About Michelle LaVaughn Obama (Robinson)
Michelle LaVaughn Obama née Robinson (born January 17, 1964)
is an American attorney and the wife of Barack Obama, President-elect of
the United States and Senator from Illinois. She will be the first
African-American to become the First Lady of the United States.
She was born and grew up on the South Side of Chicago and graduated
from Princeton University and Harvard Law School. After completing her
formal education, she returned to Chicago and accepted a position with
the law firm Sidley Austin, and subsequently worked as part of the staff
of Chicago mayor Richard M. Daley, and for the University of Chicago
Medical Center.
Michelle Obama is the sister of Craig Robinson, men's basketball
coach at Oregon State University. She met Barack Obama when he joined
Sidley Austin. After his election to the U.S. Senate, the Obama family
continued to live on Chicago's South Side, choosing to remain there
rather than moving to Washington, D.C.
Michelle Robinson was born on January 17, 1964, in Chicago, Illinois
to Fraser Robinson (who died in 1991), a city water plant employee and
Democratic precinct captain, and Marian Shields Robinson, a secretary at
Spiegel's catalog store. Michelle can trace her roots to pre-Civil War
African Americans in the American South; her paternal great-great
grandfather, Jim Robinson, was an American slave in the state of South
Carolina, where some of her family still reside. She grew up in the
South Shore community area of Chicago, and was raised in a conventional
two-parent home. The family ate meals together and also entertained
together as a family by playing games such as Monopoly and by reading.
She and her brother, Craig (who is 21 months older), skipped the second
grade. Michelle attended Whitney Young High School, where she was on the
honor roll four years, took advanced placement classes, was a member of
the National Honor Society and served as student council treasurer. She
was a high school classmate of Santita Jackson, the daughter of Jesse
Jackson and sister of Jesse Jackson, Jr. She graduated from high school
in 1981, and went on to major in sociology and minor in African American
studies at Princeton University, where she graduated cum laude with a
Bachelor of Arts in 1985.
At Princeton, she challenged the teaching methodology for French
because she felt that it should be more conversational. As part of her
requirements for graduation, she wrote a thesis entitled,
"Princeton-Educated Blacks and the Black Community." She obtained her
Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Harvard Law School in 1988. While at
Harvard, she participated in political demonstrations advocating the
hiring of professors who are members of minorities.
She met Barack Obama when they were among very few African Americans
at their law firm (she has sometimes said only two, although others have
pointed out there were others in different departments) and she was
assigned to mentor him while he was a summer associate. Their
relationship started with a business lunch and then a community
organization meeting where he first impressed her. The couple's first
date was to the Spike Lee movie Do the Right Thing.[20] The couple
married in October 1992, and they have two daughters, Malia Ann (born
1998) and Natasha (known as Sasha) (born 2001). Throughout her husband's
2008 campaign for President of the United States, she has made a
"commitment to be away overnight only once a week — to campaign only two
days a week and be home by the end of the second day" for their two
children.
She once requested that Barack, who was then her fiancé, meet her
prospective boss, Valerie Jarrett, when considering her first career
move. Now, Jarrett is one of her husband’s closest advisors Early in the
presidential race, Michelle Obama did not portray herself as an advisor
to her husband. In fact, she was quoted in interviews saying "My job is
not a senior advisor."
According to an Obama interview on the 2008 season premier of The
Ellen DeGeneres Show, the couple does not intend to have any more
children.
Following law school, she was an associate at the Chicago office of
the law firm Sidley Austin, where she first met her husband. At the
firm, she worked on marketing and intellectual property. Subsequently,
she held public sector positions in the Chicago city government as an
Assistant to the Mayor, and as Assistant Commissioner of Planning and
Development. In 1993, she became Executive Director for the Chicago
office of Public Allies, a non-profit organization encouraging young
people to work on social issues in nonprofit groups and government
agencies. She worked there nearly four years and set fundraising records
for the organization that still stood a dozen years after she left.
In 1996, Obama served as the Associate Dean of Student Services at
the University of Chicago, where she developed the University's
Community Service Center. In 2002, she began working for the University
of Chicago Hospitals, first as executive director for community affairs
and, beginning May, 2005, as Vice President for Community and External
Affairs. She still holds the position, though she is working part time
in order to devote more time to being a mother.
