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Obama Explains What His Presidency Did For the Black Community

In an interview with the Breakfast Club, Former President Barack Obama discusses highlights from his new memoir, A Promised Land.

During the interview, Obama responds to one of the biggest critiques of his presidency; what did he do to help black Americans.

“I understand it because when I got elected there was so much excitement and hope,” Obama says. “And I also think that we genuinely view the presidency as almost like a monarchy. In the sense of ‘once the president’s there, he can just do whatever needs to get done and if he’s not doing it, it must be because he didn’t want to do it.”

DJ Envy responds, using President Trump as an example of a President doing as they wish.

“Because he breaks the law or disregards the constitution,” Obama says to Envy.

Obama uses statistics to explain the wins the Black community achieved while he was in office.

“By the time I left office,” the former president explains “you had seen three million African Americans have healthcare that did have it before. You had seen the incarceration rate- the number of Black folks in prison- drop for the first time in years. You had seen the juvenile correction system, 30 percent fewer people in there. You had seen Black poverty drop to its lowest level since 1968. You had seen Black businesses rise. You had seen Black income go up.”

“Millions of Black Folks were better off at the time I left office than when I came in,” he adds.

After restating the statistics, the breakfast club co-host Charlamagne tha God askes, “I think people want to know what did you do specifically for Black people… the systemic things that we’ve done to Black people to put us in these positions, we need specific systemic things to get us out,” Charlamagne questions.

“But what I’m saying Charlamagne is, Black poverty dropped faster than everybody else,” the former president further explains. “Black incomes went up more than a lot of other folks.”

“The truth of the matter is,” the former president adds. “There is no way in eight years to make up for 200 years.”

Watch the full interview below.

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