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Home » Barack Obama’s Fiery Speech at Obama Presidential Center – June 18, 2026 (Transcript)

Barack Obama’s Fiery Speech at Obama Presidential Center – June 18, 2026 (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of former President Barack Obama’s powerful address at the grand opening of the Obama Presidential Center on Chicago’s South Side, June 18, 2026.  

Welcome and Opening Remarks

BARACK OBAMA: Hello Chicago! Sweet home Chicago. Please have a seat. Thank you, Punihei, for that outstanding introduction. President and Mrs. Bush, President and Secretary Clinton, thank you for being with us today and for your devotion to our country. And President and Dr. Biden, thank you for this steadfast partnership for eight years. Joe, we started as running mates and ended as family. And we would not be here without you. And we are grateful.

To our amazing Foundation staff and our amazing board, to Governor Pritzker, Mayor Johnson, thank you for making this center possible. To Congressional leaders and foreign dignitaries who have made the trip, I cherish our partnership together and all we have accomplished together. Thank you.

To Michelle, she did me wrong. She wouldn’t let me see her speech. She knew she was going to mess me up, and she did it anyway. But she’s always made me better and I could not be more grateful. And to Sasha and Malia, what can I say? You mean everything to me.

A Journey That Began in Chicago

More than 40 years ago, on a late summer afternoon in 1985, I arrived here in Chicago, entering the city through the very spot where this center now stands. I can still picture myself heading down what was then Cornell Drive in a janky used car that I bought in New York with all my worldly possessions stuffed in the trunk and the backseat. So I really couldn’t see out of the rearview mirror and I was a safety hazard. And I was 23 years old.

I had just been hired by a group of churches on the South Side to help organize a part of the city that had been battered by steel plant closings and chronic neglect. And I didn’t have much organizing experience. Didn’t know anybody in Chicago. But I had been inspired by the Civil Rights Movement. And I knew I wanted to make a difference.

And although I wasn’t sure exactly how I was going to do that, I was possessed with this abiding faith that if we could give people more of a say in the forces that govern their lives, if we could bridge some of the differences that drove us apart, then we could build an America where everyone counts and everyone has a fair shot and everyone belongs. Even a mixed-race kid with a weird backstory and a name nobody could pronounce.

Finding Purpose, Community, and Family

And it was here, in this city, a city of broad shoulders, that I found what I was looking for. Day by day, block by block, I got to know the people who lived here, their hopes, their dreams, their tragedies and their trials. I witnessed their resilience in the face of hardship, and the quiet heroism of a single mom raising her kids and sending them to college on a secretary’s salary, or the priest electing to stay in the city and open his doors to add rescues, even as most of his flock had fled to the suburbs.

I learned that leadership has less to do with titles or rank or chasing attention than with helping others find their voice, reaching their potential. And sitting around people’s kitchen tables or on their back porches, spending time in church basements and barber shops, I was reminded that everyone has a story to tell if you just care to listen. Sacred stories full of courage and humor and grace, and that each of those stories in some way connected to my own.

In other words, I found my purpose here, and I fortified my faith here, and I found my community here, friendships that would last a lifetime. And I found a girl from the South Side who has been my greatest blessing.

Michelle and I, our wedding reception was over at South Shore Cultural Center. You could walk from here. Our daughters were born right down the street. This is where we bought our first home. This is where our kids took their first steps. This is where I launched my candidacy for the Illinois State Senate over at the Ramada Inn on Lakeshore Drive, serving pretzels and soda, embarking on the path that ultimately and improbably led to this day.

The Meaning of the Obama Presidential Center

So, for me, this center could not be any place else. It’s an expression of thanks, an acknowledgement that so much of what I hold most dear, I owe to the people of this city and the people of these surrounding neighborhoods. And it’s why we designed the center not to be some lifeless mausoleum. I am too young for that. Not just a place to see Michelle’s dresses, although I understand that will be the top attraction.

We wanted it to be a vibrant, living celebration of community, where we can learn together and share the joys of art and music and sport and play. Because it’s in those moments that we’re reminded of our common humanity, and strengthen the bonds of trust that not only make our lives richer, but make our democracy stronger.

Now, we also wanted this center to be a celebration of the extraordinary public servants, many of whom are here today, that made this journey possible. Some of you helped get me elected. Some of you I had to talk into joining my administration. Some of you were seasoned veterans who helped show a rookie president the ropes. But a lot of you were younger than I was when I first drove into this city.

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We’re all a bit older now. Many of you have children of your own, even grandchildren. But the passage of time has only deepened my admiration for your talent and your dedication and your skill.