With the ascent of her husband as a prominent national politician,
she has become a part of pop culture. In May 2006, Essence magazine
listed her among "25 of the World's Most Inspiring Women." In July 2007,
Vanity Fair magazine listed her among "10 of the World's Best Dressed
People." In September 2007, 02138 magazine listed her 58th of "The
Harvard 100," a list of the prior year's most influential Harvard
alumni. Her husband was ranked fourth. In July 2008, she made a repeat
appearance on the Vanity Fair international best dressed list. She also
appeared on the 2008 People list of best-dressed women and was praised
by the magazine for her "classic and confident" look. Obama's package of
attributes is anticipated to be well-suited for the role of First Lady
by some.
She served as a salaried board member of Tree House Foods, Inc., a
major Wal-Mart supplier with whom she cut ties immediately after her
husband made comments critical of Wal-Mart at an AFL-CIO forum in
Trenton, New Jersey, on May 14, 2007. She serves on the board of
directors of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.
According to the couple’s 2006 income tax return, Michelle's salary
was $273,618 from the University of Chicago Hospitals, while he had a
salary of $157,082 from the United States Senate. The total Obama
income, however, was $991,296 including $51,200 she earned as a member
of the board of directors of TreeHouse Foods, plus investments and
royalties from his books.
In July 2008, Obama accepted the invitation to become an honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha, the 100-year-old black sorority.
Barack Obama told People Magazine that one of his wife's secret
talents is that she can really hoop. "She is the best Hula-Hooper I
know. Once she gets the rhythm going, she can drop to her knees!"
She often wears clothes by designers Calvin Klein,Oscar de la
Renta,Isabel Toledo, Narciso Rodriguez, Donna Ricco and Maria Pinto.
Although Michelle Obama has campaigned on her husband's behalf since
early in his political career by handshaking and fund-raising, she did
not relish the activity at first. While campaigning during Barack
Obama's 2000 run for U.S. House of Representatives, her boss at the
University of Chicago asked if there was any single thing about
campaigning that she enjoyed; after some thought, she replied visiting
so many living rooms had given her some new decorating ideas.
In May 2007, three months after her husband declared his presidential
candidacy, she reduced her professional responsibilities by eighty
percent to support his presidential campaign. Early in the campaign, she
had limited involvement in which she traveled to political events only
two days a week and traveled overnight only if their daughters could
come along. In early February 2008, she attended thirty-three events in
eight days. She has made at least two campaign appearances with Oprah
Winfrey.
In 2007, Michelle gave stump speeches for her husband's presidential
campaign at various locations in the United States. Jennifer Hunter of
the Chicago Sun-Times wrote about one speech of hers in Iowa, "Michelle
was a firebrand, expressing a determined passion for her husband's
campaign, talking straight from the heart with eloquence and
intelligence." She employs an all-female staff of aides for her
political role. She says that she negotiated an agreement in which her
husband gave up smoking in exchange for her support of his decision to
run. About her role in her husband's presidential campaign she has said:
"My job is not a senior adviser." During the campaign, she has
discussed race and education by using motherhood as a framework.
This is her first election year on the national political scene and
even before the field of Democratic candidates was narrowed to two she
was considered the least famous of the candidates' spouses. Early in the
campaign, she exhibited her ironic humor and told anecdotes about the
Obama family life. However, as the press began to emphasize her sarcasm,
which did not translate well in the print media, she toned it down. A
New York Times op-ed columnist, Maureen Dowd, wrote:
I wince a bit when Michelle Obama chides her husband as a mere mortal
— comic routine that rests on the presumption that we see him as a god
... But it may not be smart politics to mock him in a way that turns him
from the glam JFK into the mundane Gerald Ford, toasting his own
English muffin. If all Senator Obama is peddling is the Camelot
mystique, why debunk this mystique?
Asked in February 2008 whether she could see herself "working to
support" Hillary Clinton if she got the nomination, Michelle said "I'd
have to think about that. I'd have to think about policies, her
approach, her tone." When questioned about this by the interviewer,
however, she stated "You know, everyone in this party is going to work
hard for whoever the nominee is."
Despite her criticisms of Clinton during the 2008 campaign, when
asked in 2004 which political spouse she admired, Obama cited Hillary
Clinton, stating, "She is smart and gracious and everything she appears
to be in public — someone who's managed to raise what appears to be a
solid, grounded child."
On October 6, 2008 Larry King Live Obama was asked if the American
electorate is past the Bradley effect. She stated that Barack's
achievement of the nomination was a fairly strong indicator that it is.
