Former President Barack Obama Talks Post-White House Work

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Former President Barack Obama hosts a conversation on civic engagement and community organizing, Monday, April 24, 2017, at the University of Chicago in Chicago. It's the former president's first public event of his post-presidential life in the place where he started his political career. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
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Former President Barack Obama said Monday that his post-White House work will focus heavily on encouraging young people to become politically involved during his first public event since leaving office.

“The single most important thing I can do is to help in any way I can prepare the next generation of leadership to take up the baton and to take their own crack at changing the world,” Obama said at a forum at the University of Chicago.

Obama listed off a number of issues he intends to work on, including gerrymandering, criminal justice reform, and money in politics. But inspiring young people, Obama said, is “the most important thing I can do for my next job. “What is preventing us from tackling [challenges] and making more progress really has to do with our politics and our civic life,” he said.

Obama did not mention President Donald Trump, who is just days away from reaching his 100th day in office. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released Sunday found Trump’s job approval rating at 40 percent, the lowest mark of any new president in the poll’s history. The former president has largely avoided talking about his successor, but through a spokesman has denied Trump’s claim that Obama ordered surveillance of Trump Tower and said he “fundamentally disagrees” with the Trump administration’s temporary immigration ban from six Muslim-majority countries.

 

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