At this late stage of his presidency, Barack Obama told HBO’s Bill Simmons he’s become like NFL quarterback Aaron Rodgers when he’s in the pocket: “You can’t get distracted by what’s around you, you’ve got to be looking downfield.”
In a wide-ranging interview published by GQ magazine on Tuesday, Obama reflected on what he got wrong during his first years in office, why he’s feeling more confident in his role right now and what phone calls he’s willing to take while on a date with first lady Michelle Obama — for the record, that’s his daughters Malia and Sasha, his mother-in-law, his chief of staff and National Security Adviser Susan Rice.
Obama told Simmons he has a “case to make now that was harder to make earlier in my presidency.”
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“We had confidence, for example, that the economic decisions that we made to stabilize the financial system and pass Wall Street reform and raise taxes on the wealthiest and pass health care—that would have a payoff. But because we had been in such a deep hole, we had to be careful about crowing success when people weren’t feeling it. And it wasn’t really until around 2014 where the attitude of the American people was, ‘The economy’s improving, I’m feeling better.’”
Still, Obama said he had tried to deliver good news with caveats so he doesn’t appear to gloat, but at the same time he feels “looser.”
“Not only do you not look like you have any fear, but you actually don’t have any fear. And I don’t at this point. The bets we made early on have paid off. Some of it does have to do with luck,” he said.
Nothing%20beats%20watching%20your%20children%20become%20smarter%20and%20cooler%20than%20you%20are.’
Earlier in his presidency, Obama says cockiness derailed his agenda. “I think a certain arrogance crept in, in the sense of thinking as long as we get the policy ready, we didn’t have to sell it,” the president admitted.









