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Obama says Republican Party accepts ‘unrecognizable and unacceptable’ positions

Obama says Republican Party accepts 'unrecognizable and unacceptable' positions thumbnail

Former President Obama told CNN on Monday that Republicans have been forced into accepting “unrecognizable and unacceptable” positions within their party.

Speaking with CNN anchor Anderson Cooper, Obama said he never thought the “dark spirits” that began to rise among Republicans during his two-terms as president would later become heart of the base of the party.

“I thought that there were enough guardrails institutionally that even after Trump was elected that you would have the so-called Republican established who would say, ‘Ok, you know, it’s a problem if the White House… doesn’t seem to be concerned about Russian meddling,’ or ‘It’s a problem if we have a president who’s saying that… Neo-Nazis marching in Charlottesville there’s good people on both sides…'”

Fmr. Pres. Obama to Anderson Cooper on the GOP: “I thought that there were enough guardrails institutionally that even after Trump was elected that you would have the so-called Republican establishment [step in]…we did not see that Republican establishment say hold on, time out” pic.twitter.com/Ir717YJTG1

— CNN (@CNN) June 8, 2021

Instead of calling out questionable behavior, Obama said the Republican establishment was “cowed into accepting” the statements that “would be unrecognizable and unacceptable even five years ago or a decade ago.”

“We have to worry,” Obama told Cooper, “when one of our major political parties is willing to embrace a way of thinking about our democracy that would be unrecognizable and unacceptable even five years ago or a decade ago.”

Former President Barack Obama

Barack Hussein ObamaObama says Republican Party accepts ‘unrecognizable and unacceptable’ positions Biden shifts from Obama on Cuba post-Florida losses Biden’s no-drama White House chief says, “We have to worry when one of our major political parties is willing to embrace a way of thinking about our democracy that would be unrecognizable and unacceptable even five years ago or a decade ago.” pic.twitter.com/uKtzcHbozW

— CNN Politics (@CNNPolitics) June 8, 2021

While some Republicans at first balked at the mayhem that overtook the Capitol on Jan. 6, resulting in lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence

Michael (Mike) Richard PenceObama says Republican Party accepts ‘unrecognizable and unacceptable’ positions Trump: ‘Too soon to tell’ if Pence would be running mate if he seeks White House in 2024 Axios CEO says GOP before Trump will not return scrambling for safety as a pro-Trump mob breached the Capitol building, many later walked back their comments and criticisms of Trump.

“And then poof, suddenly everybody was back in line,” Obama said.

“I didn’t expect that there would be so few people who would say, ‘Well I don’t mind losing my office because this is too important, America’s too important, our democracy is too important,'” Obama said. “We didn’t see that.”

The former president said he still hoped that “the tides will turn,” but added “it doesn’t happen just automatically.”

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