As Trump’s abuses worsen, it seems Obama is increasingly fired up and ready to go

As Trump’s abuses worsen, it seems Obama is increasingly fired up and ready to go

With increasing frequency, the former Democratic president is re-entering the political arena in unexpected and unsubtle ways.

When thinking about Donald Trump’s most prominent and most vocal Democratic critics, Barack Obama does not immediately come to mind. That, however, is starting to change.

In April, the former president spoke at Hamilton College, took aim at Trump’s trade tariffs, condemned the White House’s offensive against higher education, expressed his concerns that the values of the United States have “eroded” and said the incumbent president’s efforts to extort law firms were “contrary to the basic compact we have as Americans.”

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In June, Obama spoke at The Connecticut Forum in Hartford, warning that the country was “dangerously close” to normalizing behavior “consistent with autocracies.”

A month later, after the White House started falsely accusing him of “treason,” Obama’s patience wore thin, and he issued a statement about how “ridiculous” Team Trump’s claims had become.

In August, Obama publicly condemned the GOP’s mid-decade gerrymandering schemes — they represent “an existential threat to our democracy,” he said in a video — while having private chats with rising Democratic stars such as Zohran Mamdani and touting his party’s recent victories in special elections.

 

Obama Turns Up the Heat on Trump

In September, the former Democratic president seems even more fired up. NBC News reported:

Former President Barack Obama on Tuesday condemned the assassination of Charlie Kirk and the spate of political violence that has gripped the country while rebuking President Donald Trump and his allies’ for politicizing the shooting and not doing more to unite the country.

 

At the Jefferson Educational Society’s global summit in Pennsylvania, the Democrat did not mention Trump by name. He also didn’t have to: Obama drew sharp enough contrasts that were entirely unsubtle.

 

At the same event, while reflecting on the white supremacist who killed nine Black people at a church in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015, Obama added: “As president of the United States, my response was not: ‘Who may have influenced this troubled young man to engage in that kind of violence? And now let me go after my political opponents and use that.’”

For good measure, Obama condemned Charlie Kirk’s slaying as “horrific and a tragedy,” and categorically rejected the very idea of political violence, calling it “anathema to what it means to be a democratic country.” He also made it clear that he found some of the late conservative activist’s ideas abhorrent.

 

 

For good measure, the morning after the Trump administration helped force Jimmy Kimmel’s show off the air, Obama turned to Bluesky, writing: “After years of complaining about cancel culture, the current administration has taken it to a new and dangerous level by routinely threatening regulatory action against media companies unless they muzzle or fire reporters and commentators it doesn’t like.”

 

With a Democratic Party leadership vacuum, Obama steps up his criticism of Trump

Obama’s recent public comments came after private conversations with allies about whether he should speak out more, according to people familiar with the discussions.

Barack Obama points as he speaks

 

Former President Barack Obama has stepped up his criticisms of the Trump administration in recent weeks, weighing in more forcefully and frequently than he did at the start of the president’s second term.

It is an intensification that Democrats welcome at a moment when they lack party leadership, even as some say his trademark caution is still getting the better of him.

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In the last three weeks, Obama called President Donald Trump’s news conference linking Tylenol and autism “violence against the truth,” and he attacked the administration in the wake of comedian Jimmy Kimmel’s initial late-night ouster for taking “cancel culture” to a “new and dangerous level.” After Charlie Kirk’s killing, Obama aggressively called out Trump’s rhetoric, saying the president was further dividing the country. And before the government shutdown, he clapped at Republicans, saying they would “rather shut down the government than help millions of Americans afford health care.”

Obama’s headline-grabbing comments come after private conversations over the summer with allies about whether he should speak out more and how he should approach high-stakes White House actions as they unfold, according to two people familiar with the discussions. According to one of the sources, the former president recognizes the gravity of a moment when Trump is seen as stretching the limits of the Constitution, and one former aide said he is cognizant that there is a dearth of party leadership.

 

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It’s unclear, however, whether Obama will sustain this pace.

A former Obama White House official with knowledge of his team’s thinking said before Obama sat for a series of paid speaking events in recent weeks, his team mulled how to best take advantage of the appearances. At the same time, a flurry of high-profile events transpired, including the Kirk shooting, Kimmel being pulled off the air and the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey.

“I’m aware there are discussions of ‘Should we be out there more? How are we calibrating?’ Of course they’re asking that, that’s responsible because he’s trying to be thoughtful. It’s fair to say they’re constantly asking themselves, ‘How do we meet this moment?’” the former official said.

