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>Michelle Obama to go to bat for Biden
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The former first lady's 2016 address was the most memorable of that cycle and many others.
She never mentioned Trump by name but urged Democrats to take a different approach than the Republican.
"Our motto is 'When they go low, we go high,'" she said in the speech's most memorable line.
While the speech was memorable, it did not have the desired effect; Clinton, the Democratic nominee, was defeated by Trump in an upset.
Since them, some have even wondered if it might have been better for Democrats to be more forceful against Trump, regardless of whether it would be seen as punching low.
Michelle Obama over the last four years has watched as Trump has sought to erase her husband's accomplishments, from the Affordable Care Act to executive orders protecting immigrants to the Iran nuclear deal.
At the same time, she has become an even greater cultural force.
In 2018, she published "Becoming," a bestselling memoir about growing up in Chicago and her years in the White House.
In the book, she slammed Trump, saying the birther campaign he championed that falsely claimed Barack Obama was not a U.S. citizen was "deliberately meant to stir up the wingnuts and kooks."
The former first lady also wrote that she "buzzed with fury" when she saw the "Access Hollywood" tape that surfaced in the middle of the 2016 race in which Trump boasted about grabbing women by the genitals.
Now that Trump is president, Democrats expect the former first lady to dial it up a notch, seeking to avoid a repeat of 2016.
"Last time, we didn't know what exactly Trump could do. We could only imagine how bad it is," said one Democrat close to the Biden campaign. "Now it's real. We've seen the damage he's done. We've lived it."
Both privately and publicly, Obama has bemoaned the Trump era but has largely remained out of the political spotlight. At the same time, she has focused her energy on voter registration efforts.
"She's grown increasingly frustrated with the current climate because she's seen firsthand how a president can shape the overall mood of the country," the ally said.
Earlier this month, Obama acknowledged suffering from a "low-grade depression" because of the pandemic and the country's race relations and the overall political tenor.
"I'm waking up in the middle of the night because I'm worrying about something or there's a heaviness," Obama said on her new podcast. "I try to make sure I get a workout in, although there have been periods throughout this quarantine where I just have felt too low."
A few days later, she circled back to the topic on her Instagram account, which has 41.1 million followers.
She acknowledged how recent events have contributed to her malaise.
"The idea that what this country is going through shouldn't have any effect on us - that we all should just feel OK all the time - that just doesn't feel real to me," she added. "So I hope you all are allowing yourselves to feel whatever it is you're feeling."
David Litt, a former speechwriter to President Obama and author of the new tome "Democracy in One Book or Less," said the former first lady is "able to talk about issues in a way that transcends politics."
"She's one of the most compelling speakers because she's around this world, she's in this world, but she's not of it," Litt said. "I think she has this pretty unique ability to connect with people who might otherwise be skeptical of political rhetoric."
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