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![](images/barack%20obama%20920-102718_small.png)
FILE -
In this
Oct. 22,
2018
file
photo,
former
President
Barack
Obama
speaks
at a
rally in
support
of
candidate
for
Senate
Jacky
Rosen
and
other
Nevada
Democrats,
in Las
Vegas.
Obama is
visiting
one of
Milwaukee's
most
impoverished
black
neighborhoods
Friday,
Oct. 26,
2018, to
campaign
for
Wisconsin
Democrats,
signaling
his
party's
effort
to
encourage
African-Americans
to vote
and
avoid
the low
turnout
that
proved
costly
for
Hillary
Clinton
in 2016.
(AP
Photo/John
Locher) |
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Obama
rips
Trump,
GOP in
fiery
speeches
for
Midwest
Dems
By
IVAN
MORENO
and
DAVID
EGGERT
APNews.com
DETROIT
- Former
President
Barack
Obama
criticized
President
Donald
Trump’s
tenure
in
office
Friday
in fiery
speeches
in
Milwaukee
and
Detroit
that
took aim
at him
and
other
Republicans
for
“making
stuff
up.”
The
speeches
were
among
Obama’s
sharpest
and most
direct
takedowns
of
Trump’s
presidency,
although
the
former
president
was
careful
to not
mention
Trump by
name. He
said the
“character
of our
country
is on
the
ballot”
in the
first
midterm
election
since
Trump
took
office.
Obama
cited a
recent
Trump
comment
that he
would
pass a
tax cut
before
the
November
election.
Obama
then
told the
crowds
in high
school
gymnasiums
that
“Congress
isn’t
even in
session
before
the
election!
He just
makes it
up!”
At
one
point
Obama
said in
Wisconsin:
“Here’s
the
thing.
Everything
I say
you can
look
up.”
Obama’s
visits
were to
urge
people
to vote
for
Michigan
and
Wisconsin’s
Democratic
candidates.
While
Trump
was
frequently
the
target
of his
criticism,
he did
not
spare
Republicans
generally
and said
they are
lying
when
they say
they
want to
protect
people
with
pre-existing
conditions
while
trying
to
repeal
the
Affordable
Care
Act.
“What we
have not
seen
before
in our
public
life is
politicians
just
blatantly,
repeatedly,
baldly,
shamelessly,
lying.
Just
making
stuff
up,”
Obama
said.
“Calling
up,
down.
Calling
black,
white.
That’s
what
your
governor
is doing
with
these
ads,
just
making
stuff
up,” he
said,
referring
to
Wisconsin
Republican
Gov.
Scott
Walker
and his
assertions
that he
wants to
protect
health
care for
those
with
pre-existing
conditions.
Walker
is being
challenged
by
Democrat
Tony
Evers.
![](images/obama%20crowd%20920-102718_small.png)
Massive crowds gather outside Cass
Tech High School ahead of former
President Barack Obama's visit and
rally Friday in Detroit where he
criticized President Donald Trump's
tenure in office Friday in a fiery
speech in Milwaukee that took aim at
him and other Republicans for
"making stuff up." (Photo by HB
Meeks/Tell Us USA News Network)
In
Michigan,
Obama
credited
Democratic
gubernatorial
candidate
Gretchen
Whitmer
for
helping
to
expand
Medicaid
and said
“few
people
fought
against
it
harder”
than her
Republican
opponent,
state
Attorney
General
Bill
Schuette.
He said
voters
can
trust
Sen.
Debbie
Stabenow
to
protect
people
with
pre-existing
conditions
because
“she was
there”
to help
pass his
health
law. She
is
facing a
challenge
from
Republican
John
James,
whom
Obama
criticized
for
saying
he backs
Trump’s
agenda
“2,000
percent.”
Obama
used the
subject
of
Hillary
Clinton’s
private
email
server
to
accuse
Republicans
of
trying
to
“scare
the heck
out of
people
before
every
election”
and also
to mock
Trump
about
the
Chinese
spying
on his
cellphone.
“In
the last
election,
it was
Hillary’s
emails.
‘This is
terrible’
...
‘This is
a
national
security
crisis.’
They
didn’t
care
about
emails
and you
know how
you
know?
Because
if they
did,
they’d
be up in
arms
right
now that
the
Chinese
are
listening
to the
president’s
iPhone
that he
leaves
in his
golf
cart.”
Obama
spoke
about
the
slow-moving
migrant
caravan
from
Central
American
bound
for the
United
States
as
another
example
of a
Republican
scare
tactic.
“Now
the
latest,
they’re
trying
to
convince
everybody
to be
afraid
of a
bunch of
impoverished,
malnourished
refugees
a
thousand
miles
away,”
he said.
“That’s
the
thing
that is
the most
important
thing in
this
election,”
he said.
“Not
health
care,
not
whether
or not
folks
are able
to
retire,
doing
something
about
higher
wages,
rebuilding
our
roads
and
bridges
and
putting
people
back to
work.”
“Suddenly,”
he
continued,
changing
his
voice to
a
high-pitch
to
strike a
mocking
tone,
“it’s
these
group of
folks.
We don’t
even
know
where
they
are.
They’re
right
down
there.”
Referring
to
Trump’s
promise
to
“drain
the
swamp,”
Obama
said
that
instead
“they
have
gone to
Washington
and just
plundered
away.”
“In
Washington
they
have
racked
up
enough
indictments
to field
a
football
team,”
he said.
“Nobody
in my
administration
got
indicted.”
Obama’s
visit to
Milwaukee
was the
first
time he
was in
the city
for a
political
event
since
March
2016,
when he
came to
celebrate
enrollment
numbers
in the
Affordable
Care
Act. He
did not
campaign
for
Hillary
Clinton
in
Wisconsin,
a state
she
narrowly
lost
that
proved
crucial
to Trump
becoming
president.
Michigan
is
another
battleground
state in
the
Midwest
that
Democrats
lost in
2016,
despite
Obama’s
visit
the day
before
the
election.
“I’m
hopeful
Michigan,”
he said.
“I’m
hopeful
that
despite
all the
noise,
despite
all the
lies,
we’re
going to
come
through
all
that.
We’re
going to
remember
who we
are, who
we’re
called
to be.
I’m
hopeful
because
out of
this
political
darkness,
I’m
seeing a
great
awakening.”
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