“This is a fun job,” President Obama tells VICE Media founder Shane Smith at the top of an 18-minute interview released Monday afternoon, responding to a softball question about the difficulties associated with the presidency.
But what follows aren’t all softballs.
“Throwing a snowball would be funny,” Smith says, referring to Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma‘s Feb. 26 stunt on the Senate floor, “if it weren’t for the fact that’s he’s chairman of the Senate committee on the environment.”
“That’s disturbing,” the president responds, adding, “I guarantee you that the Republican Party will have to change its approach to climate change because voters will insist upon it.”
WATCH: Sen. Inhofe throws a snowball in the Senate
On the subject of governmental dysfunction — specifically, the recent showdown over funding the Department of Homeland Security — the president says despite how it might appear from from the outside, it’s not simply a matter of both parties “being partisan.”
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Obama uses climate change as an example, saying, “Ninety percent of Democrats agree with me, and 90% of Republicans oppose any action on it, and a sizable portion of their party deny it even exists.” “Right now,” Obama says, “it’s not both sides arguing and creating gridlock. You’ve got one side that is denying the facts, who are often motivated principally by opposing whatever it is that I propose. That’s not inevitable to our democracy; that’s a phase the Republican Party is going through right now, and it’ll outgrow that phase.”
Obama stressed the importance of voting as a means by which to combat political gridlock, citing poor voter turnout in the 2014 midterms. “The minute you withdraw in that way from the process of politics, well, then you’re destined to have the existing power structures call the shots,” he argues.
Is federal marijuana legalization inevitable, Smith asks, citing it as “our no. 1 question.” First, Obama wants “young people” to know that it shouldn’t be their top concern; climate change is more important, he says, before condemning the “criminal justice system, generally” for “cracking down on non-violent drug offenders.” “We may actually be able to make some progress on the decriminalization side,” he says.