The same night she also was interviewed by Jon Stewart on the Daily Show
where she deflected criticism of her husband and his campaign. Her
first Daily Show appearance came after her husband had made three such
appearances.
The following weekend, the Obamas held a high-priced fundraiser for
the Presidential campaign and for the Democratic National Committee to
raise money from women. Obama has also been courting working women.
Her assigned Secret Service codename is "Renaissance".
On February 18, 2008, Obama commented in Milwaukee, Wisconsin that
"For the first time in my adult life, I am proud of my country because
it feels like hope is finally making a comeback." Later that evening she
reworded her stump speech in Madison, Wisconsin, saying "For the first
time in my adult lifetime, I'm really proud of my country, and not just
because Barack has done well, but because I think people are hungry for
change." Several commentators criticized her remarks, and the campaign
issued a statement that "anyone who heard her remarks ... would
understand that she was commenting on our politics." In June 2008 Laura
Bush indicated she thought Michelle Obama's words had been
misrepresented in the media "I think she probably meant I'm 'more
proud,' you know, is what she really meant," adding, "I mean, I know
that, and that's one of the things you learn and that's one of the
really difficult parts both of running for president and for being the
spouse of the president, and that is, everything you say is looked at
and in many cases misconstrued."
Throughout the campaign, the media have often labeled Obama as an
"angry black woman," and some websites have attempted to propagate this
perception, causing her to respond:
Barack and I have been in the public eye for many years now, and
we've developed a thick skin along the way. When you’re out campaigning,
there will always be criticism. I just take it in stride, and at the
end of the day, I know that it comes with the territory."
Michelle Obama was regarded as a charismatic public speaker from the
very beginning of the campaign. She delivered the keynote address on the
first night of the 2008 Democratic National Convention on August 25,
during which she sought to portray herself and her family as the
embodiment of the American Dream. Other speakers that night included
Jesse Jackson, Jr. and Edward Kennedy, who some expected to steal the
limelight. She described Barack as a family man and herself as no
different from many women; she also spoke about the backgrounds that she
and her husband came from. Obama said both she and her husband believed
"that you work hard for what you want in life, that your word is your
bond, and you do what you say you're going to do, that you treat people
with dignity and respect, even if you don't know them, and even if you
don't agree with them." She also emphasized her love of country, in
response to criticism for her previous statements about feeling proud of
her country for the first time. Her daughters joined her on the stage
after the speech and greeted their father, who appeared on the overhead
video screen.
Obama's speech was largely well received and drew mostly positive
reviews. A Rasmussen Reports poll found that her favorablity among
Americans reached 55%. Political commentator Andrew Sullivan described
the speech as "one of the best, most moving, intimate, rousing, humble,
and beautiful speeches I've heard from a convention platform." Ezra
Klein of The American Prospect, described it as a "beautifully
delivered, and smartly crafted, speech" and described Obama as "coming
off as wholesome and, frankly, familiar." Katherine Marsh of The New
Republic, however, said she missed "the old Michelle... not the Stepford
wife fist-bumping Elisabeth Hasselbeck, but the sassy better half who
reminded us that while Barack was the answer, he was also stinky in the
morning and forgot to put the butter away. She both affirmed his promise
and humanized him." Jason Zengerle, also of The New Republic, said
Obama should have emphasized her professional and educational
achievements as well as her mother, daughter and sister qualities;
Zengerle wrote, "It almost makes you long for the days when politicians'
wives were seen but not heard. After all, if they're not permitted to
really say anything, what's the point of having them speak." Time
described the evening's series of speakers as the long awaited passing
of the torch from the long line of Kennedy family members to the next
man to be the Democratic Party standard bearer.
-------------------- Michelle Obama
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michelle LaVaughn Robinson Obama (born January 17, 1964) is the wife
of the forty-fourth President of the United States, Barack Obama, and is
the first First Lady of the United States of African-American heritage.
Michelle Robinson was born in and grew up on the South Side of
Chicago. She graduated from Princeton University and Harvard Law School.
After completing her formal education, she returned to Chicago and
accepted a position with the law firm Sidley Austin, where she met her
future husband. Subsequently, she worked as part of the staff of Chicago
mayor Richard M. Daley, and for the University of Chicago Medical
Center. Throughout 2007 and 2008, she helped campaign for her husband's
presidential bid and delivered a keynote address at the 2008 Democratic
National Convention. She is the mother of two daughters, Malia and
Sasha, and is the sister of Craig Robinson, men's basketball coach at
Oregon State University.
