Tag: Michelle Obama

  • Trump Posts Election Conspiracy Video With Obamas Depicted As Monkeys

    Trump Posts Election Conspiracy Video With Obamas Depicted As Monkeys

    WASHINGTON – US President Donald Trump on Thursday posted an election conspiracy video that depicted former president Barack Obama and his wife Michelle as monkeys, drawing condemnation from prominent Democrats.

    Near the end of a one-minute-long video posted on Trump’s Truth Social platform, the Obamas are shown with their faces on the bodies of monkeys for about one second.

    The song “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” plays in the background when the Obamas appear.

    The video repeats false allegations that ballot-counting company Dominion Voting Systems helped steal the 2020 election from Trump.

    As of early Friday morning, the video had been liked several thousand times on the president’s social media platform.

    The office of California Governor Gavin Newsom, a potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate and a prominent Trump critic, slammed the post.

    “Disgusting behavior by the President. Every single Republican must denounce this. Now,” Newsom’s press office account posted on X.

    Ben Rhodes, a former top national security advisor and close confidant to Barack Obama, also condemned the imagery.

    “Let it haunt Trump and his racist followers that future Americans will embrace the Obamas as beloved figures while studying him as a stain on our history,” he wrote on X.

    Obama is the only Black president in American history and backed Trump’s opponent Kamala Harris on the campaign trail in the 2024 presidential election.

    AI IMAGERY

    In the first year of his second term in the White House, Trump ramped up his use of hyper-realistic but fabricated visuals on Truth Social and other platforms, often glorifying himself while lampooning his critics.

    He has used the provocative posts to rally his conservative base.

    Last year, Trump posted a video generated by artificial intelligence showing Barack Obama being arrested in the Oval Office and appearing behind bars in an orange jumpsuit.

    Later, he posted an AI clip of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries — who is Black — wearing a fake mustache and a sombrero.

    Jeffries called the image racist.

    Since returning to the White House, Trump has drawn criticism from his opponents for leading a crusade against diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs.

    One of Trump’s first acts was to terminate all federal government DEI programs, including related policies in the military.

    The drive to rid the armed forces of what Trump has derided as “woke” initiatives has also seen the removal from some military academy bookshelves of scores of books that cover the US’s history of discrimination.

    US federal anti-discrimination programs were born of the 1960s civil rights struggle, mainly led by Black Americans, for equality and justice after hundreds of years of slavery, whose abolition in 1865 saw other institutional forms of racism enforced.

  • Obama Says There’s No ‘Military Rationale’ For Israel’s Offensive In Gaza

    Obama Says There’s No ‘Military Rationale’ For Israel’s Offensive In Gaza

    Former President Barack Obama on Friday criticized Israel’s ongoing military action in Gaza, saying that “there’s not a military rationale for continuing to pummel what is already rubble” and arguing for Palestinian statehood.

    “I think that it is important for us to acknowledge those of us who are not direct parties to the violence to say, right now, children can’t starve. Right now, there’s not a military rationale for continuing to pummel what is already rubble,” Obama said at an event in Dublin, Ireland, according to a transcript released by his office.

    He continued, “It is unacceptable to ignore the human crisis that is happening inside of Gaza, and it is necessary for us to insist that both sides have to find a path in which a Palestinian state and autonomy exist side by side with a secure Israel.”

    The rare public comments from the former president on the war in Gaza come as world leaders are gathered in New York for the United Nations General Assembly, a meeting roiled by the grinding conflict.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lashed out Friday at Western countries’ recent recognition of Palestinian statehood, accusing world leaders of “buckling under the pressure of a biased media, radical Islamist constituencies and antisemitic mobs.”

    Obama criticized political leaders for failing to resolve hostilities and singled out Netanyahu, referencing his fraught relationship with the Israeli leader and commenting that “we did not always get along.”

    “Unfortunately, oftentimes the leadership, the politicians have a vested interest in maintaining the notion that it is simply us and them, and it’s their fault because that helps keep them in power,” he said. “It’s a cynical game. I watched it throughout my presidency, and I was not always popular in that region because I would call them on it. I think it’s fair to say that me and the prime minister of Israel, who’s still there, were not the best of friends.”

    The former president, however, added that “Hamas’s vicious approach to trying to solve a problem that puts all their people at risk is the height of cynicism that I reject as well.”

