It is my honor to be joined by the 44th president of the United States, Barack Obama. Mr President, thanks so much for joining me. >> It is wonderful to be here, Brian.
Thank you for having me. >> So, as you know better than anybody, the discourse has devolved into a level of cruelty that we haven't seen before. Um, what was disqualifying just a few years ago now not only feels fine, acceptable, but actually rewarded.
Um, you have administration officials saying that the victims of ISIS aggression are domestic terrorists. You have JD Vance coming out and saying that it's okay uh you don't have to apologize for being white. Just days ago, Donald Trump put uh a picture of you, your face on an ape's body.
And so again, this is, you know, this is kind of we've seen the devolution of of the discourse. How do we come back from a place that that we have fallen into? >> Well, f first of all, I think it's important to recognize that the majority of the American people find this behavior deeply troubling.
You know, it it is true that it gets attention. It's true that it's a distraction, but you know, as I'm traveling around the country, as as you're traveling around the country, you meet people uh they still believe in decency, courtesy, kindness, and there's this sort of clown show that's happening in social media and on television. Uh and what is true is that there doesn't seem to be any shame about this among people who used to feel like you had to have some sort of decorum and and and um a sense of propriety and respect for the office.
Right? So so that's been lost. But the but the reason I I point out that I don't think the majority of the American people approve of this is because ultimately the answer is going to come from the American people.
And we just saw this uh in Minnesota and Minneapolis. Um I it is important for us to recognize the uh unprecedented nature of what ICE was doing in Minneapolis St. of all the the the way that federal agents, ICE agents were being deployed without any clear guidelines, training, uh pulling people off uh you know, out of their homes, using five-year-olds to try to uh >> bait their parents, >> bait their parents.
uh all the stuff that we saw, teargassing crowds simply who were standing there not breaking any laws. Um so so the rogue behavior of agents of the federal government we is is deeply concerning and and uh dangerous. But we should take a moment to appreciate the extraordinary uh outpouring of organizing, community building, decency, neighbors, buying groceries for folks, accompanying children to school, teachers who were standing up for their kids.
um you know, not just randomly, but in a you know, systematic, organized way, citizens saying, "This is not the America we believe in, and we're going to fight back and we're going to push back with the truth and with cameras and with peaceful protests and and shining a light on u the the sort of behavior that, you know, in the past we've seen in authoritarian countries and we've seen in uh dictatorships but we have not seen in America and that kind of heroic uh sustained behavior in subzero weather by ordinary people uh is what should give us hope and it should should remind us that at the end of the day the way we get a democracy that's working. The way we get policies that actually uh are helping working families uh you know get ahead. the way that we restore norms, rule of law, decency, it's going to be because we citizens are activated and paying attention and saying enough and saying, you know, uh we have a different idea of of what uh the American family should look like and and and community should look like and and that is what I'm seeing across the board.
So, you know, I was um on a panel a while back and I said, you know, a lot of the values that we say we subscribe to um during easy times, during peaceful times, um it's easy to say we believe in those things, >> right? When they're not challenged. >> When they're not challenged.
You know, it's easy to believe in free speech when uh it doesn't seem like the government's trying to crack down on free speech. It's it's it's easy to to say that um you know, we believe in the golden rule when we aren't at risk of being arrested when we exercise the golden rule. >> Yeah.
>> Right now, we're being tested and you know, the good news is what we saw in Minneapolis and St. Paul and what we're seeing in in places across the country, including here in Los Angeles, u has been uh the American people saying, "No, you know what? " At least a good number of the American people saying, "We're going to live up to those values that we say we believe in.
" And as long as we have folks doing that, um I feel like we're going to get through this. So, I hear and appreciate what you're saying about the agency of individuals as we look toward our elected officials, our democratic leaders. I think something that I've been having a lot of trouble reconciling is for so long it's felt like Democrats are solely focused on protecting norms, institutions, processes, and then you've got a Republican party that sees what it wants and will find a way to get it.
