Obama To Deliver First Speech Since Leaving Office
After several months off largely
out of the public eye, former US president Barack Obama returns to centre stage
on Monday, giving a speech in his adopted hometown of Chicago that –
theoretically – will not touch on current politics.
Obama will take part in a
discussion on community organising and civic engagement with students from area
schools at the University of Chicago, where he once was a lecturer at the law
school.
The event begins at 11 am (1600
GMT).
Donald Trump’s Democratic
predecessor has not given a public speech or an interview since leaving the
White House on January 20.
He has tweeted a
few times and issued a few statements through a spokesman, notably to defend
his signature domestic policy achievement, health care reform — which Trump’s
Republicans are now hoping to dismantle.
Obama also spoke
up when his billionaire successor accused him of personally ordering the wiretapping
of Trump Tower during the 2016 presidential campaign.
But for now, he
has abstained from any substantive commentary on how Trump is doing, in keeping
with presidential protocol which dictates that past residents of the White
House do not step on the toes of the current occupant.
That silence
comes in the face of accusations by Trump on everything from Syria, with the
Republican all but accusing Obama of bearing responsibility for chemical
weapons attacks by the Damascus regime, to gang violence in America.
Youth civic
engagement and community organising are at the heart of the Obama Center, which
is located on Chicago’s South Side, where Obama started his career as a
community activist.
On Sunday,
America’s first black president privately met with at-risk youth from the South
Side to discuss gang violence, jobs and training, according to The Chicago
Tribune.
The Obamas are
currently renting a house in Washington, where their youngest daughter Sasha is
finishing high school.
Since leaving
office, Obama has gone kitesurfing in the Caribbean with British billionaire
Richard Branson.
He then spent
nearly a month in French Polynesia, where he vacationed on media mogul David
Geffen’s yacht — and was reportedly working on his book.
But after
Monday, his public schedule will pick up pace.
On May 7, he
will receive the 2017 Profile in Courage award from the John F. Kennedy Library
Foundation in Boston.
He will give a
private paid speech during a visit to Italy.
And then on May
25, he will deliver a speech at a Protestant church gathering at the
Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, with Chancellor Angela Merkel at his side.
Obama, who
developed a close working relationship with Merkel during eight years in the
Oval Office, visited Berlin in November as part of his last foreign tour before
handing over to Trump.
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