The MeidasTouch Podcast - Obama Torches Trump in Comeback Speech
Episode Date: August 16, 2025MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas report on the surprise comeback speech by former President Obama signaling to many he is going to return to the fight more publicly against Trump. Visit https://SIMPLI...SAFE.com/MEIDAS to protect your home with 50% OFF any NEW SimpliSafe system with a Select Professional Monitoring plan. Visit https://meidasplus.com for more! Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Coalition of the Sane: https://meidasnews.com/tag/coalition-of-the-sane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Chris Hadfield, astronaut and citizen of planet Earth.
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He's back.
Former President Obama is breaking his silence and in an incredible surprise speech,
he's destroying Donald Trump for Trump's attack on our voting rights.
Former President Obama just gave a speech.
in front of a group made up of Texas state Democratic legislators and former President Obama
talked about how the United States was once the envy of the world when it came to voting rights
and how it was authoritarian regimes, dictatorships across the world that would rig their
elections and how the rest of the world used to look to the United States as a shining
example of the way democracy is supposed to work until Donald Trump
destroyed it. Let's see what former President Obama said. Let's play it. You've got countries all
around the world where the elections are fixed. And whoever's in charge suppresses and makes it
hard for the opposition to compete. And we used to be a shining example to those countries.
And people would aspire to the kind of true democracy that America had. And we need to
need to get back to that. Because that's not just a Democratic or Republican idea. That's an
American idea. That's what we're fighting for. In addition, former President Obama also talked about
how it is so critical right now to stand up for voting rights as Republicans realize that their
ideas are failing, that Americans don't like their ideas. So they have to rig the game, play
this clip. The problem that we've been seeing, not just recently, but this goes back a while,
is that the Republicans increasingly recognize their ideas won't sell. Now, let me show you a
longer portion of President Obama's speech before these Texas Democratic legislators play this
clip. But I am more grateful to you and the rest of the delegation for your sacrifice and what
you've done. And it is important for you to understand that highlighting what is
happening in Texas has galvanized and mobilized folks across the country. So I think in these
kinds of battles, there's a tendency sometimes to be frustrated because the game's a little
fixed in Texas, you know, legislative maps have been drawn in ways that entrench one party
rather than creating an even playing field. And so sometimes there might have been a temptation
to just kind of sit back and let it happen. And I think to thanks to the leadership of people
like you, the leadership of leader Wu, all of the members who have taken this stand,
were slowly waking people up to the realities of what's happening right now.
And let me just say a little bit about this, and then I'll turn it over to Attorney General
Holder.
both he and I believe that the right way to do democracy
is not to have the people who are already in office select
who's going to vote for them,
but have the people of America vote and select who's going to represent them.
That's right, yeah.
And it would be our preference
that that was done in a non-biased way
that an independent commission
or some sort of neutral approach was taken
so that Democrats and Republicans
compete fairly.
The lines aren't drawn to advantage one party or another
and the people decide
based on their ideas.
The problem that we've been seen,
not just recently, but this goes back a while,
is that the Republicans increasingly recognize
their ideas won't sell.
So we've got to fix the game a little bit.
And by drawing mats that splinter
Democratic voting blocks by packing in Democrats
into one district so that they don't have
influence in other districts. All those things can have an impact of weakening the impact of
Democratic votes and strengthening and increasing the influence of Republican voters. And
that's not fair. That's not how democracy is supposed to work. The thing that we've also
come to recognize, though, and I think Eric, who's been working on this redistricting issue for
almost a decade now, what we all recognize is we can't let a systematic assault on
democracy just happen and stand by. And so with, because of your actions, because of your
courage, what you've seen is California responding, other states looking at what they can do
offset this mid-decade gerrymandering that is highly irregular and is not what we should be
doing to balance out the maps for this upcoming election. And my hope is that rather than have
a race to the bottom where every district is predetermined based on how it's drawn, that
over time, the American people, ideally with the help of the courts, realizes that there's a
better way. And I think that will happen, but it requires civic education, it requires
mobilization, it requires activation of the sort that you have just described and that you
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Because, and I'll close with this, I think there's been a tendency.
And I was born in 1961.
And just looking at the room there, that means I might be the oldest person up in here,
except for Eric Holder, who's the old, he's really old, even though, you know, he looks good.
But when I think about 1961, you know, the voting rights hadn't yet passed.
Civil Rights Act 10 yet passed.
