Michelle Obama Says the U.S. ‘Ain’t Ready’ for a Female President: You Are Not’

Michelle Obama Says the U.S. ‘Ain’t Ready’ for a Female President: You Are Not’
Michelle Obama isn’t sugarcoating her views on women and the White House. During her appearance on Alex Cooper’s Call Her Daddy podcast, the former first lady shared her candid thoughts on whether the United States is ready for a woman president — and her answer was blunt. “As we saw in this past election, sadly, we ain’t ready,” Obama said. “You’re not ready for a woman. You are not.”
The Jan. 21 interview covered everything from public scrutiny to the intense focus on her appearance during Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, but the conversation sharpened when Cooper asked about Michelle’s own political future. Obama made it clear she has no plans to run, pointing to persistent resistance toward women in power as a key reason.
Obama echoed remarks she made last November during a live taping of her IMO podcast with Tracee Ellis Ross, where she questioned whether the country has truly made space for a woman to lead. “There’s still, sadly, a lot of men who do not feel like they can be led by a woman,” she said, adding, “We saw it.”
While acknowledging progress, Obama said it’s unrealistic to pretend deeply rooted biases no longer exist. “We’d be silly to think there aren’t some gut feelings people aren’t even analyzing,” she said, adding that change takes time. “There are men out there who would not vote for a woman. Let’s just be real about it.”
She also pushed back against criticism over her comments, noting that the country has already seen “two really qualified female candidates.” Obama questioned why the topic continues to make people uncomfortable, asking, “Why are we pretending that didn’t just happen?” She added that she remains hopeful. “I think it’s going to happen. Are we ready now? I don’t know. Let’s prove us wrong.”
The interview also touched on broader political issues. When Cooper raised a hypothetical scenario of Donald Trump running for a third term, Obama said she would “actively work against that,” stressing the need for new leadership. “This is a hard job… eight years is enough,” she said.
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