The Freeman

Obama says goodbye in last prexy speech

WASHINGTON — Barack Obama closes the book on his presidency yesterday, with a farewell speech in Chicago that will try to lift supporters felled by Donald Trump's shock victory.

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Obama's last trip on Air Force One will be a pilgrimage to his adoptive hometown, where he will address a sell-out crowd not far from where he accepted the presidency eight years ago.

Diehard fans – many African Americans – have braved Chicago's frigid winter to collect free tickets, which now sell for upwards of $1,000 a piece on Craigslist.

The First Lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and his wife Jill Biden will come along on for the ride.

Obama's cross-country trek would be a sentimenta­l trip down memory lane, were it not slap-bang in the middle of a tumultuous presidenti­al handover.

Trump has smashed convention­s, vowed to efface Obama's legacy and hurled personal insults left and right.

The 2016 election campaign has raised serious questions about the resilience of US democracy.

In a virtually unpreceden­ted move, US intelligen­ce has accused the Kremlin of tipping the electoral scales in Trump's favor.

Democrats, cast into the political wilderness with the loss of the White House, the Senate and the House of Representa­tives plus a majority of statehouse­s, are struggling to regroup.

With an approval rating hovering around 55 percent, Obama will hope to steel them for new battles ahead.

Lead speechwrit­er Cody Keenan said the address will be about Obama's vision for where the country should still go.

"It's not going to be like an anti-Trump speech, it's not going to be a red meat, rabble rousing thing, it will be statesman-like but it will also be true to him," Keenan told AFP. "It will tell a story."

Trump's unorthodox politics has thrown 55-year-old Obama's transition and post-presidency plans into flux.

Obama, having vowed a smooth handover of power, finds himself being increasing­ly critical of Trump as he prepares to leave office on January 20.

After that there will still be a holiday and an autobiogra­phy, but Obama could find himself being dragged backed into the political fray if Trump were to enact a Muslim registry or deport adults brought to the United States years ago by their parents.

Having vowed to take a backseat in politics, Obama's second act could yet be as politicall­y engaged as Jimmy Carter – whose post-presidency has remade his image as an elder statesman.

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 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? Then Democratic presidenti­al candidate Barack Obama addresses supporters during his election night rally at Grant Park in Chicago, Illinois.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE Then Democratic presidenti­al candidate Barack Obama addresses supporters during his election night rally at Grant Park in Chicago, Illinois.

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