The New Yorker:

The official oral history of the Obama White House is a stark and extensive reminder of the values and the principles that are being trampled.

By David Remnick

In the fall of 2016, President Barack Obama and his aides at the White House made plans for one last trip abroad, on Air Force One, to deliver a message in Greece about the origins and the persistence of democratic values. The trip was planned in a mood of confidence, even advance celebration. Hillary Clinton, Obama’s former Secretary of State and the Democratic nominee, would surely defeat Donald Trump, and Obama, who had won over an immense crowd in Berlin when he first ran for the White House, in 2008, would now have a valedictory moment near the Acropolis, where the ancient Greeks originated the business of self-rule. At least, that was the rosy view in the planning sessions.

The voters of Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Florida, however (with an assist from James Comey and Clinton’s own stumbles), put an end to those plans. After Trump won the election, Obama agreed with aides who told him that to deliver the speech outdoors with the Acropolis as a backdrop would come off as grandiose and out of key with the moment. They moved the event to a more modest, less historically resonant venue—a cultural center in Athens. The content of the speech that Obama delivered was not greatly altered. But the context of the occasion had darkened considerably. In Athens, Obama spoke out in support of NATO and postwar alliances. He affirmed the ideals and the institutions of democratic rule: the separation of powers; an independent judiciary; freedom of speech and religion; a free press designed “to expose injustice and corruption”; free and fair elections; peaceful transitions of power. In the months and years that followed, Trump showed contempt for all of these. But, when Obama delivered the speech, few recognized the full extent of the emergency to come.

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