President
Barack Obama has a message for Donald Trump — being president is
tougher than being on a reality show and the American people are too
“sensible” to elect him.
“I continue to believe Mr. Trump will not
be president,” Obama said at a news conference in California after a
meeting with southeast Asian leaders. “And the reason is that I have a
lot of faith in the American people. Being president is a serious job.
It’s not hosting a talk show, or a reality show.”
He went on: “It’s not promotion, it’s not marketing. It’s hard. And a lot of people count on us getting it right.”
The comments marked a political resurgence
for a lame-duck President in his final year in office. Obama offered
surprisingly frank assessments of the campaign to replace him, taking
shots at Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio. He also hinted hint that he was
sympathetic to Hillary Clinton’s position on the difficulty of enacting
political change, as she faces a tough challenge from a candidate in
Bernie Sanders, who has fired up Democratic primary voters who are
demanding sweeping reform.
But it was the potential of a Trump administration that Obama seemed most eager to critique.
The presidency isn’t “a matter of
pandering and doing whatever will get you in the news on a given day.
And sometimes, it requires you making hard decisions even when people
don’t like it,” Obama said, adding that whoever succeeds him needs to be
able to reflect the importance of their office and give foreign leaders
confidence he or she knows their names and something about their
nations’ histories.
Obama also appeared to raise the question of whether Trump was prepared to be commander-in-chief.
“Whoever’s standing where I’m standing
right now has the nuclear codes with them, and can order 21-year-olds
into a firefight, and (has) to make sure that the banking system doesn’t
collapse, and is often responsible for not just the United States of
America, but 20 other countries that are having big problems, or are
falling apart and are gonna be looking for us to something.”
He added: “The American people are pretty sensible, and I think they’ll make a sensible choice in the end.”
Trump responded to Obama during an event in Beaufort, South Carolina.
“He has done such a lousy job as
president,” Trump said, before adding that he didn’t mind being targeted
by Obama, saying he took it as a “great compliment.”
Trump wasn’t the only Republican who took a shot from the President.
When he bemoaned Republican warnings that
his nominee to replace late Justice Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court
would not even get a hearing, Obama rebuked people who claim to be
“strict interpreters” of the Constitution — except regarding his right
to propose a nominee.
That seemed to be a clear jab at Cruz, who
has helped lead calls to prevent the president installing a nominee who
could tilt the ideological balance of the court to the left.
Rubio also came under fire when the
president mocked “a candidate who sponsored a bill, that I supported, to
finally solve the immigration problem, and he’s running away from it as
fast as he can.”
The President stepped more carefully when
he was asked about the Democratic race. He opened by making it look like
he was delivering a veiled endorsement of Clinton, who is facing a
stronger than expected challenge from Sanders.
“You know, I know Hillary better than I
know Bernie, because she’s served in my administration, and she was an
outstanding secretary of state. And I suspect that, on certain issues,
she agrees with me more than Bernie does,” Obama said.
But then added: “On the other hand, there
may be a couple issues where Bernie agrees with me more. I don’t know, I
haven’t studied their positions that closely.”
Obama who, like Sanders, once wowed young
Democrats with soaring calls for change in the 2008 election, also
appeared to give credence to Clinton’s election argument that pushing
through fundamental reforms is harder than it looks.
“Ultimately, I will probably have an
opinion on it, based on both — (having) been a candidate of hope and
change and a President who’s got some nicks and cuts and bruises from —
you know, getting stuff done over the last seven years.”
Obama was clear on one thing — he’s happy not to be in the race himself.
“The thing I can say unequivocally,” he said, “I am not unhappy that I am not on the ballot.”