In the grand theater of politics, it’s a common script: the opposition party finds a way to pin every misstep on the sitting president. Take the Obama years, for example, when every ill wind was attributed to Barack Obama’s policies by his Republican critics. It’s a classic move in the political playbook—one might say it’s as predictable as the changing of the seasons.
Yet, during Donald Trump’s first term, we witnessed a curious twist: he attempted to shift the blame for current issues back onto Obama, even years after his departure from the Oval Office. Flashback to six years ago, when Trump pointed fingers at Obama for the inadequate response to the COVID-19 pandemic, despite Obama having left the presidency nearly four years prior.
In a tweet that seems to echo with the resonance of historical revisionism, Trump stated:
“For decades the CDC examined its testing protocols but did little to improve them. They always anticipated a pandemic but hoped it would never occur. President Obama’s modifications only served to complicate matters further. Their handling of H1N1 was a catastrophe, leading to thousands of deaths, with no substantial efforts to rectify the testing issues—until now. Changes have been implemented, and testing will soon roll out on a massive scale. All bureaucratic hurdles have been cleared!”
The recurring theme is clear: any failure today must be linked to the previous administration’s shortcomings. This tendency to play political hot potato has escalated in Trump’s second term, with his Vice President, JD Vance, now blaming Joe Biden for the spike in gas prices following Trump’s controversial military actions in Iran.
Speaking in North Carolina, Vance proclaimed:

