Skip to main content

Obama "Republican Vision ‘Unrecognizable’ in 2016 Race"

President Obama said in an interview released Monday that politics in America had become “meaner” than when he took office, but expressed hope that Republicans would eventually turn away from the “expression of frustration” and anger that Donald J. Trump and Senator Ted Cruz were offering to voters.


Speaking to Politico’s Glenn Thrush for the site’s “Off Message” podcast, Mr. Obama said the Republican candidates for president were more outside the mainstream than Senator John McCain was during the 2008 campaign.

“John McCain was a conservative, but he was well within, you know, the mainstream of not just the Republican Party but within our political dialogue,” Mr. Obama told Politico. The president said voters would have to judge “the degree to which the Republican rhetoric and Republican vision has moved, not just to the right, but has moved to a place that is unrecognizable.”

The president’s comments came one week before voters in Iowa gather to caucus in the first presidential voting of the 2016 campaign to succeed him. In the interview, he expressed hope that voters in Iowa and in later contests would “steer back towards the center.”

Mr. Obama also talked at length about the Democratic contest between Hillary Clinton and Senator Bernie Sanders, describing both as “passionate about giving everybody a shot.” He disputed the idea that Mr. Sanders was idealistic while Mrs. Clinton was pragmatic, saying the two candidates have elements of both qualities in their political outlook.

The president said Mr. Sanders had succeeded in speaking bluntly to an American public that was eager to break free from conventional political limitations.

“Bernie came in with the luxury of being a complete long shot and just letting loose,” Mr. Obama said. He added that Mr. Sanders “has the virtue of saying exactly what he believes, and great authenticity, great passion, and is fearless.”

“His attitude is, ‘I got nothing to lose,’” the president said.

Mrs. Clinton, by contrast, entered the 2016 contest with the “privilege and burden” of being the front-runner, Mr. Obama said. Her long experience in government, as a senator and secretary of state, is both a strength and a weakness, the president said. He continued that being “wicked smart” about policy “could make her more cautious and her campaign more prose than poetry.”

But he added that those same experiences meant that “she can govern and she can start here, day one, more experienced than any non-vice president has ever been who aspires to this office.”

Mr. Obama said that in 2007, Mrs. Clinton demonstrated “sheer strength, determination, endurance, stick-to-it-ness, never-give-up attitude” as she fought him for the Democratic nomination. He said she had to work harder than he did during that contest.

“We had as competitive and lengthy and expensive and tough a primary fight as there has been in modern American politics, and she had to do everything that I had to do, except, like Ginger Rogers, backwards in heels,” Mr. Obama said. “She had to wake up earlier than I did because she had to get her hair done. She had to, you know, handle all the expectations that were placed on her. She had a tougher job throughout that primary than I did.”

He also recalled with fondness the months he spent in Iowa, calling it “the most satisfying political period” in his career, especially, he said, because of the young campaign workers who toiled on his behalf there.

“If you were feeling bad, you went to Iowa for a while and you went to the headquarters and you ate some, you know, old pizza and just talked to these guys and you got fired up all over again,” he said.

Source : New York Times

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Nigerian army Claims the Second Rescue of Chibok Girl

A second schoolgirl that was seized in the Nigerian town of Chibok has been found, the army says. But a spokesman for the Chibok girls' parents has cast doubt on the claims, saying that the girl's name is not on the families' list of those missing. An army spokesman said Serah Luka was among a group of 97 women and children rescued by troops in the north-east. Islamist militant group Boko Haram has abducted thousands of other girls in recent years, rights groups estimate. This comes two days after the rescue of the first Chibok girl, Amina Ali Nkeki. The army has previously given misleading statements about the rescue of the Chibok girls - in its initial statement after Ms Nkeki was found, it used a wrong name. In all, 218 girls remain missing after their abduction by the Boko Haram Islamist group from Chibok secondary school in north-eastern Nigeria in 2014. Ms Nkeki told a Chibok community leader that six of the kidnapped girls had died, but...

Hong Kong Lunar New Year Celebrations Erupt in Violence as Police Clear Food Stalls

Hong Kong's Lunar New Year celebrations have descended into chaos as police leared illegal food stalls set up on a busy junction for Lunar New Year celebrations, leaving dozens injured or arrested. Riot police used batons and pepper spray and fired warning shots into the air early on Tuesday after authorities tried to move illegal street vendors from a district in the city. Protesters hurled bricks at police as scuffles broke out, while other demonstrators set fire to rubbish bins in the streets of Mong Kok, a gritty neighbourhood across the harbour from the heart of the Asian financial centre. A police statement said that three men aged 27 to 35 were arrested for assaulting a police officer and obstructing police, while another three police officers received hospital treatment. Broadcaster RTHK said later that 24 people had been arrested. The scuffles broke out after police moved in to clear "hawkers", or illegal vendors who sell local delicacies, trinkets and ...

Ted Cruz Loses Over Three Consecutive Trump Victories

Real estate mogul Donald Trump received victory over top rivals Sen. Ted Cruz (Texas) and Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.) in Tuesday's Nevada GOP caucus, setting up a particularly difficult road ahead for Cruz. Republican presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) speaks during a campaign event in Las Vegas on Monday. (JOSH EDELSON via Getty Images on Monday)   Trump has now won three straight state contests and appears to be barreling toward the Republican presidential nomination, while Cruz has only won one state, Iowa. Cruz's campaign had hoped to eke out a win in Nevada based on the strength of his political organization and ground game, which helped lead him to a similar victory in the Iowa caucus earlier this month. The caucus format relies on turning out voters who are engaged enough to spend several hours participating in the political process. By contrast, Trump has lagged behind Cruz and Rubio in his organizing efforts, and political observers expre...