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Reluctantly, Obama Embracing Role as Anti-Trump

Democrats are trying to use the contrast between Obama and Trump to show Trump as un-presidential.

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He won’t be on November’s ballot, but President Barack Obama is slowly embracing his role as the anti-Trump, taking on the Republican front-runner in ways that no other Democrat can.

With Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders still fighting it out in the Democratic primary, the task has fallen increasingly to Obama to articulate the counter-message to Donald Trump.

Democrats are working hard to use the contrast between Obama and Trump to paint the Republican candidate as anything but presidential.

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Obama’s public scolding of Trump, who for years peddled inaccurate claims about Obama’s birth certificate, dates back to 2011 when Obama roasted him at the glitzy White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner.

Trump was visibly humiliated as Obama lobbed joke after joke at him on national television.

For months, Obama and his aides mostly avoided getting dragged into the fray or letting the campaign noise distract from Obama’s agenda. The White House would sidestep questions about the latest Trump controversies, refusing to turn Obama into a pundit on the race to replace him.

When Obama waded in, it was only to offer implicit rebukes of the Trump phenomenon, such as his assertion in September that “America is great right now” – a not-so-veiled reference to the business mogul’s campaign promise to “make America great again.”

Now the Trump criticism is coming with increasing frequency and ease. When asked on Tuesday whether Trump’s proposals were already damaging US relations, Obama answered unequivocally: “Yes.”

I am getting questions constantly from foreign leaders about some of the wackier suggestions that are being made. They don’t expect half-baked notions coming out of the White House. We can’t afford that.
Barack Obama, President of United States of America
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The Democratic National Committee quickly circulated video of Obama’s remarks, arguing they illustrated how Trump “simply doesn’t have the temperament necessary to be commander in chief.”

Yet by calling attention to Trump’s positions, the White House risks further elevating him, while giving Obama’s critics a fresh reason to get behind the billionaire businessman.

In his latest rebuke, Obama unloaded on Trump’s “half-baked” proposal to compel Mexico to pay for a border wall by threatening to cut off remittances that Mexican immigrants in the US send back home.

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Obama, echoing the broader message from Democrats this year, has stressed that Trump isn’t the only Republican espousing “draconian” rhetoric about Mexicans, Muslims and others.

The White House said once the Democrats choose their nominee, Obama will be out in full force campaigning, raising money and activating his own supporters. White House spokeswoman Jennifer Friedman said Obama would cast the general election as a choice between building on Obama’s policies or abruptly reversing course.

This is a choice that the president does not take lightly, and is something he will lay out for the American people with increased frequency in the weeks and months ahead.
Jennifer Friedman, Spokesperson of White House

(This has been published in arrangement with AP.)

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