Family and education
See also: Michelle Robinson's family tree
Michelle LaVaughn Robinson was born on January 17, 1964, in Chicago,
Illinois to Fraser Robinson III,[1] a city water plant employee and
Democratic precinct captain, and Marian Shields Robinson, a secretary at
Spiegel's catalog store.[2] Her mother was a full-time homemaker until
Michelle entered high school.[3] The Robinson and Shields families can
trace their roots to pre-Civil War African Americans in the American
South. Her paternal great-great grandfather, Jim Robinson, was an
American slave in the state of South Carolina,[4][5] where some of her
paternal family still reside.[6][7] Her maternal great-great-great
grandmother, Melvinia Shields, also a slave, became pregnant by a white
man. His name and the nature of their union have been lost. She gave
birth to Michelle's biracial maternal great-great grandfather, Dolphus
T. Shields.[8]
Robinson grew up on Euclid Avenue in the South Shore community area
of Chicago,[2][9][10] and was raised in what she describes as a
"conventional" home, with "the mother at home, the father works, you
have dinner around the table".[11] The family entertained together by
playing games such as Monopoly and by reading.[12] She and her brother,
Craig (who is 21 months older), skipped the second grade. By sixth
grade, Michelle joined a gifted class at Bryn Mawr Elementary School
(later renamed Bouchet Academy).[13]
She attended Whitney Young High School, Chicago's first magnet high
school, where she was on the honor roll for four years, took advanced
placement classes, was a member of the National Honor Society and served
as student council treasurer.[2] The round trip commute from her South
Side home to the Near West Side took three hours.[14] She was a high
school classmate of Santita Jackson, the daughter of Jesse Jackson and
sister of Jesse Jackson, Jr.[12] She graduated from high school in 1981
as salutatorian.[14][15]
Michelle was inspired to follow her brother to Princeton
University;[3] he graduated in 1983. At Princeton, she challenged the
teaching methodology for French because she felt that it should be more
conversational.[16] As part of her requirements for graduation, she
wrote a thesis entitled, "Princeton Educated Blacks and the Black
Community."[17][18] "I remember being shocked," she says, "by college
students who drove BMWs. I didn't even know parents who drove BMWs."[14]
Robinson majored in sociology and minored in African American studies
and graduated cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts in 1985.[2][19] She
earned her Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Harvard Law School in
1988.[20] While at Harvard, she participated in political demonstrations
advocating the hiring of professors who were members of minorities.[21]
She is the third First Lady with a postgraduate degree, following
Hillary Rodham Clinton and Laura Bush.[22] In July 2008, Obama accepted
the invitation to become an honorary member of the 100-year-old black
sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha, which had no active undergraduate chapter at
Princeton when she attended.[23]
She met Barack Obama when they were among the few African Americans
at their law firm, Sidley Austin (she has sometimes said only two,
although others have pointed out there were others in different
departments),[24] and she was assigned to mentor him as a summer
associate.[25] Their relationship started with a business lunch and then
a community organization meeting where he first impressed her.[26] The
couple's first date was to the Spike Lee movie Do the Right Thing.[27]
The couple married in October 1992,[26] and they have two daughters,
Malia Ann (born 1998) and Natasha (known as Sasha, born 2001).[28] After
his election to the U.S. Senate, the Obama family continued to live on
Chicago's South Side, choosing to remain there rather than moving to
Washington, D.C. Throughout her husband's 2008 campaign for President of
the United States, she made a "commitment to be away overnight only
once a week — to campaign only two days a week and be home by the end of
the second day" for their two children.[29] She is the sister of Craig
Robinson, men's basketball coach at Oregon State University. She is the
first cousin, once removed, of Rabbi Capers C. Funnye Jr., one of the
country’s most prominent black rabbis.
