A spokesman
for Barack Obama spoke out Wednesday against critics who called out the former
president for reportedly accepting a $400,000 speaking fee, backed by a
Wall
Street bank.
Eric Schultz,
the spokesman, told Fortune that in 2008,
then-candidate Obama pulled in more money than any candidate in history, and
went on to “implement the toughest reforms on Wall Street since FDR.”
Fox
Business reported that Obama has agreed to speak at a Wall
Street conference run by Cantor Fitzgerald LP. The speaking fee will be
$400,000, which is nearly twice as much as Hillary Clinton, his secretary of
state, and the 2016 Democratic Party candidate, charged private businesses for
such events.
Obama has
agreed to speak at Cantor’s health care conference in September and will be the
keynote luncheon speaker for one day during the event, people at the firm told
Fox Business. These people say Obama has signed the contract, but the company,
a mid-sized New York-based investment bank, is waiting to coordinate with the
former president before making a formal announcement.
“Is there an
irony here because he spoke incessantly about the income gap and is now earning
from those same people he criticized? Yes it is,” said Hank Sheinkopf, a
Democratic political consultant. “Should we expect it? Yes, we should because
all former presidents do this. He went on the attack against Wall Street and
now he’s being fed by those same people he called ‘fat cats’. It’s more
hypocritical than ironic.”
Schultz went
on to say that Obama will continue to give the occasional speech, but he will
devote much of his time to writing his book and “focusing his post-presidency
work on training and elevating a new generation of political leaders in
America.”
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