logo
Obama urges demoralized Dems to stop ‘navel-gazing' and ‘whining' and to ‘toughen up'

Obama urges demoralized Dems to stop ‘navel-gazing' and ‘whining' and to ‘toughen up'

New York Post16 hours ago
Former President Barack Obama wants Democrats to stop acting like babies.
Obama privately implored bigwigs in his own party to dispense with the handwringing, 'toughen up' and begin taking actions to 'stand up for the things that you think are right,' during a fundraiser in New Jersey on Friday.
'I think it's going to require a little bit less navel-gazing and a little less whining and being in fetal positions. And it's going to require Democrats to just toughen up,' the 44th president said of the path ahead for Dems, according to excerpts of his speech obtained by CNN.
Since President Trump roared back to the White House in January, Democrats have seemingly been battered by a sharp blow to morale and struggled to find their footing. Trump has publicly gloated that Democrats are 'in total disarray' and needled them for not having a clear leader.
Republicans, by contrast, have effectively been led by Trump since the 2016 election cycle. Obama, who has largely laid low since departing the White House in 2017, downplayed concerns about Democratic leadership and implied that the party just needs to become more confident in itself.
3 Former President Barack Obama bluntly tells Democrats to 'toughen up.'
Ron Sachs – CNP for NY Post
3 The former president has kept a fairly low profile during the Trump era.
AFP via Getty Images
'Stop looking for the quick fix. Stop looking for the messiah. You have great candidates running races right now. Support those candidates,' Obama urged, according to excerpts of his remarks.
The former president argued that the upcoming off-year elections in New Jersey and Virginia, often seen as key bellwethers for midterm cycles, will be 'a big jumpstart for where we need to go.'
'Make sure that the DNC [Democratic National Committee] has what it needs to compete in what will be a more data-driven, more social-media-driven cycle, which will cost some money and expertise and time,' Obama said.
His remarks came at a fundraiser held by New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and his wife at their home. The event raked in an estimated $2.5 million, CNN said. Some of that haul will go to boost Rep. Mikie Sherrill's gubernatorial bid in the Garden State.
The former president hailed Sherrill and Virginia Democratic gubernatorial nominee Abigail Spanberger as 'powerful spokespersons for a pragmatic, commonsense desire to help people and who both have remarkable track records of service.'
At the fundraiser, which was attended by party bigs such as DNC Chair Ken Martin, Obama also stressed that 'we've got to start building up our coffers.' The Democratic Party apparatus has been forced to take out a line of credit because of dwindling finances.
3 Obama stresses that Democrats also need to focus on building up their war chest.
AP
The Democrats have been butting heads over which tactics to use to counter Republicans in recent months. The DNC, for example, had been plagued by controversy over former Vice Chair David Hogg's push to meddle in party primaries to back more feisty candidates. Hogg has since left the DNC.
'You know, don't tell me you're a Democrat, but you're kind of disappointed right now so you're not doing anything. No, now is exactly the time that you get in there and do something,' Obama said.
'Don't say that you care deeply about free speech and then you're quiet. No, you stand up for free speech when it's hard. When somebody says something that you don't like, but you still say, 'You know what, that person has the right to speak.' … What's needed now is courage.'
Obama also briefly took on some of the ideological rights in the party, such as the feud between its far-left faction and the moderates who focus on the so-called 'abundance agenda,' which emphasizes deregulating the government from itself to produce more supply.
'There's been, I gather, some argument between the left of the party and people who are promoting the quote-unquote abundance agenda. Listen, those things are not contradictory. You want to deliver for people and make their lives better? You got to figure out how to do it,' Obama stressed.
'I don't want to know your ideology, because you can't build anything. It does not matter.'
Obama also admitted that he's not been 'surprised by what Trump's done' or that 'there are no more guardrails within the Republican Party' and urged key institutions such as law firms to fight back.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jon Stewart Hits 'MAGA World' With A Brutal Wake-Up Call About The Real Trump
Jon Stewart Hits 'MAGA World' With A Brutal Wake-Up Call About The Real Trump

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jon Stewart Hits 'MAGA World' With A Brutal Wake-Up Call About The Real Trump

