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Obama paints picture of resurgent America

Published: 21 Dec 2014 - 06:25 am | Last Updated: 18 Jan 2022 - 07:30 pm

WASHINGTON: After a tough year capped by a bruising defeat for his Democrats in last month’s midterm elections, no one would blame President Barack Obama if he were a bit down. 
On Friday at his year-end press conference, he was anything but down. “I’m energised. I’m excited about the prospects for the next couple of years,” Obama said.
Far from a man beaten down by partisan politics, Obama — riding high on a stronger economy, his surprise opening to Cuba and his unilateral overhaul of the immigration system — seemed more confident than ever.
“Pick any metric that you want — America’s resurgence is real. We are better off,” he said, several hours before heading to his home state of Hawaii for the holidays with his family. “We are better positioned than we have been in a very long time.”
2014 was the best year for job growth in two decades, Obama said at a decidedly upbeat press conference during which he did not address ongoing thorny nuclear talks with Iran or the controversial report on the CIA’s brutal treatment of terror suspects after the 9/11 attacks.
“In last year’s final press conference, I said that 2014 would be a year of action and would be a breakthrough year for America. And it has been,” Obama said.
The president added that he was looking forward to the “fourth quarter” of his presidency — a sports reference from an avid basketball fan and player. This year hasn’t always been as sunny.
At the end of a campaign that saw many candidates from his own party keep their distance from him, and his poll numbers waning, Obama watched the Democrats lose control of the Senate in the mid-term elections.
For the last two years of his presidency, Obama will not have it easy when dealing with a Congress run by rival Republicans. Just a few months ago, Obama seemed aloof, often hesitant — a man who has lost the fire that carried him to a historic election victory in 2008.
That image was reinforced by the pointed barbs launched by former Pentagon and CIA chief Leon Panetta, who said his former boss “relies on the logic of a law professor rather than the passion of a leader.”
For the past six weeks, however, Obama has been transformed. He has come out swinging — on net neutrality, on climate change, on immigration and, most surprisingly, on a historic shift in Cuba policy. Obama ended on a cheery note, saying that while American institutions sometimes “don’t work as well as they should... things get better.” “And now I’m going to go on vacation,” he added.
AFP