Associated Press
By Josh Lederman
April 6, 2016
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, whose
ascent to the White House would constitute an overwhelming rebuke to
Obama. Democrats are working hard to use the contrast between Obama and
Trump to paint the Republican candidate as anything but presidential.
For
months, Obama and his aides mostly avoided getting dragged into the
fray or letting the campaign din 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. Asked
Tuesday whether Trump’s proposals were already damaging U.S. relations,
Obama answered unequivocally: “Yes.”
“I
am getting questions constantly from foreign leaders about some of the
wackier suggestions that are being made,” Obama said. “They don’t expect
half-baked notions coming out of the White
House. We can’t afford that.”
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.
Obama
has said repeatedly he doesn’t believe Trump will win, and White House
officials said there was no concerted effort to insert Obama more
visibly into the election debate. After all,
every minute Obama spends talking about Trump is a minute wasted when
it comes to Obama’s many unfinished pieces of business.
In
his latest rebuke, Obama unloaded on Trump’s proposal to compel Mexico
to pay for a border wall by threatening to cut off remittances that
Mexican immigrants in the U.S. send back home.
Asked about that idea, Obama issued a point-by-point rebuttal, arguing
that would actually increase the flow of immigrants into the U.S. and
that tracking huge numbers of remittances was impossible.
“Good luck with that,” Obama said.
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.
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. Yet the brunt
of Obama’s criticism has centered on Trump, who has the best
mathematical path to the Republican nomination despite losing in
Wisconsin on Tuesday.
Though
Clinton and Sanders have both vigorously attacked Trump, neither has
been able to focus exclusively on the Republican as their battle for the
Democratic nomination continues. Obama
hasn’t endorsed either of the Democrats or campaigned on their behalf,
leaving his condemnation of Trump as his primary foray into the race to
date.
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 and 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,” Friedman said.
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