Laws be damned, constitution be damned, rules be damned. And we're seeing that play out right now. And so, you know, given this massive asymmetry, where where it often leaves us feeling like it's a Lucy pulling the football away from Charlie Brown over and over and over again situation, what needs to be done?
And do you think that that that's that our Democratic leadership and our Democratic elected officials understand that for the first time? >> Well, look, I I I think we have to acknowledge that uh we've got the harder job, right? So we we believe in government as a tool for good for as a potential force to uh create more jobs and as a way to make sure that the planet doesn't roast to make sure that >> uh as as we move forward um and the economy grows that everybody and not just some are benefiting and and that kids are getting a good education.
And what that means is that um we have to think about the consequences of our actions. We have to uh try to figure out how do we get working majorities to actually pass laws and to implement those laws and to make things happen. Tearing stuff down doesn't require all that.
So when you you you talk about Republicans, for example, it seems like they see what they want and they just go after it. Well, they've passed one significant piece of legislation since they've been for all the hoopla. They haven't actually codified and institutionalized much anything.
They have poured a huge amount of money into ICE and the their immigration agenda. Um, and they've cut taxes for really wealthy people and now they're trying to unravel a bunch of rules and norms and laws that are already in place. That's an easier job.
So I I say that because uh we should accept the responsibility and the challenge that our job is going to be a little bit harder because in order for us to get stuff done like let's say the Affordable Care Act, well we've got to cobble together a majority and we've got to persuade and we've got to convince. And so I do think that there have been some there's been some unwillingness on the part of Democrats in the past to break down some of the institutional barriers for us getting stuff done just because well it's always been done that way. And I'll give you an example that frustrated the heck out of me when I was president which was the filibuster in the Senate.
Um, the Senate is already structurally u skewed and anti-majoritarian, right? Like the it's it's hard for majorities to get stuff done, whether it's trying to pass civil rights legislation in the 60s or, you know, trying to get gun control legislation or what have you. Because even though majority people support it, Delaware and Wyoming have the same number of senators as California.
Right. All right. So that that would require a constitutional amendment.
You then compound that with a filibuster. And the the truth is is that Democrats for some time have been traditionalists in wanting to preserve that when it blocks us from making government effective which in turn makes people feel like government is corrupt and not caring about them >> which lends itself >> which then lends itself to the the kind of uh it gives pe folks like Trump an opening. Yeah.
Right. So redistricting is another good example of where u I strongly believe we should not be having politicians draw lines that determine who's voting for them. We should have voters decide who their politicians are.
And you know, I've worked with Eric Holder to help set up uh the terrific work that uh you know, the NDRC has been doing to try to make sure that we have fair maps. But the fact that Governor Nuome here in California uh and others said, "Well, if they're going to try to jerrymander their way out of losing this upcoming midterm, then we're going to respond and we're going to respond in a lawful way where we put it up to a referendum and and let people decide and not just give away the store because of traditions. " That was the right response.
So I I I do think that I don't want us to simply duplicate the behavior of the other side. I I I don't want us to have a slash and burn strategy where we don't care about rule of law. We don't care about some of the guard rails around our democracy.
We start lying and and and having no regard for the truth the way the other side seems to be comfortable with right now. Uh because if if if that's how we fight, then we lose what we're fighting for. But that doesn't mean we have to get punked or or be saps.
And I do and or or to to cling to traditions just for the sake of tradition. I think what we have to continually uh evaluate is in this moment in time, how do we make sure that we can advance our agenda in a way that reflects what's good for ordinary folks, not special interests, not simply the wellto-d do. And how do we do that in a way that's consistent with integrity, honesty, democracy, uh the values that we claim to want to uphold?
And and I think it's possible to do that. But but I I the reason I started with reminding ourselves, yes, we have a a harder job. Uh because sometimes I think we're tough on Democrats saying, why aren't you being as mean and tough and nasty as they are?