    Israel launched its ground incursion into Gaza City earlier this month, after approving a plan in August to take over and occupy the heavily bombarded city, which it said is one of the last remaining Hamas strongholds.

    The United Nations has warned that Israel’s plans to invade Gaza City would put about 1 million Palestinians who live there at risk of being forcibly displaced. The Israeli military told CNN Tuesday that 640,000 people have left the city since. It’s not possible to verify that estimate.

    The Trump administration is also pressing for an end to the conflict. This week, US envoys proposed a 21-point peace plan to end the war in Gaza to Arab leaders.

    And President Trump has signaled his own frustration with Netanyahu’s leadership. Speaking Thursday in the Oval Office, he said he will not allow Israel to annex the occupied West Bank, drawing a rare red line over Israel’s actions in the Palestinian territory.

    “I will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank. Nope, I will not allow it. It’s not going to happen,” the president said, acknowledging that he had spoken to Netanyahu earlier in the day on the topic. “It’s been enough. It’s time to stop now.”

  • She Took Me Back: ‪The Obamas Address Divorce Rumors

    She Took Me Back: ‪The Obamas Address Divorce Rumors

    Former United States President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama have publicly addressed the swirling divorce rumours that have followed them for months, putting them to rest with trademark humour and warmth.

    The Obamas joined Michelle’s brother Craig Robinson on his podcast, IMO with Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson, on Wednesday.

    During the candid family chat, the couple dismissed speculation about their marriage breaking down and offered listeners a peek into their enduring bond.

    “She took me back! It was touch and go for a while,” Barack joked, sparking laughter.

    Michelle quickly added, “It’s my husband, y’all,” as her brother Craig ribbed them both: “It’s so nice to have you both in the same room together”. To this, Michelle replied, smiling, “I know, because when we aren’t, folks think we’re divorced”.

    The light-hearted banter was the first time the Obamas have directly countered the persistent rumours, which intensified earlier this year when Michelle skipped the funeral of former President Jimmy Carter and did not attend President Donald Trump’s second inauguration.

    Craig Robinson also recalled how deep the gossip runs — sharing how a stranger once cornered him at an airport asking urgently, “What did he (Barack Obama) do?”

    The former President admitted he is usually unaware of the chatter: “These are the kinds of things I just miss. I don’t even know this stuff is going on. Then somebody mentions it and I’m like, what are you talking about?”

    Michelle, however, gave a more heartfelt assurance. “There hasn’t been a single moment in our marriage when I thought about giving up on my man. We’ve been through tough times, but we’ve also had a lot of fun and had some amazing adventures. I’ve become a better person because of the man I married,” she added.

  • Michelle Obama To Skip Trump’s Inauguration

    Michelle Obama To Skip Trump’s Inauguration

    Former first lady Michelle Obama will not attend Donald Trump’s inauguration next week, her office said Tuesday, without providing an explanation for her decision.

    “Former President Barack Obama is confirmed to attend the 60th Inaugural Ceremonies. Former First Lady Michelle Obama will not attend the upcoming inauguration,” a statement from the Office of Barack and Michelle Obama said.

    The decision to forgo attendance at Trump’s formal swearing-in is a break with tradition for the ceremony, in which former presidents and their wives typically participate. Former President George W. Bush and Laura Bush will attend the inauguration, his office said, and sources familiar told CNN that former President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton also will be there.

    Michelle Obama also was not in attendance at a memorial service last week for former President Jimmy Carter, remaining instead in Hawaii. Former President Barack Obama attended the service at the National Cathedral in Washington, sitting next to Trump and engaging in animated conversation with him as the program was getting underway.

    Other former first ladies, including Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush, both attended the Carter event.

    Michelle Obama has spoken openly about her animosity toward Trump, whom she has accused of putting her family’s safety in danger through his rhetoric.

    In 2017, she put those personal feelings aside after Trump won his first presidential election, welcoming the incoming president and Melania Trump to the White House for tea ahead of that year’s swearing-in.

    In the years afterward, she spoke about the experience of sitting onstage as Trump was inaugurated.

    “There were tears, there was that emotion. But then to sit on that stage and watch the opposite of what we represented on display – there was no diversity, there was no color on that stage, there was no reflection of the broader sense of America,” she said in a podcast in 2023.

    The Trumps did not attend President Joe Biden’s inauguration in 2021 amid the president-elect’s false claims that he won the 2020 election.