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But that person noted that some of Obama’s newsmaking moments emerged from public appearances that had been on the books for months.

“To take that shot is intentional,” the person said of Obama’s rhetoric against Trump. “Don’t get me wrong — that is definitely a choice. But I can’t overstate the extent to which the realities of the opportunities you have on the calendar inputs into your strategy. They reinforce each other.”

Obama’s role in the country’s current political discourse has been a topic of conversation — and at times a source of deep frustration — among Democrats since he left office more than eight years ago. While it’s still not enough for some, his cadence in recent weeks is a sharp change from Trump’s first term, when he subscribed to post-presidential norms of not talking about a successor.

But this time is arguably unlike any other. Eight months into Trump’s presidency, the Democratic Party remains leaderless, creating a void that Obama is best suited to fill.

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“The party itself is in the wilderness and I think the last person who can speak with credibility on behalf of Democrats is Obama,” said Ami Copeland, a Democratic strategist who previously served as Obama’s deputy national finance director. “People don’t want to hear from Biden about anything right now. [Bill] Clinton is still kind of tainted, I think. And the last person who really led a successful campaign that moves the big-tent party is him.”

Copeland characterized Obama’s recent public statements as likely coming from a sense of duty.

“He still feels a responsibility to not just the party, but more importantly, to the country. I don’t even see that as a partisan comment. That is just [an] ‘I care about the country and babies’ comment,” Copeland said, referencing Obama’s retort on Tylenol.

In response to a request for comment on Obama’s recent remarks, White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said, “Barack Hussein Obama is the architect of modern political division in America — famously demeaning millions of patriotic Americans who opposed his liberal agenda as ‘bitter’ for ‘cling[ing] to guns or religion.’”

“If he cares about unity in America, he would tell his own party to stop their destructive behavior,” she added.

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Even as many Democrats point to Obama’s impact, they acknowledge they need to look beyond him if they’re ever to move forward with a new generation of leadership.

But for now, they point to Obama’s popularity as giving his words more weight. A Gallup poll in February showed Obama had the highest approval rating among presidents who were still living. A Marquette University Law School poll released last week showed Trump with net minus-15% favorability while Obama enjoyed net 17% favorability.

Obama’s discussions on whether to weigh in more publicly on developments out of the Trump administration have included exploring ideas of how, when and in what format, according to the people familiar with the discussions. They characterized the approach as a work in progress, meaning he’s made his views on Trump clear over the past decade, but as the administration rolls out new actions, he’s sought to ensure his approach has an impact.

This summer, the former president was called out for clinging to a reserved posture.

In June, a headline in The Atlantic asked, “Where is Barack Obama?” and thrashed the former president, casting him as all but sitting on his heels as democracy burned.

“No matter how brazen Trump becomes, the most effective communicator in the Democratic Party continues to opt for minimal communication,” the piece stated. “His ‘audacity of hope’ presidency has given way to the fierce lethargy of semi-retirement.”

Less than two weeks later, Obama made news at a public event where he warned that the United States was “dangerously close” to slipping into an autocracy. At the time, news pieces found it notable that Obama appeared publicly to speak against Trump at all. But even at that event, no audio or video was allowed, and Obama was cautious and circumspect. He did not mention Trump by name.

“Democracy is not self-executing. It requires people, judges, people in the Justice Department, and people throughout the government who take an oath to uphold the Constitution,” Obama said in those remarks. “It requires them to take that oath seriously. When that isn’t happening, we start drifting into something that is not consistent with American democracy. It is consistent with autocracies.”

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Aides have long said they want to avoid a “dilution” factor with the 44th president, so that he’s not so frequently weighing in on issues that his words lose their impact.

In July, Obama’s office did issue a rebuke of Trump after the president accused him of committing “treason” and rigging the 2016 and 2020 elections.

“But these claims are outrageous enough to merit one. These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction,” his office said at the time.

To some Democrats, Obama is falling short at a critical time.

“Obama has a singular role in impacting the national debate that he is not in any way maxing out right now, at a time when he is most needed,” said Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee.

Green held up Obama’s signaling of support for California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s effort to match Texas in redrawing its maps mid-decade as the kind of “trickle down” messaging he should take part in to help guide other Democrats.

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“He has an unmatched ability to cut through the noise and focus in on the Republicans’ most effective arguments, and then completely debunk them, oftentimes with humor that has been devastating for some Republican candidates on the receiving end during campaign season,” Green said. “But we need him to use that same prowess in this moment to help save the country.”

