By Stacy M. Brown
Former President Barack Obama and former Vice President Kamala Harris have entered the public fray, joining Democratic voices like New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett in confronting Republican President Donald Trump and his administrationās sweeping changes head-on.
After months of relative silence following her defeat to Trump last November, Harris returned to the spotlight Thursday during a rare appearance at theĀ Leading Women DefinedĀ conference at a seaside resort in Dana Point, California.Ā
According to The Los Angeles Times, she didnāt mention Trump by name but spoke forcefully about the anxiety many Americans are experiencing under his new administration.
āThere is a sense of fear that is taking hold in our country, and I understand it,ā Harris said. āThese are the things that we are witnessing each day in these last few months in our country, and it understandably creates a great sense of fear. Because, you know, there were many things that we knew would happen, many things.ā
Then she delivered a line that was quite pointed.
āIām not here to say, āI told you so,āā she continued, to a roar of laughter. āI swore I wasnāt going to say that.ā
The appearance marked a shift in tone for Harris, who has been weighing a potential run for governor of California in 2026 or waiting until 2028 for another shot at the presidency. Still, she clarified that her political silence hasnāt equated to surrender.
āWe canāt go out there and do battle if we donāt take care of ourselves and each other,ā Harris told the crowd. āIāll see you out there. Iām not going anywhere.ā
Obama, meanwhile, broke his silence during an appearance at Hamilton College in New York, offering one of his sharpest public critiques yet of Trumpās second administration. He condemned Trumpās attempts to reshape the federal government, stifle dissent, and punish those who oppose his policies.
āSo, this is the first time Iāve been speaking publicly for a while,ā Obama said. āIāve been watching for a little bit.ā
He put Trumpās actions into perspective.
āImagine if I had done any of this,ā Obama added. āItās unimaginable that the same parties that are silent now would have tolerated behavior like that from me or a whole bunch of my predecessors.ā
While calling Trumpās proposed tariffs bad for America, Obama said his larger concern lies with what he described as the White Houseās alarming overreach.
āIām more deeply concerned with a federal government that threatens universities if they donāt give up students who are exercising their right to free speech,ā he said. āThe idea that a White House can say to law firms, if you represent parties that we donāt like, weāre going to pull all our business or bar you from representing people effectively. That kind of behavior is contrary to the basic compact we have as Americans.ā
Obama, who campaigned for Harris during the final stretch of the 2024 election, had warned that a second Trump term would endanger the nationās democratic norms.
āJust because [Trump] acts goofy,ā Obama said at the time, ādoesnāt mean his presidency wouldnāt be dangerous.ā
With Trumpās second term underway, the voices of resistance are growing louder.
Booker added fuel to the movement by making history on the Senate floor. He delivered a 25-hour, 5-minute speech that broke the filibuster record previously held by segregationist Sen. Strom Thurmond. Thurmondās 1957 filibuster ā lasting 24 hours and 18 minutes ā was aimed at blocking the Civil Rights Act.
Booker used his record-breaking speech to denounce what he called a deliberate dismantling of government at the hands of Trump, Elon Musk, and Congressional Republicans.
āIt always seemed wrong,ā Booker said, referring to the Senate room still named after Thurmond. āIt seemed wrong to me when I got here in 2013. It still seems wrong today.ā
The New Jersey senator, a descendant of both enslaved people and slave owners, framed his marathon speech as a moral plea, reading letters from Americans affected by deep cuts and policy threats to Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and SNAP.
āThis is a moral moment,ā Booker declared. āItās not left or right; itās right or wrong.ā
With Bookerās record-setting stand, Harrisās reemergence, and Obamaās warning shots, what once felt like fragmented frustration among Democrats may now be coalescing into something more deliberate: a resistance that is visibly on the move.
āIāll see you out there,ā Harris said. āIām not going anywhere.ā
The post Harris, Obama and Booker Step Up as Resistance Against Trump Takes Shape appeared first on The Washington Informer.

