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Barack Obama is sick of being America's saviour

The i Paper Published Jun 30, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Barack Obama is 65 years old.
about 65 years · age
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Citation-ready fact
Barack Obama drew 14,000 paying customers to London’s O2 Arena in September.
14000 people · audience
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Citation-ready fact
Barack Obama made public his enthusiasm for Zohran Mamdani, New York City’s 34-year-old Mayor.
34 years · age
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Citation-ready fact
Barack Obama opened a new presidential centre costing £650 million earlier this month.
650000000 GBP · presidential centre
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Citation-ready fact
Barack Obama has served as the principal surrogate for Democratic candidates in four consecutive election cycles.
4 election cycles · Democratic candidate support
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Citation-ready fact
A gunman tried to kill Donald Trump at an outdoor election rally in Pennsylvania two years ago.
2 years · time since Trump assassination attempt
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Citation-ready fact
Barack Obama’s foundation has received millions of donors’ dollars for global leadership programmes.
at least 1000000 USD · donor contributions
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Welcome to Trump’s America, The i Paper’s World Insight series presenting the sharpest, deepest thinking on an era-defining shift in history and politics, investigating how Donald Trump and his administration have changed the US and the world – and where we go from here.

• The heavy price America has paid for Jeff Bezos’s ambition
• The US is becoming impossible to live in
• I told Trump over dinner he didn’t have my loyalty – it sealed my fate
• This is how the world will look after Trump
• I’ve seen what ICE has done to Minnesota. Farage wants to import that to the UK
• The men who want to stop women voting
• Trump isn’t damaging America. He’s reinventing it’

The sun was out, the skies were bright and there were smiles all around as Barack Obama gathered the clan to celebrate the opening of his new £650m presidential centre earlier this month. Long-time friends, allies and campaign stalwarts sat in folding chairs on Chicago’s South Side, cooling themselves with paper fans that said, “A Home for Hope”. Angela Merkel was there, as was Justin Trudeau. So were three former Democratic presidents. Donald Trump was not invited.

The musicians who performed on a stage barricaded by bulletproof glass could have drawn a crowd at Wembley. Obama believers all, they included Bono and The Edge, Jennifer Hudson and Christina Aguilera, Marc Anthony and John Legend and Common. Bruce Springsteen, who has become close friends with Obama, brought an acoustic guitar and sang his ode to better times, “Land of Hope and Dreams”.

Obama struck a different note, remarking on the decade of calamities since he left the White House, not least “political conflicts that have shaken the very foundation of our democracy”. Often celebrated for his abiding optimism, he admitted that he sometimes finds himself angry and full of doubt. “For millions of people in this country and around the world,” he said, “the future feels uncertain, the ground unstable beneath our feet.”

The diagnosis is as clear as the danger. The question that Obama hears, from figures high and low, is what does he plan to do about it? He recognises the conundrum. Every day, he said recently, he asks himself whether he could be doing more to oppose Trump and his blinkered allies in the Republican Party as they run rampant, breaking rules, violating norms, undermining institutions and doggedly dragging the country backwards.

Could he do more? Nearly 65 years old, greying but vigorous, Obama remains the most popular politician in the country. He is a singular voice in a Democratic Party that has been unable to produce a compelling national leader since he left the stage. When he does make an appearance, lines stretch around the block and clips on social media attract legions of laments for times gone by. And not just at home. In September, he drew 14,000 paying customers to London’s O2 Arena, where he was greeted with a standing ovation.

Obama likes to point out that the US does not have a parliamentary system, and thus he has no formal role. And yet he has stepped into the breach as the principal surrogate for Democratic candidates in four consecutive election cycles, something unprecedented for a former president. A central motivation for getting more involved with politics than he intended is the similarly unprecedented behaviour of the current inhabitant of the White House.

Trump, a leader governed by a prodigious sense of grievance, routinely demonstrates his resentment of his predecessor. It has been his habit for many years, starting with the fiction that Obama was not born in the United States and, more recently, the groundless assertion that Obama should be tried for treason. To suggest otherness, he calls him Barack “Hussein” Obama and, earlier this year, shared a video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes.

Obama this week said Trump’s “obsession” with him was “strange”. The former president has not been shy about his disdain for his successor, telling delegates to the Democratic National Convention in 2024 that Trump, a convicted felon, “hasn’t stopped whining about his problems since he rode down his golden escalator nine years ago”. His frustrations with Trump run to far more serious matters, of course, but he reasons that speaking out more often would only dilute his influence. “Then I’m not a political leader,” he said, “I’m a commentator.”

While Obama has shown a willingness to back candidates and principled causes, especially at election time, he prefers operating behind the scenes in the role of elder statesman, serving as a mentor to young Democrats and other opposition figures around the world. (One of those was Keir Starmer, as he charted a fateful path to No 10 after becoming Labour leader.) He has poured millions of donors’ dollars into global leadership programmes run by his Chicago-based Obama Foundation and has made public his enthusiasm for New York City’s 34-year-old Mayor, Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic socialist.