As president in 2011, Obama showed no reticence in ripping into Trump for promoting the false claim that Obama had been born outside the U.S. At that year’s White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, Obama mercilessly mocked Trump, who was in the audience, for having little experience in making consequential executive decisions and for peddling conspiracy theories.

“Now, I know that he’s taken some flak lately, but no one is happier, no one is prouder to put this birth certificate matter to rest than the Donald,” Obama said. “And that’s because he can finally get back to focusing on the issues that matter — like, did we fake the moon landing? What really happened in Roswell? And where are Biggie and Tupac?”

Trump was visibly irritated during the remarks, and some of his allies say the moment likely factored into his decision to seek the presidency in 2016.

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To be sure, Obama has for years served as a Trump critic, particularly when shifting to his familiar role as a closer in critical races on the campaign trail for other Democrats. He’s trotted out punchy one-liners, including at the Democratic National Convention when he memorably needled Trump over an obsession with crowd size, then gestured with his hands in a way that made clear he also was referencing Trump’s manhood.

In August, it was Obama who acted as the party elder and congratulated Texas Democrats in a video address for standing up to Republicans by leaving their state to deny the GOP a quorum before a redistricting vote. Obama has kept up his advocacy for the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, led by his friend and former attorney general Eric Holder.

“President Obama has been sounding the alarm about the threat of gerrymandering for a long time. He was integral to the formation of the NDRC and has made our mission a priority in his post-presidency,” NDRC President John Bisognano said in a statement.

The recent recalibration of Obama’s comments is in part due to the increasing pace and scale of Trump’s actions, two former aides said.

“When I hear not just our current president, but his aides, who have a history of calling political opponents ‘vermin,’ enemies who need to be ‘targeted,’ that speaks to a broader problem that we have right now and something that we’re going to have to grapple with, all of us,” Obama said at a Sept. 17 public appearance before the Jefferson Educational Society, a nonprofit think tank.

Before that, he stood out among Democrats for having called New York City mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani in June, even as many of his peers in the party tiptoed around the democratic socialist’s primary win.

“He picks and chooses his spots wisely. Sometimes you can watch for so long,” a person who frequently speaks to the former president said. “You won’t see him shadowing this president. He didn’t do it the first four years. There was a lot of crazy then. More crazy now. He’s not going to be a president who spends his time throwing shade on another president, but he’ll certainly lean in when he sees injustices.”

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While being interviewed onstage in London by British Nigerian historian David Olusoga, Obama last month described Trump’s claims about the link between Tylenol and autism as “violence against the truth.”

“We have the spectacle of my successor in the Oval Office, making broad claims around certain drugs and autism that have been continuously disproved. … That undermines public health, the degree to which that can do harm to women who are pregnant,” he said. “That’s why, by the way, it is important for those who believe in the truth and believe in science to also examine truth when it is inconvenient for us.”

John Anzalone, who acted as a chief pollster to Obama as well as to Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign and former President Joe Biden said Democrats are so far in the desert they’re craving a dominant voice to step forward.

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“More Obama,” Anzalone said, “just like ‘more cowbell,’” referencing a famous “Saturday Night Live” skit.

Anzalone argued this moment is unlike others in history, as there is no major oppositional voice breaking through in the same way that then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich could act as a foil to President Bill Clinton when the Republicans were in the minority, for instance.

If “he feels more comfortable ratcheting it up, you’re going to see a lot of people cheering, because we feel that it’s kind of leaderless and rudderless,” Anzalone said of Obama. “There’s an audience for President Obama and people do listen, but we also kind of understand that there’s a certain calculus when you’re a former president about what, how often and how loud you speak, and you’ve got to respect that.”

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Anzalone noted, however, that as much as Democrats want to hear from Obama early and often, new leaders need to emerge, and the party as a whole must find a way to break through to voters moving forward.

“It’s good to hear from President Obama but there’s limits to what even he can do fixing the problems of the terrible branding,” Anzalone said. “Individual candidates are going to have to do that. Leaders are going to have to do that.”

 

‘Violence against the truth’: Obama denounces Trump’s Tylenol claims

The former president spoke to an audience of about 14,000 in London.

Barack Obama speaks.

LONDON — Barack Obama has accused President Donald Trump of “violence against the truth” for linking autism to the use of Tylenol by pregnant women.

The former president made a direct attack on his successor that was as rare for its forcefulness as for its setting — an arena stage on foreign soil in London on Wednesday — as he warned that the Trump administration’s claims undermine public health.

“We have the spectacle of my successor in the Oval Office, making broad claims around certain drugs and autism that have been continuously disproved,” Obama said during an on-stage Q&A in front of a 14,000-strong crowd at London’s O2 Arena.