March on Washington happened when I was a baby, a toddler.
And so because of the struggles and the fights
and because of the courts recognizing
they had a role to play in strengthening rather than weakening democracy,
our democracy got systematically stronger during my lifetime.
And most of the lifetimes of most of the people
who are in that conference room that you guys are sitting in.
The problem is I think there's a tendency to take it for granted.
And I think we became a little bit complacent over the years.
We assumed that things would continue to get better,
that our democracy would become more inclusive,
that it would become more fair,
that we'd make it easier for people to vote
rather than harder for people to vote,
that the votes would be counted rather than suppressed.
And what we forgot is that history doesn't always move in a straight line
and it's not always two steps forward and another two steps forward.
Sometimes it's two steps forward and a step back.
And we're at a moment right now where not just gerrymandering,
but efforts at voter suppression, efforts at questioning the results of elections,
efforts at the executive branch unilaterally doing things that bypass Congress and the
people's representatives, militarization of cities, politicization of our justice departments
and our military. Those are trend lines that remind us,
that this precious democracy that we've got is not a given.
It's not self-executing.
It requires us to fight for it.
It requires us to stand up for it.
And so as tired as y'all may be and missing home
and ready to get a change of clothes
because, you know, you didn't pack enough and all that,
I want all of you to be returning, feeling invigorated, and know that you have helped to lead
what is going to be a long struggle. It's not going to be resolved right away. And it's going to
require ultimately the American people understanding the states and realizing that we cannot
take our freedoms and our democracy for granted.
You've helped set the tone for that, and I'm grateful for it.
And here is the incredible way that Obama closes this speech, let's play it.
And maybe one last thing I want to point out, because obviously we're talking to Democrats.
But the stakes that are involved right now actually impact Republicans as well.
They don't know yet.
You know, the Republican Party started as a party that was the party of Lincoln.
Illinois republicanism was about expanding and protecting the union and democracy.
and perfecting it.
And when I got to Washington,
when I was in the state legislature like all of you,
there were differences between Democrats and Republicans,
but there was still the capacity to work together.
And when I got to the Senate,
there were Republicans who I disagreed with on certain issues,
but there was an agreement on the rules
and the quorum and conduct.
that there were some things that were bigger than party.
And I think there are still a bunch of Republicans out there,
voters, as well as some of your colleagues, some people in Washington,
who would like to see a return to a sense of fairness
and a sense of independence
where a Republican legislature,
just like a Democratic legislator,
could listen to their district
and the people they represent
and sometimes break with the White House
and sometimes do things based on their conscience
and not try to fix the rules
or rig the rules in ways that just shoved through
the gender of a narrow faction.
And when we have fair voting rights
and we have fair maps
and we're fairly competing,
that's good for everybody,
not just one side.
And that's what we should be aspiring to over the long term.
is a situation in which
there are rules
that are fair for everybody
and then we compete
just like a basketball game
we started off talking about
George Gervum
we wouldn't want to be in a game
where if one team
gets down suddenly they get to change the rules
suddenly their
baskets count for
four points and yours only count for two
You won't want to be in a basketball game
where the other team starts to lose
and suddenly they want to fire the ref
and put in their own cousin
to referee the game.
And so
the beauty of our democracy, just like
any other system we build
is when
we protect the integrity of the process.
And that's what's at stake here is the integrity of the process.
And when you have a process that has integrity,
when you have a democracy that has integrity,
then sometimes you may lose an issue.
Sometimes you may lose a vote.
Sometimes the other side wins an election.
and they do some things that you don't like
but you know because it's fair
if you can persuade the people next time
then you can take the country in a better direction
that's what we need
that's what this country stands for
that's why it's been the envy of the world
you've got countries all around the world
where the elections are fixed
and whoever's in charge suppresses
and makes it hard for the opposition to
compete. And we used to be a shining example to those countries. And people would aspire
to the kind of true democracy that America had. And we need to get back to that. Because
that's not just a Democratic or Republican idea. That's an American idea. That's what we're
fighting for. All right. I love you all.
words there by former President Obama. Tell me what you think. I'd like to see more speeches by
him, if I'm being honest. I'd like to see him out there more because every time he speaks,
it's so on point, it's so inspiring. Let me know what you think. Leave comments below. Thanks for
watching. Hit subscribe. Let's get to 6 million subscribers. The truth is more important than ever.
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