Four years after leaving office, he’s officially the world’s most admired man. But what is Obama’s legacy? The former president talks Trump, Biden and America’s new dawn
- Extract: the anxious days running up to the 2008 presidential election
- Audio: Barack Obama reads from his memoir
If you’re a former US president, there’s one guaranteed way to be remembered fondly – make sure you’re followed by a truly awful successor. It certainly worked for Barack Obama: you only had to mention his name these last four years to send millions of Americans (and others) into a reverie of nostalgic longing. The gulf in calibre between Donald Trump and his predecessor was so wide that each day Trump sat in the Oval Office, Obama’s reputation shone a little brighter.
Not that he needed the comparison. Even before Trump took office, Obama left the White House with unusually high approval ratings: 59% of Americans thought well of him, according to Gallup – and that figure has held ever since. Outside the US, Obama recently displaced Bill Gates as the world’s most admired man, according to YouGov, which is handy as Obama is married to the world’s most admired woman.
Continue reading...from The Guardian https://ift.tt/334hQta