She once requested that her then-fiancé meet her prospective boss,
Valerie Jarrett, when considering her first career move.[11] Now Jarrett
is one of her husband’s closest advisors.[30][31] The marital
relationship has had its ebbs and flows; the combination of an evolving
family life and beginning political career led to many arguments about
balancing work and family. Barack Obama wrote in his second book, The
Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream, that "Tired
and stressed, we had little time for conversation, much less
romance".[32] However, despite their family obligations and careers,
they continue to attempt to schedule date nights.[33]
The Obamas' daughters attended the University of Chicago Laboratory
Schools, a private school.[34] As a member of the school's board,
Michelle fought to maintain diversity in the school when other board
members connected with the University of Chicago tried to reserve more
slots for children of the university faculty. This resulted in a plan to
expand the school.[3] The Obamas' daughters now attend Sidwell Friends
School in Washington, after also considering Georgetown Day
School.[35][36] She stated in an interview on the The Ellen DeGeneres
Show that the couple does not intend to have any more children.[37] They
have received advice from past first ladies Laura Bush, Rosalynn Carter
and Hillary Rodham Clinton about raising children in the White
House.[36] Marian Robinson has moved into the White House to assist with
child care.[38]
Career
Following law school, she was an associate at the Chicago office of
the law firm Sidley Austin, where she first met her future husband. At
the firm, she worked on marketing and intellectual property.[2]
Subsequently, she held public sector positions in the Chicago city
government as an Assistant to the Mayor, and as Assistant Commissioner
of Planning and Development. In 1993, she became Executive Director for
the Chicago office of Public Allies, a non-profit organization
encouraging young people to work on social issues in nonprofit groups
and government agencies.[15] She worked there nearly four years and set
fundraising records for the organization that still stood 12 years after
she left.[12]
In 1996, she served as the Associate Dean of Student Services at the
University of Chicago, where she developed the University's Community
Service Center.[39] In 2002, she began working for the University of
Chicago Hospitals, first as executive director for community affairs
and, beginning May 2005, as Vice President for Community and External
Affairs.[40] She continued to hold the University of Chicago Hospitals
position during the primary campaign, but cut back to part time in order
to spend time with her daughters as well as work for her husband's
election;[41] she subsequently took a leave of absence from her job.[42]
According to the couple’s 2006 income tax return, her salary was
$273,618 from the University of Chicago Hospitals, while her husband had
a salary of $157,082 from the United States Senate. The total Obama
income, however, was $991,296, which included $51,200 she earned as a
member of the board of directors of TreeHouse Foods, and investments and
royalties from his books.[43]
She served as a salaried board member of TreeHouse Foods, Inc. (NYSE:
THS),[44] a major Wal-Mart supplier with whom she cut ties immediately
after her husband made comments critical of Wal-Mart at an AFL-CIO forum
in Trenton, New Jersey, on May 14, 2007.[45] She serves on the board of
directors of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.[46]
2008 Presidential election
Although Obama has campaigned on her husband's behalf since early in
his political career by handshaking and fund-raising, she did not relish
the activity at first. When she campaigned during her husband's 2000
run for United States House of Representatives, her boss at the
University of Chicago asked if there was any single thing about
campaigning that she enjoyed; after some thought, she replied visiting
so many living rooms had given her some new decorating ideas.[47]
At first, Obama had reservations about her husband's presidential
campaign due to fears about a possible negative effect on their
daughters.[48] She says that she negotiated an agreement in which her
husband gave up smoking in exchange for her support of his decision to
run.[49] About her role in her husband's presidential campaign she has
said: "My job is not a senior adviser."[30][50][51] During the campaign,
she has discussed race and education by using motherhood as a
framework.[16]
In May 2007, three months after her husband declared his presidential
candidacy, she reduced her professional responsibilities by 80 percent
to support his presidential campaign.[11] Early in the campaign, she had
limited involvement in which she traveled to political events only two
days a week and traveled overnight only if their daughters could come
along;[1] by early February 2008 her participation had increased
significantly, attending thirty-three events in eight days.[31] She made
several campaign appearances with Oprah Winfrey.[52][53] She wrote her
own stump speeches for her husband's presidential campaign and generally
spoke without notes.[14]
Throughout the campaign, the media often labeled her as an "angry
black woman,"[54][55][56] and some Web sites attempted to propagate this
image,[57] prompting her to respond: "Barack and I have been in the
