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Since leaving office, Obama has largely avoided weighing in on politics or how his successor is doing. But recently, with the coronavirus outbreak taking a huge toll on the country, he has become more outspoken.
Last week, on a call with roughly 3,000 former staffers, Obama said the government has taken on a “What’s in it for me?” mindset, and he called the White House’s pandemic response “an absolute chaotic disaster.”
On Saturday, in a virtual address to graduates of historically black colleges and universities, Obama broached the topic again: “This pandemic has fully, finally torn back the curtain on the idea that so many of the folks in charge know what they’re doing.”
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He didn’t name names, but the implication was clear.
Trump calling his predecessor incompetent is not new. He has railed against inheriting what he has called an ineffective and “broken” system when he came into office. He has said he won’t be asking former presidents for help because he wasn’t “going to learn much.” And in 2013, before his presidential aspirations were in the picture, Trump tweeted: “Who thinks that President Obama is totally incompetent?”
But Trump’s brief comments on Sunday come as he pushes the unfounded “Obamagate” conspiracy theory, alleging that officials in the previous administration sought to undermine Trump and target his top associates — like former national security adviser Michael Flynn — with the Russia investigation.