[h=1]Obama's farewell world tour: President takes off for seven days to Greece, Germany and Peru to get the adulation he can't get at home[/h]
PUBLISHED: 16:58, 14 November 2016 | UPDATED: 03:18, 15 November 2016
President Barack Obama is embarking on one last tax-payer funded journey abroad on Monday.
The seven-day trip will see Obama visit Greece for the first time and stop through Germany for meetings with Chancellor Angela Merkel and other European Union leaders on his way to Peru for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.
A lame duck president since last Tuesday's national election, Obama is using the week-long escape, that includes a leisurely visit to the Parthenon, to drag his policy agenda over the finish line and convince America's allies that the United States will not tear up binding, international agreements in the age of Donald Trump.
He'll use his final overseas speech to tout the United States' economic growth under his leadership, the White House says, and try once more to put a positive light on globalization.
- The seven-day trip will see Obama visit Greece for the first time; he'll tour the Parthenon and give his final foreign speech
- He'll stop through Germany for meetings with Chancellor Angela Merkel and European leaders from France, Spain, Italy and the UK
- Trip ends in Peru at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, where he's also meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping
- Lame duck president is trying to drag his policy agenda over the finish line and convince America's allies the US will not back off its commitments
- Speech will tout the United States' economic growth under his leadership and put a positive light on globalization
- In spite of Donald Trump's victory, the president 'will be running through the tape on January 20th,' Obama's advisers say
PUBLISHED: 16:58, 14 November 2016 | UPDATED: 03:18, 15 November 2016
President Barack Obama is embarking on one last tax-payer funded journey abroad on Monday.
The seven-day trip will see Obama visit Greece for the first time and stop through Germany for meetings with Chancellor Angela Merkel and other European Union leaders on his way to Peru for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.
A lame duck president since last Tuesday's national election, Obama is using the week-long escape, that includes a leisurely visit to the Parthenon, to drag his policy agenda over the finish line and convince America's allies that the United States will not tear up binding, international agreements in the age of Donald Trump.
He'll use his final overseas speech to tout the United States' economic growth under his leadership, the White House says, and try once more to put a positive light on globalization.