Well, you know, it's it's uh you know, when I was president of the United States, I suppose I could have simply uh unilaterally ordered the military to, you know, go into some red state and Yeah. and uh harass and intimidate a governor there or cut off funding for uh states that didn't vote for me. I I could have exercised that prerogative, but that is contrary to how I think our democracy is supposed to work.
And and and I think we shouldn't get discouraged by the fact that we have a tougher job. we should what we should do is expect that uh um our side is smart enough to figure it out. >> So, you had mentioned persuasion and I think that that's a a really good point here because as we eventually head toward a next general election cycle, we're going to be contending with a lot of the same infighting that's plagued Democrats before.
You'll often have leftists and progressives um butting up against liberals and moderates. And look, you are the ultimate pragmatist. And so, what advice do you have as we head toward this election cycle, you know, this this eventual 2028 election cycle, so that we don't devolve into the same, you know, 2016 era Bernie Hillary redux that feels like it always consumes the left?
Well, look, first of all, I think it's important to remember that the divisions in the Democratic party u tend to get magnified in the in the media um relative to the divides that exist in most other countries uh where you have a parliamentary system, you have multiple parties and you got Green Party and you got the center left party and you've got a socialist party and sometimes you got a communist party. >> Our differences get exaggerated. Listen, I I Bernie Sanders believes just like Nancy Pelosi believes, just like Chuck Schumer believes, just like Hakeem Jeff believes, just like AOC believes in equality and and non-discrimination uh against people because of race or gender or sexual orientation.
We all all Democrats believe in that. That's a core value. Democrats believe that uh government should uh provide a a strong safety net for people when they're down on their luck.
Everybody I just mentioned believes in that. Everybody believes that uh there should be some regulation of the market so that you don't have monopolies and igopies that are simply dictating the terms of uh the economy. um and that we should have a tax system that levels out some of the inequalities that result.
So I think it's important for us to remind ourselves as a starting point what do we have in common? Most of the time >> the differences are tactical, right? It has to do with well how much of a tax hike can people put up with?
How much regulation uh should we be thinking about when it comes to climate change? And if if if we recognize that typically the arguments in the Democratic party aren't about core values, but are really around tactics and how do you get stuff done? Now, we can have a robust debate, and I want a robust debate.
>> Yeah. And what we can also do is not try to nationalize every issue all the time. Right?
This last off-year election I think was a great example. You know, you've got a candidate like Spanberger in Virginia who runs what would be considered a more centrist campaign and runs a terrific campaign. And then you've got Mandami in New York who runs a, you know, explicitly socialist grassroots campaign and excites and mobilized folks.
And that can win in New York City. It probably could not win in Virginia. And that's okay.
That's healthy. >> Yeah. >> And and and and sometimes I think we we we get into arguments a a recent one, this idea that the quote unquote abundance agenda is somehow a sellout and and folks on the left getting exercised because oh, this is part of this sort of corporate Democrats trying to u you know take over the party.
Well, no, not really. What I I think it is entirely legitimate to say, for example, we need to build more affordable housing, which is going to require higher taxes on people like me and people who are well off in order to subsidize the construction of affordable housing, let's say, in a place like California, and also be able to say, you know what, there are a bunch of well-intentioned rules and zoning laws and so forth that baby boomers like me and existing homeowners have used to block the construction of affordable housing even in Democratic cities. And so if we want to actually deliver housing rather than have some abstract argument, then we got to figure out not an eitheror of do we spend more money or do we reform some of these things that are preventing the construction of affordable housing.
We have to do both. And and I want us to have those arguments. Um, and and one last thing I think that's that's I've noticed in in a lot of our internal arguments, a lot of which, by the way, are taking place online and ordinary voters, this is all >> completely off off their off their radar screen.