'Daily Show' host Jon Stewart on Monday tore into President Donald Trump for backtracking on the release of files related to late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Trump is demanding that people stop talking about Epstein, causing some of the president's most loyal supporters to turn on him. 'Surprisingly, MAGA world, for the first time in memory, isn't just slavishly acquiescing to Trump's reality distortion field,' he said, and played clips of figures on the right trashing the president after the Justice Department said last week that the long-rumored Epstein client list doesn't exist. Stewart said MAGA world is 'in open revolt,' with some even burning their infamous red hats. 'MAGA is losing their shit right now,' he said. 'They cannot believe what they're seeing. Trump is lying? Dismissing reasonable concerns as bad-faith whining? attacking anyone who disagrees?' He offered a message directly to the MAGA-verse. 'As a resident of blue America, can I just say right now to my red colleagues that my pronouns are 'how does' and 'my ass taste,'' he said. 'The Trump that you're just experiencing now, to your deep disappointment and dismay, is the dude we've been dealing with the whole fucking time. You just didn't realize it 'cuz he's been nice to you.' As an example, he showed how Trump treats disasters in red states very differently from those in blue ones, offering quick assistance in Texas after last week's deadly floods, but threatening to withhold aid in California during the fires earlier this year. 'Whatever you need, daddy's here ― because you're the child he wanted,' Stewart told the red states. But the blue ones? 'We're Eric,' he said. See more in his Monday night monologue:

Trump firing Fed Chair Powell could trigger 'Nixon shock,' warns analyst
Trump firing Fed Chair Powell could trigger 'Nixon shock,' warns analyst

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump firing Fed Chair Powell could trigger 'Nixon shock,' warns analyst

Trump firing Fed Chair Powell could trigger 'Nixon shock,' warns analyst originally appeared on TheStreet. Bitcoin passed $120,000 this week, surpassing the market capitalization of Amazon, making Bitcoin's market cap the fifth largest in the world. At the same time, nearly $4 billion has flown into crypto investment products, and altcoins have picked up momentum. But this turn is not just technical. It is becoming even more tied to macro signals with the whispers of where the future of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell may end up. CPI data comes out on Tuesday, and President Trump continues to mention a possible interest rate cut by the Fed, forcing investors to adjust a wild card has surfaced! President Donald Trump may remove Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, a trade that Deutsche Bank strategist George Saravelos states is one of the most underpriced risks in the markets. According to Saravelos, if Jerome Powell is fired, the market could be disrupted within 24 hours. As per WSJ, Saravelos told clients in a note that dismissing Powell could lead to a 3%–4% fall in the dollar and push U.S. Treasury yields up 30–40 bps in a matter of hours. The ramifications would stretch well beyond U.S. borders, he said, noting the threat to swap lines and overall market confidence in U.S. monetary policy. In crypto circles, analysts spoke exclusively to TheStreet Roundtable. They said such a move would further amplify the asset class's core narrative. "Removing the Fed Chair would be a nuclear event for market confidence," said Mike Cahill, CEO of Douro Labs. 'Crypto thrives when people stop believing the old guard has things under control." According to Greg Magadini, Director of Derivatives at Amberdata, Trump's advocacy for lower rates, especially as the U.S. is trying to manage debt costs, could be disastrous if long-term yields rise due to a loss of faith in the independence of the Fed. However, Magadini believes that "It would be a huge boon to Bitcoin, gold, and other hard assets—a disaster for fixed income and the dollar." He compared it to Nixon's decision to go off the gold standard in Richard Nixon's 1971 decision to devalue the dollar and unpeg it from gold caused global financial turmoil and a gold price boom, commonly known as the 'Nixon shock'. As markets prepare for Tuesday's inflation data, Bitcoin's current price is more than just ETF inflows as analysts are betting on a much larger macro dislocation. Whichever way Powell decides to go, markets are already pricing in a change. At press time Bitcoin is trading at $119,803.91, up nearly 1% in the last 24 hours, as per Kraken's price page. Trump firing Fed Chair Powell could trigger 'Nixon shock,' warns analyst first appeared on TheStreet on Jul 14, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Jul 14, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store