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Obama Criticizes Erosion of Decorum Over Racist Trump Video

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Former President Barack Obama addressed a controversial video shared on Donald Trump's social media, highlighting a significant decline in political decorum and "shame." The video, depicting the Obamas as apes, drew widespread condemnation from both Democrats and Republicans.


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During an appearance on a podcast with Brian Tyler Cohen, Obama expressed concerns about the current political discourse. The offending clip, included in a video on Trump's Truth Social account, was set to the song "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" and accompanied baseless claims of voter fraud in the 2020 election.

The video sparked outrage, including from Republican Senator Tim Scott, who criticized it as "the most racist thing" emerging from the White House. Initially, the video was defended by the White House as provoking "fake outrage," but was later deleted and attributed to a staff member.

Obama did not mention Trump by name but emphasized that the behavior reflects a troubling broader trend in America. He noted that while such antics gain attention, they serve as distractions. Despite the noise, Obama remains hopeful, citing his travels across the country where he meets people who still believe in "decency, courtesy, kindness."

He described the current political and media environment as a "clown show," with a notable absence of propriety and respect for the office previously maintained by public officials. Obama pointed out that the lack of shame in politics marks a shift from past standards.

In the podcast, Obama also honored peaceful protesters opposing immigration operations, discussed issues like electoral redistricting, and shared updates on his presidential library set to open in Chicago next year.

Trump, when asked about the video, claimed he "didn't see" the racist part but refused to apologize, stating that he made no mistake. The incident highlights the deepening divide and the erosion of respectful political engagement in America.

Key Takeaways

  • Obama condemns the degradation of political decorum over a racist video.

  • The video, depicting the Obamas as apes, faced bipartisan backlash.

  • Trump denies awareness of the offensive content and refuses to apologize.

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  Adapted by ASEAN Now · Source · 14 Feb 2026


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This whole episode is less about one crude video and more about what it reveals about leadership (past and present).

The video is not ambiguous. Comparing a Black former president and First Lady to apes is not satire, it is one of the oldest and ugliest racial stereotypes in Western political culture!

The fact that it circulated from an account belonging to Trump is troubling enough. The refusal to acknowledge the obvious when confronted is worse.

When Obama speaks of a loss of “shame” and decorum, he is pointing to something structural rather than personal.

For most of the post-war period, presidents understood that the office imposed constraints and that even in attacking the opposition there were lines one did not cross.

That members from both sides of the government now feel compelled to criticise the video shows just how far outside normal standards this fell.

By contrast, Trump’s response of “I didn’t see the racist part” together with and no apology follows a now-familiar pattern of deny knowledge, deflect responsibility, blame staff, move on.

It is a leadership model built on "perpetual plausible deniability". But the buck has traditionally stopped at the Resolute Desk, not at an unnamed aide’s keyboard.

What is perhaps most striking is not that partisan loyalists will defend anything, every political system has its tribalists, but that the bar for presidential conduct has shifted so dramatically that this becomes just another news cycle.

Fifty years ago, this would have ended careers. Today, it is waved away as “fake outrage”!

Obama’s broader point is harder to dismiss, when politics becomes performance art, a “clown show,” in his words outrage becomes oxygen, and responsibility becomes optional.

That may appeal to the loyal supporters, but it corrodes institutions over time.

For those of us observing from this from outside the U.S., the concern isn’t about left versus right. It’s about whether the world’s most powerful "democracy" still expects its leaders to behave like custodians of the office or merely as combatants who never concede error.

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Elect a clown: Get a circus.

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3 hours ago, Jim Waldron said:

This whole episode is less about one crude video and more about what it reveals about leadership (past and present).

The video is not ambiguous. Comparing a Black former president and First Lady to apes is not satire, it is one of the oldest and ugliest racial stereotypes in Western political culture!

The fact that it circulated from an account belonging to Trump is troubling enough. The refusal to acknowledge the obvious when confronted is worse.

When Obama speaks of a loss of “shame” and decorum, he is pointing to something structural rather than personal.

For most of the post-war period, presidents understood that the office imposed constraints and that even in attacking the opposition there were lines one did not cross.

That members from both sides of the government now feel compelled to criticise the video shows just how far outside normal standards this fell.

By contrast, Trump’s response of “I didn’t see the racist part” together with and no apology follows a now-familiar pattern of deny knowledge, deflect responsibility, blame staff, move on.

It is a leadership model built on "perpetual plausible deniability". But the buck has traditionally stopped at the Resolute Desk, not at an unnamed aide’s keyboard.

What is perhaps most striking is not that partisan loyalists will defend anything, every political system has its tribalists, but that the bar for presidential conduct has shifted so dramatically that this becomes just another news cycle.

Fifty years ago, this would have ended careers. Today, it is waved away as “fake outrage”!

Obama’s broader point is harder to dismiss, when politics becomes performance art, a “clown show,” in his words outrage becomes oxygen, and responsibility becomes optional.

That may appeal to the loyal supporters, but it corrodes institutions over time.

For those of us observing from this from outside the U.S., the concern isn’t about left versus right. It’s about whether the world’s most powerful "democracy" still expects its leaders to behave like custodians of the office or merely as combatants who never concede error.

I’ll quote you in the hope that people will read your words and think…

As you allude, politics is not football, it’s not a tribal sport.

Wouldn't want to ruin his sterling record. When has Trump ever had any decorum?

If the Obamas are apes, that makes Trump an Orangutan...

6 hours ago, unblocktheplanet said:

Wouldn't want to ruin his sterling record. When has Trump ever had any decorum?

If the Obamas are apes, that makes Trump an Orangutan...

Trump has been compared to an orangutan many times. Memes are all over the internet.

Gary Lineker sharing the Jewish rat meme.

No outrage from the hypocrite libs over any of that.

Liberals dwell in the gutter and complain when someone descends there for moment to give them a slap.

12 minutes ago, JonnyF said:

Trump has been compared to an orangutan many times. Memes are all over the internet.

Gary Lineker sharing the Jewish rat meme.

No outrage from the hypocrite libs over any of that.

Liberals dwell in the gutter and complain when someone descends there for moment to give them a slap.

I must have missed that Gary Lineker is a sitting or past POTUS

2 minutes ago, CallumWK said:

I must have missed that Gary Lineker is a sitting or past POTUS

I must have missed when that became a requirement for criticism of blatant antisemitism.

1 hour ago, JonnyF said:

Trump has been compared to an orangutan many times. Memes are all over the internet.

Gary Lineker sharing the Jewish rat meme.

No outrage from the hypocrite libs over any of that.

Liberals dwell in the gutter and complain when someone descends there for moment to give them a slap.

Happy to see your prejudice is not just Muslins but as l as o Black's, Tommy R.

30 minutes ago, JimCM said:

Happy to see your prejudice is not just Muslins but as l as o Black's, Tommy R.

Can you rewrite thst in English please, you antisemite, grooming gang apologist.

Much appreciated.

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Former President Obama continues to take the high road and to conduct himself with dignity, and decency. He defines the term "Gentleman".

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Trump speaks to ignorant folks who dream of the Confederacy (a war they lost) and slavery (a culture Lincoln closed down). No doubt they have no decorum.

Trump knows who his base is and panders to them.

Criticism of lack of decorum - from a fellow who wore a tan suit for goodness sake!

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