One of the things I think it's important for Democrats for for us also to to recognize, progressives to recognize, folks on the left to recognize, it's possible for us to have a moral sense of what what is right and true and what needs to be done. And also recognize that we are in a particular time and place here in America. and voters are not going to agree with us 100% on everything.
And so it is a it is not a sellout. It's not a betrayal to say that we're going to shape our agenda and our message in a way that allows us to build an working majority to get stuff done. And I think particularly around social issues, sometimes we get confused around this.
You you witness what happened in in Minneapolis and you say to yourself, morally speaking, that five-year-old child who's standing in front of that SUV as his father's t being dragged off, his that child is is equal to mine or any child. his im immigration status, his nationality does not change the love and and and decency that we should be showing that child. But what is also true is that we're a nation of laws.
We have borders and we've got to figure out an immigration policy that is orderly and that is fair and is enforced in a sensible way that is compatible with our values but na may not fully capture the degree to which that kid should have the same chances in life as a US citizen kid. But, you know, we've got to accommodate the reality that the majority of the American people think that there's a difference between somebody who's a US citizen and somebody who's not, and that they want an orderly immigration system. And and sometimes I think what happens in the online debate is if somebody suggests, well, we have to have some immigration enforcement, then somebody's going to point at that child and say, so you don't care about that kid, so you must be a bad person.
The same would be true, let's say, here in Los Angeles around the homeless issue. I think morally, ethically speaking, it is an atrocity that in a country this wealthy, we have people just on the streets. And we should have a a we should insist on policies that that recognize their full humanity, people who are houseless, and be able to provide them the help and resources that they need.
But we should also recognize that the average person, you know, doesn't want to have to navigate around a tent city in the middle of downtown. and that we're not going to be able to build a working majority and support for the resources that we need to help folks like that, whether it's drug treatment or uh you know, temporary housing or what have you. We're not going to be able to generate support for it if we simply say, you know what, it's not their fault and so they should be able to do whatever they want because that's a losing political strategy.
That doesn't mean that uh we care less about those folks. It means if we really care about them, then we got to try to figure out how do we gain majority support and and and be practical in terms of what we can get through at this moment in time and build on those victories. That a lot of times is the arguments that are taking place but they become sort of performative and people start saying you know oh you're selling out or con conversely I think sometimes folks at the in the at the center say uh you know you're you're being impractical and and dismissing legitimate critiques and concerns and and I what we need be able to do is to maintain both ideas at the same time, which is our long-term goals have to be driven by our values and our core beliefs and our ethics and our morals and the sense that every person counts and short term we got to win elections, >> right?
and and and and anyway, the the the good news is I think that the folks that we are fighting politically, the the the current White House, this administration, and their enablers, uh they're behaving so badly. they are doing such crazy stuff that it shouldn't be hard for our side to coalesce around the areas where we agree on and focus on that >> and and and I think that you know that is going to happen if we are effective in winning the midterms if we then have a robust primary for who's going to be the next Democratic president. I I we shouldn't be afraid of having a a robust debate.
I I I want all comers to to to sort this out. I I benefited from having a about as grueling a primary. >> Yeah.
>> As as I could have. It made me a better candidate. It ultimately made me a better president because I had been tested.
My ideas had been tested. The story I was telling about America had been tested. And that's what we should be looking for rather than expecting that somehow we're going to all come up with some consensus blueprint master plan that everybody's going to execute.
Um, you know, Democrats aren't good at doing that anyway. >> Yeah. >> Well, I think you know, one one block of voters who I think there has been particular focus paid on paid to right now is is young voters.
And you know, you were able to mobilize a generation of young voters in a way that hadn't been done before. I got involved in politics because of you. And and in fact, a lot of millennials, uh, folks my age got involved in politics because of you.
Like when I was when I was a student, you would you could not find any other students on campus who were not supporting your campaign. Democrats and you had had owned the cultural zeitgeist in a way that hadn't been done before and frankly hasn't been done since. And we've seen a shift happen obviously from from you know 2008 2012 up to 2024 and for the first time we saw Democrats really lose their grip on culture in a way that hadn't happened before.