When explaining his reluctance to become the public face of the Democratic Party, Obama points out that he is no longer the scrappy former community organiser with small children and a mortgage who captivated much of the country in 2008. He is, rather, a very wealthy man with 24/7 Secret Service protection who no longer has to worry about grocery prices or job prospects. It is the next generation, he believes, that best understands the zeitgeist and is most able to update institutions of civic and government life to fit the need.

Also, he says, the demands that he appear more often in the public arena have created “genuine tension” with wife Michelle, who wants him to be home more. Security worries are surely a factor. After a gunman tried to kill Trump at an outdoor election rally in Pennsylvania two years ago, the Secret Service made sure that Obama’s political appearances would be indoors and every guest would be screened. It was in that fearful spirit that security at his museum opening was extraordinarily tight.

Through the years, he has shared his earnest messaging about the importance of defending democracy with influencers whose huge social media followings exist outside the political mainstream. And he has carefully curated his image, drawing attention through widely studied lists of his favourite music and books, as well as films and podcasts supported by Higher Ground, the Hollywood production company he established with Michelle.

To slow Trump’s march, Democrats are desperate to take control of at least one house of Congress in November, when Trump himself will not be on the ballot, but the wreckage of his presidency will be. Obama recognises the opportunity, as well as the peril should they fall short. He intends to spend time on the hustings, fully present, as one strategist put it, during “big moments when we need someone to step in and make the difference”.

Obama intends to play a part as the United States struggles to recover from Trumpism, but he wants everyone to know that he is no saviour. One of his abiding convictions holds that leaders may muster enthusiasm for a cause, but progress only happens when ordinary citizens take action. Inside his gleaming new museum, one long wall features words drawn from his farewell address, delivered in Chicago in 2017: “I’m asking you to believe. Not in my ability to bring about change — but in yours.”

Caroline’s mother Christine has called for an apology from the press and police over how she was treated before she died.

She made a documentary called Search for the Truth for Disney+ last year

Caroline Flack’s death has become a tragic parable about cancel culture, responsible use of social media, the intrusion of the tabloid press, the sensation of reality TV and the misunderstandings and stigmas about mental ill health, from which we were all supposed to learn and in which each of us who watched on as voyeurs was complicit. 

People who have a strong chest and back may be less likely to have a heart attack, according to a new study.

Researchers said that people with strong pecs, back muscles and torso are also less likely to die within the next decade.

Experts from the British Heart Foundation (BHF) said that it is “not just about being muscly”, as the size of people’s muscles was not linked to their risk of a heart attack or early death.

It said that all kinds of exercise, and not just strength training, can improve muscle density.

It is fascinating that people’s skeletal muscle could be linked to their risk of having a heart attack. I am now personally interested in exercises like cycling, planks and pilates, which I enjoy and may have an effect on these muscles.

What are the things that you do to keep yourself healthy? Your mind might jump straight to the run you do a couple of times a week, or the choices you make about what to eat, the amount of sleep you manage to get each night or the friends who make you feel seen and heard. And you’d be right. These are all things that keep us healthy.

Millions of Britons could pay higher energy bills than they need to if they do not submit a meter reading before the price cap rises on Wednesday.

The price cap, set by the regulator Ofcom, is set to rise, affecting 5.3 million households on a standard tariff.

How much the price cap will increase from Wednesday, 1 July.

The average gas and electricity bill will jump to £1,862 a year.

There are currently 27 fixed deals available that are cheaper than July’s price cap, with average savings of £285, so act now to save yourself money.  The price cap is going up, but your bills don’t have to.

People are future-proofing their homes for sustainability and to protect themselves against unpredictable energy costs

The summer’s first full Moon is lighting up skies across the country this week.

To see the Stawberry Moon, look towards the south-east after sunset. That will be after around 9.20pm on Tuesday, 30 June. The moon will track southwards through the night, setting in the south-west before sunrise on Wednesday.

Angry people on social media claim the current high temperatures are nothing special but they ignore the long-term trends

The Government has said it will appoint a national maternity commissioner to drive change after a report concluded families have suffered from repeated failures in NHS care.

For too long women, babies and families have been failed by a system that didn’t listen. Their stories are heart-breaking and demand action.

Some forecasts suggest temperatures could begin to climb again as we enter July. Here is everything you need to know about another upcoming heatwave.

Although a return to heatwave conditions is looking increasingly likely for some areas,  the likelihood of such extreme high temperatures or high levels of humidity as last week is currently low.

The UK just experienced it’s hottest June day on record with temperatures topping 36°C in some parts of the country. And while Britain has experienced hotter weather before, like the heatwave in July 2022, something about this one has felt particularly grim-humidity. But why does this make a difference? You can read Clare Wilson’s full article on The i Paper’s website. #heatwave #ukheatwave

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