    (CNN)

  • Barack Obama Casts Harris As His Heir In Convention Speech

    Barack Obama Casts Harris As His Heir In Convention Speech

    Barack and Michelle Obama closed out the Democratic National Convention’s second night by pitching Kamala Harris as an heir to their political legacy. And they derided Donald Trump as a “racist” egomaniac who’d squandered his own presidency, and needed to be kept out of power.

    “This convention has always been pretty good to kids with funny names who believe in a country where anything is possible,” the former president said in his closing remarks, an echo to the convention address that launched his national career 20 years ago. Harris’s parents had “crossed oceans because they believed in the promise of America,” evoking the story he’d told Democrats in that same 2004 speech about his Kenyan father coming to a “magical place.”

    “I’m fired up!” Obama told the crowd, setting up one of the signature chants of his 2008 and 2012 campaigns..

    Appearing on stage not long after his wife, the former president made a tribute to Joe Biden, his one-time vice president, and said “one of my best” decisions as the party’s nominee in 2008 was picking Biden, before hailing Biden’s own achievements as president.

    But Obama quickly pivoted to attack Trump, breaking out the Democrats’ favorite new refrain— ”weird” — to say he had a “weird obsession with crowd sizes.” He glanced quickly at his hands, a joke about masculinity and a reminder that Democrats were no longer worried that anti-Trump ridicule might backfire.

    “America is ready for a new chapter,” he said, “We are ready for a President Kamala Harris.”

    Obama ran through Harris’ record as a prosecutor, adding that she had “pushed me and my administration hard,” after the subprime mortgage crisis to help people who lost their homes in the fallout, later saying that Harris would work to bolster the middle class as president.

    On Tim Walz, Obama said “he knows who he is, and he knows what’s important.” Together, he said, they had a vision to ensure all Americans could “get along with each other,” and deliver for everyone.

    “Yes she can!” Obama said, sparking an immediate chant in the crowd — another echo to 2008.

    “We will build a country that is more secure, more just, more equal, and more free,” he said, leaving to a standing ovation.

    Speaking immediately before his speech, Michelle Obama was welcomed by her own standing ovation and rapturous applause from the audience in Chicago, the Obamas’ hometown. Her speech recalled the same spirit of 2008, starting with a declaration that “hope is making a comeback!” But she also gave voice to the collective “mourning” Democrats had been feeling, an oblique nod to how far the party’s fortunes — and optimism — appear to have changed since Biden left the race.

    The former first lady also drew many links between her own life and Kamala’s history: “Her story is your story. It’s my story. It’s the story of the vast majority of Americans trying to build a better life.”

    “There is no other choice than Kamala Harris and Tim Walz,” she said, painting a picture of Harris as the polar opposite to Donald Trump, while also warning that he could revisit many of the same tactics he used to attack the Obamas in the past. She threw out a quip about how the presidency was a “Black job,” recalling Trump’s terminology, which came up in a contentious interview at the National Association of Black Journalists earlier this summer.

    Above all, she urged Democrats to channel their emotions into action.

    “Michelle Obama is asking, no I’m telling you all, to do something!” she said at one point.

    Ultimately, the major theme of the primetime speeches was drawing a contrast between the future that Harris offered as opposed to Trump, and, aside from a tribute by Obama, brief or no references to Biden by name.

    Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff spoke of Harris’ ability to take America forward: “America, in this election, you have to decide who to trust with your family’s future. I trusted Kamala with our family’s future. It was the best decision I ever made.”

    Also speaking on stage Tuesday were Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, New Mexico Gov. Michelle Grisham, and Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth.

    Appearing early in the evening, Schumer set up an immediate contrast between “Trump’s American carnage” and the future Harris might offer. To deliver it, Schumer said, a Democratic majority in the Senate would be crucial: Democrats currently hold a two-seat majority and 34 seats are up for election in November, 23 of which are held by Democrats or Independents.

    Sanders, an Independent who caucuses with the Democrats, applauded Harris’ economic agenda, calling it a plan for “an economy that works for all of us,” before repeatedly using the term “radical,” a word often used to attack the left by Republicans, to describe Trump and the GOP’s policies.

    It was a big tent at the convention. While Sanders, a socialist and icon among the party’s progressive wing, denounced the “billionaire class,” Pritzker, heir to a massive family fortune, followed that speech by using his wealth to poke fun at Trump.

    “Take it from an actual billionaire, Trump is rich in only one thing: stupidity,” the Illinois governor said.