The Obamas Get Used to Security, Rev Up for the White House
The wife of the presidential candidate opens up about their life at home.
May 23, 2007 — -- Michelle Obama has landed in the headlines not for what she's doing on the campaign trail but for what she's doing off it.
Citing "increased campaign and family commitments," the wife of Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., resigned Tuesday from her position on the board of the Treehouse Foods Corp. -- a major supplier to Wal-Mart, whose labor practices her husband has strongly criticized.
It's just one of the many adjustments Michelle Obama has had to make as her husband's run for the White House gears up.
Perhaps the family's biggest adjustment has been in the realm of personal security. After unspecified threats and overwhelming crowd sizes, Obama was the first of the 2008 presidential candidates to be assigned a Secret Service detail. It's a change that the couple's two daughters, 8-year-old Malia and 5-year-old Sasha, have taken in stride.
"Well, you know, we have Secret Service detail now, which I am extremely grateful for. And people have asked, 'Well, how are the kids dealing with it,'" she told ABC's Robin Roberts. "And, the day that they started, the detail was out at the house, and the girls met everybody and they walked up to the guys and asked, 'Do you sleep, do you sit down, do you get to eat?' And then the next morning we woke up and Sasha, our youngest one, came on and said, 'Mommy, are the secret people still here?' I said, 'They're still here.' And she said, 'OK.' She called them 'the secret people.'"
Though their children know their dad might become president, Michelle Obama said they're not letting that prospect rule their lives.
"They understand that their dad is running for president … but they really aren't directly interested," she said. "We are blessed with two kids who have the personality to work with this crazy, chaotic life that we have."
She and the senator think about how living in the White House could affect their kids' lives -- and those of minority children across the country.
"We're looking at the possibility of what they will get from their experience running for president. And what a gift, to grow up in the White House, to see world leaders, to understand how the country is shaped," she said. "What a symbol that it will show to so many young boys and girls out there, particularly kids of color, who have never seen themselves -- in a major way. What a statement that'll be."