Alan Zendell, June 19, 2026
The opening of the Obama Presidential Center, yesterday, was in stark contrast to the daily spectacle of our current president going mad in the White House. It was the Obamas (Michele and Barack) at their best and classiest. They never mentioned Donald Trump, instead relying on media commentators to remind their audiences that Trump wasn’t invited, although Presidents Clinton, Bush, and Biden and their wives were highly visible in the crowd.
I was ambivalent about Obama’s presidency. When the former president burst on the scene as a relatively unknown, highly charismatic orator, I was conflicted. He was obviously brilliant, but I fundamentally don’t trust charisma. As Trump showed us, it can be negatively hypnotic like a cobra’s, leading to things like cults and MAGA. Except for his career-making keynote address at the 2004 Democratic Convention, Obama was a complete stranger in 2008. It wasn’t until John McCain picked Sarah Palin as his running mate that I decided to vote for Obama.
When he won, I like millions of other Americans felt a surprising elation. It wasn’t about Obama as much it was the sense that by electing him, America had demonstrated we had matured as a nation. In a single populous wave of inclusiveness, we compensated for decades of slavery, Jim Crow laws, segregation, and racism in general. Unfortunately, that turned out to be only an illusion, as the forces of darkness and exclusionism simply went underground to prepare for the coup that Trump has spent his second term attempting to execute.
I thought some of Obama’s policies as president were mistaken, but the one thing he always got right was preaching love instead of hate, equal opportunity instead of elitism, courtesy and empathy over profanity and tone-deafness. Obama’s was an honorable presidency that treated opposing voices with respect and gentility. He never accused Republicans of either treason or stupidity, never openly molested or disrespected women.
One of the happiest experiences of my life was watching the victory celebration in Grant Park in Chicago after the 2008 election. There was no ego on display, no obsession with crowd sizes, no accusing everyone else of cheating. And after all the verbal abuse Obama has taken from Trump, the most impressive thing about yesterday was that the celebration of the Obama Presidential Center was as classy, positive, and inclusive as the 2008 celebration at Grant Park.
It was a reminder of what we always thought of as presidential dignity, of which there has been no sign in Trump’s White House. Where Trump is obsessed with the word “I,” Obama stresses “We.” While Trump goes out of his way to make enemies so he can play the martyr game, Obama always talks about cooperating and working together. It’s not a coincidence that on the same day as the Obama celebration, a poll was released showing that 57% of Americans view Obama favorably while only 30% have a positive view of Trump.
This is one of those moments when I imagine how historians will view this period twenty years from now. I can hear them all screaming, “How the Hell could America have let this happen? How could we have allowed this egomaniac to completely upend our way of life while running the most corrupt, incompetent administration anyone can remember?”
There are signs that yesterday’s Obama celebration is part of a changing trend, that Americans have had enough of hate-mongering and divisiveness, of the barely hidden racism and misogyny that characterizes the Trump administration. The massive celebration in New York on the same day that brought literally millions of New Yorkers of every race, color, gender, and religion together to share in the joy of the NBA Knick’s victory was another sign that we’ve had enough of the lies, crudeness, and self-serving policies intended to further enrich Trump and his supporters while average Americans struggle to pay for health care, energy, rent, and food.
We’ve seen the same trend in special elections around the country in which MAGA Republicans have been repeatedly upset by Democrats. Trump continues to hold enormous sway among his own party, but even when the candidates he backed in the primaries won, turnout was low, while voters in Democratic primaries showed excitement and eagerness. Trump and his supporters have set the stage for a historic repudiation in the midterm elections, but that’s only half the game.
To defeat Trumpism, the Democrats are going have to convince people that they can do a better job of governing. They have to present a unified message of hope and inclusion, something they have failed at miserably during the last few cycles. Victory for the great majority of the American people is there for the taking if the Democrats can stop bickering among themselves and prove to Americans that they can be trusted to put the people’s needs first.