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		Obama rebukes Trump and Republicans for 
		'abuses of power,' urges Democrats to vote 
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		 [September 08, 2018] 
		By John Whitesides 
 (Reuters) - Former U.S. President Barack 
		Obama assailed President Donald Trump and Republicans on Friday, urging 
		Democrats to deliver a check on the administration's "abuses of power" 
		and restore a sense of sanity to politics by voting in November's 
		elections.
 
 In an unusually blistering attack on his successor, Obama said Americans 
		were living in dangerous times and accused Republicans of threatening 
		democracy, dividing the country, undermining global alliances and 
		cozying up to Russia.
 
 "In two months we have the chance, not the certainty, but the chance to 
		restore some semblance of sanity to our politics," he said in a speech 
		at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. "There is actually 
		only one check on bad policy and abuses of power, and that's you and 
		your vote."
 
 Both parties are urging their core supporters to get to the polls for 
		the Nov. 6 midterm elections, when Democrats need to pick up 23 seats in 
		the House of Representatives and two seats in the Senate to gain 
		majorities in Congress and slam the brakes on Trump's agenda.
 
 Obama, who had frustrated some Democrats by keeping a relatively low 
		profile since leaving office in January 2017, accused Republicans of 
		being unwilling to safeguard democracy or offer a check on Trump's 
		policies or worst instincts.
 
		
		 
		
 He said voters would have to do it instead.
 
 "In the end, the threat to our democracy doesn't just come from Donald 
		Trump or the current batch of Republicans in Congress," he said. "The 
		biggest threat to our democracy is indifference. The biggest threat to 
		our democracy is cynicism."
 
 Trump was dismissive of Obama's speech.
 
 "I'm sorry, I watched it but I fell asleep," he said during a fundraiser 
		in North Dakota. "I found that he's very, very good for sleeping."
 
 The November elections have been seen as a referendum on Trump, who has 
		fulfilled campaign promises to cut taxes and regulations but who faces a 
		widening special counsel probe of Russian interference in the 2016 
		presidential election and growing questions about his fitness for 
		office, even by some within his administration.
 
 Obama ridiculed Trump for taking credit for economic gains that began 
		under Obama's administration, and said Trump was exploiting cultural 
		fears and economic anger that have grown in recent years amid societal 
		upheavals.
 
 "It did not start with Donald Trump. He is a symptom, not the cause," 
		Obama said. "He's just capitalizing on resentments that politicians have 
		been fanning for years."
 
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			Former U.S. President Barack Obama speaks at the University of 
			Illinois Urbana-Champaign in Urbana, Illinois, U.S., September 7, 
			2018. REUTERS/John Gress 
            
 
            'RESENTMENT AND PARANOIA'
 Until now, Obama had been reluctant to criticize his successor 
			publicly, although last week he appeared to chide Trump, without 
			naming him, in a eulogy for the late Republican Senator John McCain.
 
 But he dropped that political reticence in Illinois, the state where 
			he launched his own political career, saying a vote against 
			Republicans could restore "honesty and decency and lawfulness" to 
			government.
 
 "If you thought that elections don't matter, I hope these last two 
			years have corrected that impression," he said. "The politics of 
			division and resentment and paranoia has unfortunately found a home 
			in the Republican Party."
 
 Republicans shrugged off Obama's criticism.
 
 "In 2016, voters rejected President Obama's policies and his 
			dismissiveness towards half the country. Doubling down on that 
			strategy won't work in 2018 either," said Republican National 
			Committee spokesman Michael Ahrens.
 
 If Democrats win control of one or both chambers in Congress in 
			November, they would be able not just to stymie Trump's agenda but 
			to launch investigations of the Trump administration.
 
 Trump told supporters in Montana on Thursday that Republicans needed 
			to maintain control of Congress to stave off possible impeachment 
			proceedings against him, although Democrats have played down any 
			discussion of that approach.
 
 "If it (impeachment) does happen, it's your fault, because you 
			didn't go out to vote. OK? You didn't go out to vote. You didn't go 
			out to vote. That's the only way it could happen," Trump told the 
			rally.
 
 Obama will hit the campaign trail on Saturday, appearing at a 
			campaign event in southern California before heading to Ohio next 
			week and to Illinois and Pennsylvania later in the month.
 
             
			In August, Obama endorsed 81 Democratic contenders in 14 states, 
			emphasizing young, diverse candidates running for state-level 
			offices in an attempt to help new party leaders establish 
			themselves.
 (Reporting by John Whitesides; Additional reporting by Susan Heavey 
			in Washington and Steve Holland in North Dakota; Editing by Frances 
			Kerry and Dan Grebler)
 
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