public eye for many years now, and we've developed a thick skin along
the way. When you’re out campaigning, there will always be criticism. I
just take it in stride, and at the end of the day, I know that it comes
with the territory."[58] By the time of the 2008 Democratic National
Convention in August, media outlets observed that her presence on the
campaign trail had grown softer than at the start of the race, focusing
on soliciting concerns and empathizing with the audience rather than
throwing down challenges to them, and giving interviews to shows like
The View and publications like Ladies' Home Journal rather than
appearing on news programs. The change was even reflected in her fashion
choices, wearing more informal clothes in place of her previous
designer pieces.[47] The View appearance was partly intended to help
soften her public image,[54] and it was widely-covered in the press.[59]
The presidential campaign was her first exposure to the national
political scene; even before the field of Democratic candidates was
narrowed to two, she was considered the least famous of the candidates'
spouses.[50] Early in the campaign, she told anecdotes about the Obama
family life; however, as the press began to emphasize her sarcasm, she
toned it down.[43][49] New York Times op-ed columnist Maureen Dowd
wrote:
I wince a bit when Michelle Obama chides her husband as a mere mortal
— comic routine that rests on the presumption that we see him as a god
... But it may not be smart politics to mock him in a way that turns him
from the glam JFK into the mundane Gerald Ford, toasting his own
English muffin. If all Senator Obama is peddling is the Camelot
mystique, why debunk this mystique?[50][60]
On February 18, 2008, she commented in Milwaukee, Wisconsin that "For
the first time in my adult life, I am proud of my country because it
feels like hope is finally making a comeback." Later that evening she
reworded her stump speech in Madison, Wisconsin, saying "For the first
time in my adult lifetime, I'm really proud of my country, and not just
because Barack has done well, but because I think people are hungry for
change."[61] Several commentators criticized her remarks,[62] and the
campaign issued a statement that "anyone who heard her remarks ... would
understand that she was commenting on our politics."[63] In June 2008,
First Lady Laura Bush commented on the controversial words: "I think she
probably meant I'm 'more proud,' you know, is what she really meant... I
mean, I know that, and that's one of the things you learn and that's
one of the really difficult parts both of running for president and for
being the spouse of the president, and that is, everything you say is
looked at and in many cases misconstrued."[64]
Asked in February 2008 whether she could see herself "working to
support" Hillary Rodham Clinton if she got the nomination, she said "I'd
have to think about that. I'd have to think about policies, her
approach, her tone." But when questioned about this by the interviewer,
she stated "You know, everyone in this party is going to work hard for
whoever the nominee is."[65] Despite her criticisms of Clinton during
the 2008 campaign, when asked in 2004 which political spouse she
admired, she had cited Hillary Clinton, stating, "She is smart and
gracious and everything she appears to be in public — someone who's
managed to raise what appears to be a solid, grounded child."[66]
On the first night of the 2008 Democratic National Convention, Craig
Robinson introduced his younger sister.[67] She delivered her speech,
during which she sought to portray herself and her family as the
embodiment of the American Dream.[68] Obama said both she and her
husband believed "that you work hard for what you want in life, that
your word is your bond, and you do what you say you're going to do, that
you treat people with dignity and respect, even if you don't know them,
and even if you don't agree with them."[69] She also emphasized loving
her country, in response to criticism for her previous statements about
feeling proud of her country for the first time.[68][70][71]
That keynote address was largely well received and drew mostly
positive reviews.[72] A Rasmussen Reports poll found that her
favorability among Americans reached 55%.[73] Political commentator
Andrew Sullivan described the speech as "one of the best, most moving,
intimate, rousing, humble, and beautiful speeches I've heard from a
convention platform."[74] The speech made Juan Williams tear up over the
thought of the significance of her presentation as a representative of
Black America.[75] A pair of articles in the National Review, including
one by Byron York, however, noted that although the speech presented
America as the land of opportunity, it conflicted with her campaign
trail speeches that described negative aspects of the country.[76][77]
On an October 6, 2008 broadcast, Larry King asked her if the American
electorate was past the Bradley effect. She stated that her husband's
achievement of the nomination was a fairly strong indicator that it
was.[78] The same night she also was interviewed by Jon Stewart on the
Daily Show where she deflected criticism of her husband and his
campaign.[79]
On E. D. Hill's Fox News show America's Pulse, Hill referred to the
fist bump shared by the Obamas on the night that he clinched the
Democratic presidential nomination as a "terrorist fist jab".[80] In
