Two Democratic presidents gathered Wednesday to pay tribute to a third, the late President John F. Kennedy, by celebrating this year’s recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom—an award Kennedy created to showcase the best of his country’s citizenry.
Despite a rumored awkward relationship between #44 and #42, Obama praised Bill Clinton and thanked him for “his patience during the endless travels of my Secretary of State” (Clinton’s wife, Hillary) and his “advice and counsel… on and off the golf course.”
Yet the two have golfed together only twice in the last five years. And according to “Double Down” by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann, they didn’t even make it through 18 holes in their first outing. “I like him… in doses,” Obama reportedly said of Clinton.
The former president, whom Obama dubbed the “Explainer-in-Chief” after his grand-slam endorsement of Obama’s health care and economic policies during the 2012 Democratic National Convention, has made headlines throughout Obama’s presidency for occasionally offering criticism in the form of unsolicited advice.
Clinton urged Obama from the sidelines last week to “honor the commitment” he made to Americans by allowing them to keep existing health care plans, which were deemed sub-standard by the federal government and therefore slated for cancellation in accordance with the Affordable Care Act.
During a closed-press Q-and-A session with John McCain in June, Clinton split with Obama on the humanitarian crisis in Syria, saying that the president should be taking greater measures to support anti-government rebels. According to a report in Politico, Clinton warned that Obama risked looking like “a total fool” if he proceeded too cautiously or paid too much attention to opinion polls which offered a resounding “no” to the question of American intervention.
During the 2012 campaign season, Clinton called the business record of Republican candidate Mitt Romney, who campaigned against Obama’s stewardship of the economy, “sterling.” The praise hit Obama at a rough time: that same month, unemployment rose for the first time in a year (to 8.2%) and showed the weakest job growth in the same amount of time.
Tensions between the two developed during the Democratic primary that pitted Obama against Clinton’s wife, Hillary, ahead of the 2008 election. And with Hillary Clinton seen as the Democratic front-runner (should she decide to contend for the White House in 2016), Bill Clinton’s criticism of Obama could be seen as his attempt to put some daylight between the two.