And so what is your advice in terms of remobilizing a generation of Americans that we've had trouble mobilizing up to this point? >> Well, look, part of it has to do with the fact that I was young. >> Yeah.
And so maybe don't nominate a >> so so I look I am I'm 64 now >> I'm pretty healthy 64 feel great >> but the truth is half of the references that my daughters make about social media Tik Tok etc I don't know who who they're who they're talking about yeah >> there is a element of at some point, you age out. You're not connected directly to the immediate struggles that folks are going through. And so I I'm not making a hard and fast rule here, but I do think that Democrats do well when we have candidates who are plugged into the moment to the zeitgeist to to to the times and the particular struggles that folks are thinking about as they look towards the future rather than look backward toward the past.
and and so some of it is choosing candidates who who who check that box. Um I do think that there is an element of joy that needs to that Democrats lost sometimes that the our campaign was fun. We had some look it wasn't always fun for me but we built a community.
We we we gave people a sense that if you are part of this, you're doing something meaningful. And it wasn't just talk. Young people ran our campaigns.
We empowered them. We put them in charge. They were out there figuring stuff out.
I'm not the person who was figuring out our media's strategy. I was not the person who was out there uh you know knocking on doors and and and and you know talking to voters and and and creating events it was 20 and 30 year olds and so what happened in our campaign and what you recently saw in the in Mandami's campaign in New York >> what when when there's that sense of joy and engagement and involvement Then people feel like all right this is not just some transactional grind. This is this is me becoming part of a community and and and joining with others and and I I think young people respond to that.
And then a correlary to that is I I I do think that culturally I and I've talked about this before. Um we did turn off I think I think there was a certain way of talking about issues for Democrats where we sounded like scolds. And I I I've said this before.
Um there was there was a a a virtue signaling that made it seem as if ordinary folks if they did not say things in exactly the right way or meet this litmus test that they were being uh chastised, pushed away. And the truth is most of us, all of us are complicated and we have blind spots and sometimes we say dumb stuff and we and and if you want to create an environment that is welcoming and makes people feel okay, there's room for me here, then the message and the story we tell has to be all right, none of us are perfect. All of us count.
We all have good in us that we can tap into. We can all learn from each other. And and I think that is something we need to recover.
That's part of the fun of politics. That's part of the community and the social bonding that can come about. And we saw that in uh Minneapolis.
I I mean somebody showed me um a friend of mine uh Michelle Norris is from Minnesota and she was up there and and she was going around talking to neighbors and people she had known for a long time as they were mobilizing uh protests and and activities around ICE and and uh she showed me a clip of this street band that was performing every night after all these activities had been taking place and protests etc. And they were just out there and they were playing music and I'm trying to figure out how they were playing, you know, horns and drums, etc. in like zero degree weather cuz I would not have been able to put my lips on on a trumpet and and people were celebrating what they had accomplished.
Um and and it was an embodiment of the values that um make us care about other people. Uh and and that I think is a spirit that when Democrats tap into that spirit then we win. The other side does the mean, angry >> demagoguery, >> you know, exclusive us them, you know, divisive politics.
That's their that's that's their home court. >> Yeah. >> Our court is coming together.
Our court is look, you know, a great example. Wasn't political. >> Bad bunnies halftime show.
>> I knew you were gonna say that. Yeah. >> Well, be it.
It was it it resonated. It was smart because it wasn't preaching. It was showing.
It was demonstrating and displaying this is what a community is. And people who did not speak Spanish and have never been to Puerto Rico, they saw that elderly woman serving a drink and the kids dancing with their grandmas and it was intergenerational and >> it was it was a reminder of what Dr King called the beloved community can look like which is not perfect and it's messy sometimes and you know I guarantee you not all those lyrics were probably politically correct and if you translated them and you know they're you know people are complicated but there was a sense of all right there's room for everybody here. >> Yeah >> and and that I think is where we win.
