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President Obama motivates voters at Congressional Black Caucus dinner

9/24/2016, 9:54 a.m.
President Obama had barely begun his remarks Saturday night before shouts of “I love you!” came from the audience, tributes ...

By Hazel Trice Edney

WASHINGTON

President Obama had barely begun his remarks Saturday night before shouts of “I love you!” came from the audience, tributes to his final speech to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Annual Phoenix Awards Dinner.

He returned the words, but did not linger. He quickly moved to the business at hand — hammering the urgency for black voters to support Democrat Hillary Clinton at the polls Nov. 8, delivering arguably his most powerful address to the “conscious of the Congress.”

With thunder in his voice, President Obama said to repeated applause, “There’s no such thing as a vote that doesn’t matter! It all matters! And after we have achieved historic turnout in 2008 and 2012, especially in the African-American community, I will consider it a personal insult, an insult to my legacy, if this community lets down its guard and fails to activate itself in this election. You want to give me a good sendoff? Go vote! And I’m going to be working as hard as I can these next seven weeks to make sure folks do.”

As billionaire businessman Republican Donald J. Trump attempts to discourage black votes from Mrs. Clinton, and supporters of former Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders express hopelessness — some vowing not to vote — President Obama reminded what’s at stake as voters choose between Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Trump.

“Hope is on the ballot. And fear is on the ballot, too,” he said.

President Obama began his speech joking that he had an “extra spring in my step tonight” because he was “so relieved that the whole birther thing is over.”

As a political maneuver, Mr. Trump held a press conference last week finally acknowledging that President Obama was born in the United States. For eight years, Mr. Trump tried to spread lies and doubt, claiming that the president was born in Kenya. CBC members responded with an impromptu press conference reminding voters of what they described as Mr. Trump’s bigotry and racism as he used the “birther” stance to undermine the legitimacy of America’s first African-American president.

Looking around the audience of thousands, President Obama seized the opportunity to thank those who had elected him twice, despite staunch racism against him.

“We do want to take this opportunity just to say thank you — say thank you for your support over the years — to say thank you for your friendship, to say thank you for your prayers,” he said to applause. “As I just look across this auditorium, there are so many people here who lifted us up, who steadied us when things got tough.”

Noting that he was glad that he was not just a symbol, but substance, he listed a number of successes of his administration:

• Fighting back from “the worst recession in 80 years” and turning around an economy that “was in free fall.”

• Helped businesses create more than 15 million new jobs.

• Expanded health care through the Affordable Care Act, under which 20 million Americans, including 3 million African-Americans, were able to get health insurance.

• Began reformation of the nation’s criminal justice system by reducing the federal prison population, ending the use of solitary confinement for juveniles, banning the box for federal employers, reinvigorating the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, pushing to ensure police and communities are working together to help make streets safe and the law is applied equally.

• Across every race and age group in America, incomes rose and poverty fell during the last year.

• Typical household incomes rose by about $2,800. More than 3.5 million people were lifted out of poverty, including 1 million children.

The audience applauded wildly as the president ticked off the successes, which he said have not been quick nor easy. He added that much of it is unfinished.

Earlier in the evening, Mrs. Clinton addressed the audience, warning against the devices of “prejudice and paranoia.”

“We need ideas, not insults, real plans to help struggling Americans in communities that have been left out and left behind, not prejudice and paranoia,” Mrs. Clinton said. “We can’t let Barack Obama’s legacy fall into the hands of someone who doesn’t understand that, whose dangerous and divisive vision for our country will drag us backward.”

Mrs. Clinton received the CBC Trailblazer Award during the event.

Pushing to continue his legacy, President Obama said voter turnout will be key in the presidential election.

“If we are going to advance the cause of justice and equality and of prosperity and freedom, then we also have to acknowledge that even if we eliminated every restriction on voting, we would still have one of the lowest voting rates among free peoples,” the president said.

“That’s not good. That is on us,” he said.

“I am reminded of all those folks who had to count bubbles in a bar of soap, beaten trying to register voters in Mississippi, risked everything so that they could pull that lever. So if I hear anybody saying their vote does not matter, that it doesn’t matter who we elect — read up on your history. It matters. We’ve got to get people to vote.”