President Obama asked Democratic women to “choose hope” at a speech Friday before the Democratic National Committee’s Women’s Leadership Forum, where Hillary Clinton and Vice President Joe Biden spoke earlier in the day.
“You can measure how well a country does by how well it treats its women,” Obama said. “Some folks still talk about women’s issues as if they’re something separate, over there, and economics is over here – that’s nonsense. When women succeed, America succeeds. It’s pretty straightforward.”
Reprising a classic line from his first presidential campaign, Obama told the crowd that while cynicism is “fashionable these days,” it never did anything for anyone. “Cynicism is a choice. Hope is a better choice. So today, I’m asking you to do the same I thing I asked you to do in 2008 and choose hope,” the president said.
Obama also took a shot at the media’s portrayal of his administration, saying that he feels like the story of the economic recovery under his watch has not been adequately portrayed to the public. “There are times when I’m watching the news and I wonder if they’ve been paying attention,” he said before ticking off indicators showing the country is improving after the Great Recession.
“By almost every economic measure, we are better off today than we were when I took office,” he said.
The fundraising conference brought together a number of high-powered Democratic politicians, thinkers and donors.
The Women’s Leadership Forum started in 1993 when Tipper Gore, the wife of Vice President Al Gore, and a handful of other women came together to find ways to give to boost the role of in the national party. What grew out of that was a fundraising apparatus, but it’s since evolved into a larger effort that includes receptions, briefings, and this annual conference, which Obama keynoted.