You know, your presidential center is opening up this summer and you've dedicated your postp presidency to lifting up the next generation of leaders oftentimes in defiance of people begging and pleading with you uh to stay involved in the political process. And so why is it important for you to defer to those people especially at a moment where it feels like there is a vacuum of leadership on the left? uh you are among if not the most popular politician in America and so you're you're right here, you know, and so why is it important for you in this moment to make sure that you defer to others?
>> Well, first of all, I'm not a politician anymore and I can't be, right? I mean, I guess technically I could run for, you know, city council or something, but >> I'm not in elected office. I don't have levers of power.
I'm term limited out. And by the way, I believe in the Constitution and also I believe in my marriage and Michelle would divorce me if I even if I could run again. Um, but I've always believed I mean this has been a central tenant of of my work even before I was in elected office that our job as leaders is to lift up other leaders to to empower others to to to to find their gifts and and and help them exercise those gifts.
And so when I had left the presidency, I said, "What what's our foundation going to do? " We we care about climate change. We care about uh racial justice.
We we care about uh healthcare. We care about we care about a whole bunch of issues, and I work on those issues. Now, right now, I'm spending a lot of time helping to to think about how we're going to respond to AI as it's coming down the pike, and it's moving fast.
So, I care about specific issues, but my the thing I thought I could do uniquely. Michelle and I still have the capacity, not just here in the United States, but globally, to inspire and motivate young people and invite them in to this process. And that's what we need.
We just talked about it. You look you look at u where excitement's going to come from. That's going to come from the 20, 30 year olds who know firsthand what it means to not be able to buy a house, know firsthand what it means to to see some of the latter's opportunity being taken away, have have, you know, grown up in a moment in which there's there's more social isolation, right?
And and so and and and understand both the the good and the bad of social media. And so they're the ones who are going to craft these, you know, the the who are going to remake our institutions so that they are consistent with the the values that are, I think, timeless. And so what we've tried to do at the foundation has been to uh identify potential leaders not just with traditional credentials, not just the kids coming out of fancy schools or with the top grades or uh but union organizers and grassroots organizers as well as you know journalists and teachers and healthc care professionals.
and and human rights activists and we've now had thousands of folks go through the program and these are folks who are doing remarkable stuff at very young ages. I mean they're setting up health clinics in subsah here in Africa or they're uh you know designing new programs for intervention in in to to help with the opioid crisis in Appalachia or they're working on uh you know how do we educate kids and use using technology in remote rural areas and and uh Native American reservations. remarkable folks doing amazing stuff.
And the presidential center, which will be opening up in June, is going to be the hub around which all this activity happens. Um, and you know, there will be a museum with Michelle's dresses since that's what people want to see. >> Yeah.
>> You know, we'll have some sports memorabilia and you know, some cool stuff in there. But really the the the heart of the presidential center is going to be the music studio to where kids are learning how to tell stories through music and and a place to record podcasts so they they can learn how to, you know, talk about the issues in ways that resonate. And uh there's a Chicago public library in there and there's an auditorium where you know young people will be exposed to world leaders who are coming through and can talk about their own journey.
And what that does is it builds a community of activists and it reminds people you're not alone. You're not alone in your sorrow when you see some of the stuff that's been happening. uh in this country over the last year.
But you're also not alone in being able to figure out how do we push back and come up with new solutions and how do we uh remake these institutions so that they work for this generation. and and that kind of uh spirit is what we hope you know this this presidential center will will u constantly refresh and renew. Um you know that this is kind of a social change university and we want just ordinary visitors who aren't don't think of themselves as activists as they go through these exhibits and they see um you know what's been done in the past.
We want them to think, well, what can I do? And we'll be giving them all kinds of ways in which they can then connect for um, you know, with local organizations and get active in their own communities around the things that they care about. that that kind of reinvigorating our our civic muscles, uh giving people a sense of, you know, I'm not going to just sit here and doom scroll or occasionally, you know, tweet some complaint about what's happening, but that I actually have agency and I can actually make a difference.
