'Thank you Mr President '

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Written by Reverend Jesse Jackson

Barack Obama will step down as President of the United States on January 20, when Donald Trump will be sworn in as the 45th President to enter the White House. Here, veteran civil rights leader Reverend Jesse Jackson, looks back at Obama’s legacy

THE FINAL days of the Barack Obama presidency are upon us.

His popularity is rising with the economy, and with the increasingly stark contrasts to his successor. It is worth being clear about the legacy that he leaves behind.

Obama came to office facing the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. The global financial system teetered on collapse, the auto industry faced bankruptcy and the economy was shedding 400,000 jobs a day.

He also inherited the catastrophe George Bush had created with the debacle in Iraq and government misrule dramatised by the shame of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.

Now, eight years later, more than 15 million jobs have been created and the private sector has seen job growth for a record 81 consecutive months. Wages are beginning to rise, after long years of stagnation or worse. The auto industry has enjoyed some of its most prosperous years.

This isn’t an accident. Obama helped rescue the economy by passing the largest stimulus in history, the most ambitious financial reform since the 1930s, as well as and daring and direct intervention to save the auto industry. Economic growth helped lower the annual budget deficit to less than half the level he inherited.

Obama also passed the largest health care reforms in six decades, providing health insurance for 20 million Americans. His reforms saved those with pre-existing conditions, provided the young with protection under their parents’ programmes and (although most Americans don’t realise it), slowed the rise of health care costs dramatically.

Running for re-election in 2012, Obama recognised that income inequality had become “the defining issue of our time”. With his progressive tax reforms both in his health care plan and in the partial repeal of the top-end Bush tax cuts, and with expanded tax credits for low-income workers and families with children, Obama made a significant beginning in addressing that inequality.

Exposure

Abroad, Obama struggled against great opposition to reduce America’s exposure in the wars without end in the Middle East. His nuclear agreement with Iran not only dismantled its nuclear weapons capable facilities, it also provided the most comprehensive and aggressive verification mechanisms in the history of arms control.

In opening relations with Cuba, he helped reduce America’s isolation in our own hemisphere and made the historic turn from a policy of embargo that had failed for five decades.

His most historic contribution was to understand the clear and present danger of catastrophic climate change. The agreement with China and subsequent Paris Agreement cemented a global consensus on the need for bolder action on global warming. On his watch, America began to reduce its reliance on coal and its greenhouse gas emissions.

Obama won a majority of the votes in both his election and re-election, something neither his predecessor nor successor achieved. He governed with grace and dignity, despite grotesque and too often racist provocations.

His family provided a model for all Americans, with Michelle winning hearts across the country. He and his administration were remarkably free of scandal. His administration demonstrated once more that competence could be valued in Washington.

He did all of this while facing unprecedented, unrelenting partisan obstruction, with the Republican leader of the Senate opposing him at every turn, intent on making him a one-term president. In part because of that opposition, much remained undone. The stimulus would have been larger and the recovery stronger except for Republican opposition. The national minimum wage would have been raised.

A national infrastructure project to rebuild America would have been launched. Progress on making America the leader of the green revolution, the next global industrial revolution, would have been greater. Guantanamo, the shameful prison in Cuba, would have been closed. The Voting Rights Act would have been revived, and much more.

For most Americans, the recovery was slow. For many, it was invisible. Donald Trump won the election promising working people a better deal. He appealed to our weariness with war, suggesting a less interventionist policy. He played upon divisions, rousing fears about immigrants and Muslims. He pledged to “Make America Great Again,” in part by undoing everything Obama did.

So, it is worth marking what Trump will inherit, as we head into what is already a rocky and tempestuous presidency. Unemployment under five per cent. Eighty-one months of jobs growth and counting. Average wages rising at 2.4 per cent over the last year. Growth at 3.5 per cent over the last full quarter. Inflation at two per cent. 20 million more Americans with health insurance. America, one of the global leaders in the green industrial revolution. A president respected at home and abroad, known for his thoughtfulness and his great eloquence.

Let us hope that Trump can build on that legacy, and not lead us into a far deeper hole.

Reverend Jesse Jackson is President and Founder of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. Keep up with Reverend Jackson and the work of the Coalition at www.rainbowpush.org.

This article appears courtesy of Black Press USA.

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