June 2008, Hill was removed from her duties on the specific show, which
was then canceled.[81][82]
First Lady of the United States
Style and fashion sense
With the ascent of her husband as a prominent national politician,
Michelle Obama has become a part of popular culture. In May 2006,
Essence listed her among "25 of the World's Most Inspiring
Women."[83][84] In July 2007, Vanity Fair listed her among "10 of the
World's Best Dressed People." She was an honorary guest at Oprah
Winfrey's Legends Ball as a "young'un" paying tribute to the 'Legends,'
which helped pave the way for African American Women. In September 2007,
02138 magazine listed her 58th of 'The Harvard 100'; a list of the
prior year's most influential Harvard alumni. Her husband was ranked
fourth.[83][85] In July 2008, she made a repeat appearance on the Vanity
Fair international best dressed list.[86] She also appeared on the 2008
People list of best-dressed women and was praised by the magazine for
her "classic and confident" look.[87][88]
Many sources have speculated that, as a high-profile African-American
woman in a stable marriage, she will be a positive role model who will
influence the view the world has of African-Americans.[89][90] Her
fashion choices were part of Fashion week,[91] but Obama's influence in
the field did not have an impact on the paucity of African-American
models who participate, as some thought it might.[92][93]
She has been compared to Jacqueline Kennedy due to her sense of
style,[86] and also to Barbara Bush for her discipline and
decorum.[94][95] Her white, one-shoulder Jason Wu 2009 inaugural gown
was said to be "an unlikely combination of Nancy Reagan and Jackie
Kennedy".[96][97] Obama's style is described as populist.[22] She often
wears clothes by designers Calvin Klein, Oscar de la Renta, Isabel
Toledo, Narciso Rodriguez, Donna Ricco and Maria Pinto,[98] and has
become a fashion trendsetter,[99][100][101] in particular her favoring
of sleeveless dresses that showcase her toned arms.[102]
She appeared on the cover and in a photo spread in the March 2009
issue of Vogue.[103][104] Every First Lady since Lou Hoover (except Bess
Truman) has been in Vogue,[103] but only Hillary Clinton had previously
appeared on the cover.[105]
The media have been criticized for focusing more on the first lady's
fashion sense than her serious contributions.[22][106] She has stated
that she would like to focus attention as First Lady on issues of
concern to military and working families.[89][107][108] U.S.News &
World Report blogger, PBS host and Scripps Howard columnist Bonnie Erbe
has argued that Obama's own publicists seem to be feeding the emphasis
on style over substance.[109] Erbe has stated on several occasions that
she is miscasting herself by overemphasizing style.[38][110]
Work undertaken and causes promoted
During her early months as First Lady, she has frequently visited
homeless shelters and soup kitchens.[111] She has also sent
representatives to schools and advocated public service.[111][112] On
her first trip abroad in April 2009, she toured a cancer ward with Sarah
Brown, wife of British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.[113] She has begun
advocating on behalf of military families.[114] Like her predecessors
Clinton and Bush, who supported the organic movement by instructing the
White House kitchens to buy organic food, Obama has received attention
by planting an organic garden and installing bee hives on the South Lawn
of the White House, which will supply organic produce and honey to the
First Family and for state dinners and other official
gatherings.[115][116]
Obama has become an advocate of her husband's policy priorities by
promoting bills that support it. Following the enactment of the Pay
equity law, Obama hosted a White House reception for women's rights
advocates in celebration. She has pronounced her support for the
economic stimulus bill in visits to the United States Department of
Housing and Urban Development and United States Department of Education.
Some observers have looked favorably upon her legislative activities,
while others have said that she should be less involved in politics.
According to her representatives, she intends to visit all United States
Cabinet-level agencies in order to get acquainted with Washington.[117]
She has gained growing public support in her early months as first
lady.[111][118] She is notable for her support from military families
and some Republicans.[111][114] As the public is growing accustomed to
her, she is becoming more accepted as a role model.[111] Newsweek
described her first trip abroad as an exhibition of her so-called "star
power"[118] and MSN described it as an display of sartorial
elegance.[84] There were questions raised in the American and British
media regarding protocol when the Obamas met Queen Elizabeth II,[119]
and Michelle reciprocated a touch on her back by the Queen during a
reception, purportedly against traditional royal etiquette.[119][120]
Palace sources denied that any breach in etiquette had occurred.[121]
On June 5, 2009, the White House announced that Michelle Obama was
replacing her current chief of staff, Jackie Norris, with Susan Sher, a
longtime friend and adviser. Norris will become a senior adviser to the
Corporation for National and Community Service.[122]
Barack Hussein OBAMA, 44th President of the United States
Michelle LaVaughn ROBINSON
Husband: Barack Hussein "Barry" OBAMA, Jr.