You know, we want to encourage that and and and that's what we saw and have been seeing across the country in response to the the violations and overreach and and lawlessness uh that that been coming out of this administration. We just have to encourage that and cultivate that and and and not assume that it happens on its own. I I became president because very early on in in my career, I had people teach me the power of community and other people um joining together around common interests.
And I tried to um I tried to manifest what I had learned in every campaign I ran and try to ride that all the way through my presidency. And um you know I didn't figure out all that stuff on my own. uh and and we have a long history in this country, you know, dating back to the abolitionists movement and the suffragist movement and we on through the civil rights movement and the union movement and we have a long history internationally.
Gandhi learning from the who then inspires King who then inspires Mandela who in the meantime like Valenca is you know helping to and solidarity are helping to bring down the Iron Curtain and inspiring the you know people power in the Philippines and you know there that that spirit that energy uh it's out and you can feel it, but it's bottled up. We haven't given enough outlets for young people to to figure out how do I become a part of that and and and that's a this enormous untapped power that we have to get back to. >> So, I want to do a little bit of a lightning round here because it's not often I'll get access to president of the United States.
So, a couple questions here. >> Are aliens real? >> Uh, they're real, but I haven't seen them.
and and and uh they're not being kept in uh what is it? >> Area 51. >> Area 51.
There there's no underground uh facility unless there's this enormous conspiracy and they they hid it from the president of the United States. >> What was the first question you wanted answered when you became president? >> Um where are the aliens?
>> Where are the aliens? Um who uh is there is there a person that you most want to meet that you haven't met yet? I'll be honest with you, being president or even being the next president, I can kind of meet everybody, so I've met a lot of folks.
Uh the person who I have not yet met um and that I'm looking forward to meeting and I I hope I get an opportunity sometime in the future is uh >> uh the new pope who is from Chicago and a White Sox fan. I had the pleasure of getting to know Pope Francis pretty well. >> Um and and he was legit.
You know, there there's some figures. He's one, the Daly Lama was another is another who they're how you hope they are. They kind of walk the walk.
Yeah. Uh, and my sense of this new pope is he's from that he's cut from that cloth. You know, somebody who, you know, worked in places, you know, that really needed help and and and uh what wasn't just uh preaching from a pulpit, but getting his hands dirty trying to trying to help people.
So, I'm I'm looking forward to talking to him. I think we can I think I think >> at some point I'll probably have it. Yeah.
>> What world leader did you like the most in the least? >> Um you know I I there are a lot of world leaders I enjoyed. Angala Merkel I became very close to because she really was the leader of Europe um during my presidency and we were grappling with a bunch of different stuff.
She came from a center right tradition. I obviously come from a left center left position, but she had integrity, very, you know, wicked smart and you were both analytical and practical and uh try to figure out how to problem solve and and so she she became a very close partner to mine. Um I'm I'm going to I'm going to def you know defer on the uh the leaders I like least.
Um there there's enough of a public record people probably have a sense of some of the folks who uh who I wasn't happy with. >> Best prank out of the White House when you were president. >> Look, I I'll be honest with you, folks aren't running pranks in the White House.
They're Secret Service. Everybody's busy. >> Yeah.
>> Um if there were pranks, they weren't uh run on me. And I didn't >> You didn't pull any? >> I I tended not to pull pranks.
Um, people are intimidated enough by a president. You know, you don't want to punch down on a prank. Yeah.
If you're gonna if you're gonna pull off a prank, it's got to be on somebody who can prank you back. And what? Nobody gonna prank me.
>> All right. Last question here. Is Tupac alive?
>> Uh, he's alive on my playlist. >> All right. All right.
We'll leave it there. There you go, >> Mr President. I I appreciate it.
Thank you so much. Keep up doing the good work.