In separate and unrelated appearances yesterday, former presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama both warned that the United States is being torn apart by hatreds and called for the nation to come together. Neither Bush nor Obama mentioned President Trump by name, but both speeches sounded to many like sharp critiques of the current president.
Bush, the last Republican to sit in the Oval Office, spoke out at a conference he convened in New York to support democracy. Bush defended immigration and free trade, denounced bigotry, and criticized what he called the “casual cruelty” of current public discourse. President Trump has proposed increasing American barriers to both trade and immigrants, and he has repeatedly lashed out at his opponents in an unusually blunt manner for a sitting president.
“We’ve seen nationalism distorted into nativism, forgotten the dynamism that immigration has always brought to America,” Bush said. Nativism refers to policies favoring native-born citizens over immigrants. “We’ve seen the return of isolationist sentiments, forgetting that American security is directly threatened by the chaos and despair of distant places,” Bush added.
Obama—speaking in New Jersey at a campaign rally for a Democrat running for governor—defended his record on health care at a time when Trump has been trying to dismantle it, and he also pointed to the social, economic, and racial divides that threaten American society.
“What we can’t have is the same old politics of division that we have seen so many times before that dates back centuries,” Obama said. “Some of the politics we see now, we thought we put that to bed. That has folks looking 50 years back. It’s the 21st century, not the 19th century. Come on!”
Both former presidents have largely avoided criticizing Trump since he was inaugurated in January. But the sight of the two most recent presidents back on the public stage on the same day, however coincidental, reinforced the broader alarm among establishment leaders of both parties.
“The two presidents speaking out so forcefully and eloquently is a warning that some basic principles of democracy that both parties have long supported at home and abroad are in jeopardy,” says Antony J. Blinken, who served as Obama’s deputy secretary of state and attended Bush’s speech on Thursday.
Bush also released a “call to action” report examining threats to American democracy and making recommendations for protecting U.S. institutions. The paper was drafted by Peter H. Wehner, a former adviser in his White House, and Thomas O. Melia, a former State Department official under Obama, giving it a bipartisan stamp of approval.
Asked by a reporter as he left the hall whether his message would be heard in the White House, Bush smiled, nodded slightly and said, “I think it will.”