Birth: 4 Aug 1961, Kapiolani Medical Center, Honolulu, Honolulu Co., HI
Early Education-1: 1967-70, Franciscus Assisi Primary School (private Catholic school), Jakarta, IDN
Early Education-2: 1970-71, Menteng No. 1 (public, non-sectarian elementary school), Jakarta, IDN
Early Education-3: 1971-79, Punahou School (private, non-sectarion, college prep academy), Honolulu, HI
Undergraduate Education-1: 1979-81, Occidental College, Los Angeles, Los Angeles Co., CA
Undergraduate Education-2: 1981-83, B.A., Political Science
w/specialization in International Relations, Columbia University, New
York City, NY
Graduate Education: 1988-1991, J.D. (magna cum laude), Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA
Historical Event-1: 1990, first African-American President of Harvard Law Review
Historical Event-2: 4 Nov 2008, elected 44th President of the United States
Occupation-1: 1984-85, Business International, Chicago, IL
Occupation-2: 1985, community organizer for Altgeld Gardens, Chicago, IL
Occupation-3: 1988-89, Associate for Sidley & Austin, Chicago, IL
Occupation-4: 1991-96, Attorney for Miner, Barnhill & Galland, Chicago, IL
Occupation-5: 1993-2004, Senior Lecturer (in Constitutional Law), University of Chicago Law School
Occupation-6: 1996-present, politician
Religion (adult baptism): 1988, Trinity United Church of Christ, Chicago, IL
Political Affiliation: Democrat
Elected Office-1: 1996-2004, Illinois State Senator
Elected Office-2: 2005-2008, United States Senator from Illinois
Father: Barack Hussein OBAMA, Ph.D.
Mother: Stanley Ann DUNHAM, Ph.D.
Marriage: 18 Oct 1992, Trinity United Church of Christ, Chicago, Cook Co., IL
Place of Residence before 2005 (a condominium): Hyde Park, Chicago, Cook Co., IL
Place of Residence since 2005 (an "estate"): Kenwood, Champaign Co., IL
Wife: Michelle LaVaughn ROBINSON
Birth: 17 Jan 1964, Chicago, Cook Co., IL
Secondary Education: graduated 1981, Whitney M. Young Magnet High School, Chicago, IL
Undergraduate Education: graduated 1985, Sociology (cum laude), Princeton University, Princeton, NJ
Graduate Education: graduated 1988, J.D., Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA
Occupation-1: 1988, Associate for Sidley & Austin, Chicago, IL
Occupation-2: Associate Dean, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
Occupation-3: Executive Director of Community Affairs, University of Chicago Hospital, Chicago, IL
Father: Fraser C. ROBINSON III
Mother: Marian L. SHIELDS
Children — born in Chicago, Cook Co., IL:
1. Malia Ann OBAMA, b. 1998
2. Natasha "Sasha" OBAMA, b. 2001
Keywords for search engines: Indonesia, Java; USA, US, United States, California, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey
Sources:
1. Barack Obama's Birth Certificate.
2. Barack Obama. 1995. Dreams From My Father: A Story of Race and
Inheritance. Times Books [Three Rivers Press], New York, NY. [not seen]
3. Barack Obama. 2006. The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on
Reclaiming the American Dream. Crown Publ., New York, NY. [not seen]
4. William Addams Reitwiesner, compilier. Ancestry of Barack Obama.
For the record, I learned of OBAMA's STROUP connection from this web
site ca. 2004. At the time, I already had OBAMA's STROUP ancestry
online, from Louise Eliza STROUP backwards, because I, too, descend from
Johann Pieter STRAUB I, the 1733 emigrant from Großgartach,
Württemberg, to Philadelphia, PA. I have a web site dedicated to
STRAUB/STROUP where lines of descent from Johann Pieter are followed
until they "daughter out."
5. Anon. 9 Sep 2007. "The Obama Family Tree." Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago, IL (PDF file online at suntimes.com).
6. CNN Debunks False Rumor about Obama (online at CNN.com). The
rumor that Barack attended a fundamentalist Islamic grade school in
Jakarta is false.
7. Kim Barker. 25 Mar 2007. "History of [Barack Obama's] Schooling
Distorted." Chicago Tribune, Chicago, IL (online at
chicagotribune.com).
8. Sharon Cohen. 14 Dec 2007. Barack Obama Straddles Different Worlds (online at wtopnews.com).
9. Urban Legends: Barack Obama is a Muslim (online at urbanlegends.About.com): debunks rumor that Obama is Muslim.
10. The Enemy Within (online at snopes.com): debunks myths about Obama.
11. Numerous sites on the web, including Wikipedia.