“If you bring Florida home, this thing’s over,” Obama told volunteers at an unannounced stop in Miami Springs earlier in the day. “That way I don’t have to stay up too late. I don’t have to wait for the results through the next day. I want to go to sleep knowing that we’re going to have a president fighting on our behalf.”
Trump was in Ohio on Saturday, but he had Obama on his mind. During remarks in Circleville, he brought up the former president’s return to the stump.
“I guess it started yesterday or the day before, right? They had 42 people show up, 42,” Trump said. “We have thousands, tens of thousands and outside it’s five times what this is.”
In his remarks in Florida, Obama wove a detailed prosecution of Trump’s record in office with mockery of the President’s rough-and-ready persona, joking that anyone who gets rattled by a “60 Minutes” correspondent is “never going to stand up to a dictator.”
The former president, who has remained an obsession of Trump’s throughout his time in office, described the President’s behavior as “not normal” and compared him unfavorably to “Florida Man,” an internet meme that plays on news headlines about wild, unruly and often illegal behavior.
“You wouldn’t tolerate it from a coworker. You wouldn’t tolerate it from a high school principal. You wouldn’t tolerate it from a coach. You wouldn’t tolerate it from a family member,” Obama said, reciting a litany of Trump’s most outlandish actions. “‘Florida man’ wouldn’t even do this stuff. Why are we accepting it from the President of the United States?”
But Obama returned throughout his speech to the spiraling pandemic and Trump’s response — and his failure to chart out a coherent one that addresses the scale of the crisis.
Obama also tied the surging toll of the pandemic to Trump’s efforts to dismantle his own signature achievement, the Affordable Care Act. If the 2010 health care law is struck down in the Supreme Court, where its fate could be decided after the election, popular provisions like protections for patients with pre-existing conditions would fall with it.
Trump has repeatedly claimed that he has a replacement ready to go, but has not yet — after years of promising — presented one to the public.
“The reason they don’t show you their plan to actually provide people protections when it comes to preexisting conditions is because they don’t have one, and they never have,” Obama said. “That’s just a fact. And instead of just ‘fessing up that they don’t want people to have health insurance, they’ve attacked the Affordable Care Act at every turn.”
In his spat with “60 Minutes,” Trump released unedited footage from the interview, a portion of which showed Stahl pressing him on the whereabouts of his long-promised health care plan. But Trump, unable to point to any specific legislation or blueprint, only reasserted his vague promises.
He was clear, though, on his desire for the Supreme Court to terminate the law.
“I hope that they end it,” Trump said. “It will be so good if they end it.”
“Why would you want to take people’s health insurance just at the very moment when people need health insurance the most?,” Obama said on Saturday, in reference to Trump’s comment. “What’s the rationale in that? And think about what that would do to families right here (in Miami-Dade).”
Obama concluded with another call for Americans to turnout in record numbers ahead of and on Election Day. He hailed the grassroots movements that fought back against the Trump administration’s family separation policy at the US-Mexico border and took to the streets this summer to demonstrate against racism and police brutality.
But, he said, failing to vote would amount to an abandonment of the principles those protesters lined up to protect.
“We’ve got to channel their activism into action. We can’t just talk. We can’t just imagine a better future. We’ve got to go out there and fight for it. We’ve got out to out-hustle the other side,” Obama said. “We’ve got to vote like never before, and we’ve got to leave no doubt.”