By Stacy M. Brown

(NNPA) – Former President Barack Obama has stepped back into the political arena, delivering some of his sharpest critiques yet of President Donald Trump as the Democratic Party struggles through one of its weakest moments in modern history. With the partyโ€™s leadership approval at historic lows and its ties to Black-owned media nearly nonexistent, Obamaโ€™s renewed visibility has exposed both the vacuum and the disillusionment threatening to fracture the Democratic coalition.

In recent weeks, Obama has spoken out against Trumpโ€™s authoritarian-style intimidation of universities and the administrationโ€™s crackdown on the press, declaring that America must โ€œresist being intimidatedโ€ and warning that protecting democratic values may require โ€œsacrifice.โ€ At Hamilton College, he admonished Trumpโ€™s White House for suspending security clearances and canceling contracts with law firms and schools tied to perceived political rivals. โ€œThat kind of behavior is contrary to the basic compact we have as Americans,โ€ Obama said. โ€œImagine if I had done any of this.โ€ Days later, he took to social media to denounce media companies for capitulating to Trumpโ€™s threats. โ€œAfter years of complaining about cancel culture, the current administration has taken it to a new and dangerous level,โ€ Obama wrote, urging journalists and networks to โ€œget a spineโ€ and stand up for free speech.

Late in September at Londonโ€™s O2 Arena, Obama expanded his message beyond immediate politics, telling a packed crowd that true leadership means constant vigilance and the courage to โ€œshow up and speak out even when itโ€™s uncomfortable.โ€ He cautioned against complacency, arguing that progressives had grown โ€œsmugโ€ and unprepared for the rise of authoritarianism. โ€œTrue democracy is a project much bigger than any one of us,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s a job for all of us.โ€ Obamaโ€™s renewed activism comes at a time when his partyโ€™s base has grown increasingly restless. Aย Pew Researchย survey found that 59 percent of Democrats disapprove of their partyโ€™s leadershipโ€”the highest level of dissatisfaction since the question was first asked more than a decade ago. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumerโ€™s approval among Democrats has collapsed to 35 percent, while House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries remains little known to nearly four in ten Democratic voters.

That lack of visibility and engagement has been felt most acutely within the Black community.ย At the Black Press of Americaโ€™s annual Leadership Awards, where Jeffries and Congressional Black Caucus Chair Yvette Clarke were to be honored, anticipation filled a packed ballroom. But neither showed up.

Civil rights attorneyย Ben Crump had just pledged $50,000 to support the struggling Black Press, urging others to follow suit. โ€œTypical of Democrats,โ€ one attendee said afterward. โ€œThey donโ€™t spend money with us. They donโ€™t show up. And then they expect us to deliver their message for free.โ€ The snub, just 18 months before theย Black Pressโ€™s bicentennial, struck a nerve among publishers who have covered every chapter of Americaโ€™s freedom struggleโ€”from emancipation to civil rightsโ€”without the financial support they deserve. โ€œOur ancestors built this press through every trial in this country,โ€ said one Black publisher after the event. โ€œThe least Hakeem Jeffries could do was show up.โ€

Obamaโ€™s reemergence has not gone unnoticed by votersโ€”or by Trump. During a recent Navy celebration in Virginia, Trump attempted to incite the crowd to boo Obama, but the attempt backfired. As he invoked โ€œBarack Hussein Obama,โ€ the crowd met him with dead silence. Meanwhile, polls show that Obama remains the most admired living president.ย A Marquette Law School survey found Obama with a +17 net favorability, compared with Trumpโ€™s -15 and Joe Bidenโ€™s -24.ย Even so, Obamaโ€™s return to the spotlight underscores a sobering truth: the Democratic Party, battered by infighting and a failure to connect with its own base, still lacks a clear, trusted voice. Obamaโ€™s critiques of Trumpโ€™s policiesโ€”whether over healthcare rollbacks or media suppressionโ€”stand in contrast to the muted response from current Democratic leaders, who have failed to mobilize voters around issues that once defined their moral compass.

Trumpโ€™s efforts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act have revived Obamaโ€™s signature policy as the centerpiece of a national political showdown. Democrats, scrambling to extend ACA subsidies that prevent premiums from skyrocketing, have tried to make healthcare their rallying cry againโ€”but without strong, unified leadership, the message has struggled to resonate. For all his measured tone, Obamaโ€™s message has sharpened into something closer to alarm. He warns that complacency, even within his own party, has opened the door to authoritarianism. โ€œProgressives assumed our trajectory would bend inevitably toward progress,โ€ he told the audience at the O2. โ€œThat complacency left us unprepared.โ€ As Trump wields federal power to punish dissent, the former presidentโ€™s words carry the weight of both warning and legacy. But even as Obama reasserts his influence, the party he once led remains uncertain and dividedโ€”still ignoring the independent Black media that carried it through generations, and still searching for leadership that matches the gravity of this moment. Obama may have left office eight years ago, but in 2025, he appears to be the last Democrat still leading.

The National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), known as the Black Press of America, is the federation of more than 200 Black community newspapers in the United States.