President Barack Obama performed his brand of sharp-tongued comedy at the
White House Correspondents' Dinner for the last time, wrapping up with
"Obama out" and dropping the mic while the crowd cheered.
Obama's performance Saturday night proved he hasn't
lost a step.
"If this material works well, I'm going to use
it at Goldman Sachs next year," Obama quipped. "Earn me some serious
Tubmans."
Obama drew plenty of laughs with his barbed remarks
to a ballroom filled with journalists, politicians, and movie and television
stars. It was his eighth appearance at the event and his last as president and
he kidded about the pains of being a lame duck.
"Last week Prince George showed up to our
meeting in his bathrobe," Obama cracked. "That was a slap in the
face."
The president waxed nostalgic at times. "Eight
years ago I said it was time to change the tone of our politics. In hindsight,
I clearly should have been more specific."
And he acknowledged that the years had taken their
toll. "I'm gray, grizzled ... counting down the days to my death
panel."
Obama took a few more swipes at the presidential
race, noting that "next year at this time someone else will be standing
here in this very spot, and it's anyone's guess who she will be."
After calling presidential candidate Bernie Sanders
the bright new face of the Democratic Party, Obama contrasted the slogan
"Feel the Bern" with one he said was rival Hillary Clinton's:
"Trudge Up the Hill."
Republicans took most of Obama's humorous
broadsides. "Guests were asked to check whether they wanted steak or
fish," he told the diners, "and instead a whole bunch of you wrote in
Paul Ryan."
Obama said of the billionaire businessman and real
estate mogul leading the GOP race: "He has spent years meeting with
leaders from around the world — Miss Sweden, Miss Argentina, Miss
Azerbaijan."
He added: "And there's one area where Donald's
experience could be invaluable, and that's closing Guantanamo, because Trump
knows a thing or two about running waterfront properties into the ground."
Turning serious, the president thanked the White
House press corps and praised a free press.
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