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It was one of several stark moments during Obama’s appearance. The former president — who said last week that the U.S. was at an “inflection point” after the killing of Republican activist Charlie Kirk — noted that the U.K. and other nations are in a similarly precarious moment.

His comments on Tylenol came in response to Trump saying this week that pregnant women should avoid the medication, the brand name for acetaminophen, asserting that the fever-reducer was associated with a “very increased” risk of autism — a message contradicted by decades of data.

Obama rejected the claims and criticized Trump for increasing uncertainty for parents.

“The degree to which that undermines public health, the degree to which that can do harm to women who are pregnant, the degree to which that creates anxiety for parents who do have children who are autistic — which, by the way, itself is subject to a spectrum, and a lot of what is being trumpeted as these massive increases actually have to do with a broadening of the criteria across that spectrum so that people can actually get services and help,” Obama said. “All of that is violence against the truth.”

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The former president directed some criticism at his political allies for not doing enough to avert the populist trend in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Much of the world reached a point in the late 20th century, Obama said, in which people realized “blood and soil nationalism doesn’t work,” and “dehumanising people who are different than us doesn’t work.”

But, speaking of political liberals and progressives, Obama said “we got complacent. We got smug.” Amid a backlash at inequality, globalization, migration and government bureaucracy, “sometimes right now it feels we may be backsliding towards that older way of thinking about the world.”

Obama argued there is an ascendant desire in the U.S. — backed by Trump, but also leaders such as Putin — to return to a world where “we the people is just some people, not all people — and where there are some pretty clear hierarchies in terms of status and who ranks where.”

The “creeping authoritarian tendencies” in such nations must be fought, he said.

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Elsewhere, Obama — who was once known as the first social media president and joked “the first time I met Mark Zuckerberg I thought he was somebody’s kid” — said social media firms should show “restraint” after turning their algorithms to “spectacle, anger and grief” in the name of monetization.

There is a “significant risk” artificial intelligence will be “weaponized” by governments, non-state actors or “some guy in a basement creating a new strain of smallpox,” he said, or to “be used as a system of surveillance and oppression at levels we have not seen before.”

“Pandora’s box is opened,” he said — “we’re going to have to rearrange work and we’re going to have to rearrange the social safety net… and we’re not even having that conversation.”

London mayor Sadiq Khan — who Trump called “terrible” in a Tuesday address at the United Nations — was among those in attendance at the event.

Khan, the first Muslim mayor of a Western capital city, met Obama before his public Q&A and the two spoke privately, a person with knowledge of the encounter said.

 

Investigating claim Obama said ‘80% of the world’s problems involve old men hanging on’

A video of former U.S. President Barack Obama saying, “It’s fair to say that 80% of the world’s problems involve old men hanging on, who are afraid of death, and insignificance, and they won’t let go,” circulated on social media in late September 2025. Social media users posted the video on sites like YouTube (archived) and Threads (archived). One X post (archived) of the video received nearly 3 million views.

The clip of Obama saying the quote was said to come from an event, “An Evening With President Obama,” that took place at the O2 Arena in London on Sept. 24, 2025. It consisted of a dialogue between Obama and British historian David Olusoga. The full version of the quote that circulated read as follows:

It’s fair to say that 80% of the world’s problems involve old men hanging on, who are afraid of death and insignificance, and they won’t let go. They build pyramids, and they put their names on everything. They get very anxious about it.

However, the clip circulating on social media did not include the full context of the quote, and no official recordings or transcripts of the event were available online as of this writing. As there was no way to independently verify the authenticity of the quote, we have left this claim unrated and will update the story if further information emerges.

We reached out to the Office of Barack and Michelle Obama to inquire whether the quote was accurate. We also reached out to the host of the event, Seat Unique, to request an official recording and transcript of the event. We will update the story if we receive any responses.

What we know

The clip of Obama saying the alleged quote did not show any obvious signs of alteration or any evidence of being generated by artificial intelligence.

We can confirm that the event itself took place, as multiple trustworthy news outlets, such as The Times and The Independent, have covered it. Obama also posted a clip (archived) from the event on his X account, which matched visually with the short video circulating social media.

Obama said something very similar in December 2019 at an event in Singapore. The exact quote, according to a BBC report, was, “If you look at the world and look at the problems, it’s usually old people, usually old men, not getting out of the way.” Then-Politico reporter Tim Alberta also cited that quote during a Democratic debate that took place shortly after the event.

 

For further reading, Snopes investigated the claim that Obama said he would “be fine with a third term.”

 

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