Politics | Bill Clinton Post-Primaries, Bill Hits Road to Recovery In Africa for his charity, ex-Prez says he 'couldn't be happier' By Matt Cantor Posted Aug 3, 2008 11:49 AM CDT Copied Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty shakes hands with former President Bill Clinton after Clinton spoke at the National Governors' Association centennial meeting, Saturday, July, 12, 2008, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Tom Mihalek) After a brutal primary race peppered with “YouTube moments” that tarnished his image, Bill Clinton is back to work, traveling through Africa in support of his charity. “This is my life now, and I was eager to get back to it,” the former president told the Washington Post in an interview. He said little about his campaign gaffes and kept praise of Barack Obama to a minimum. “Next year, you and I, and everybody else will be freer and have more space to say what we believe to be the truth,” Clinton said, alluding to the primary season in which he was repeatedly criticized for hurting his wife's campaign with impolitic outbursts. He said participation in the primaries had been “a privilege” and called Obama “smart” and “a good politician." Now, he says, he “couldn’t be happier” in his current work. “They don't call him the comeback kid for nothing,” said ex-Hillary strategist Mark Penn. Read These Next Officials say ICE agent who shot Renee Good had internal bleeding. Tennis player celebrates win—before losing to an American. Verizon finally got phones out of SOS mode. Dems and Republicans team up to block Trump on Greenland. Report an error