BEHIND THE HEADLINES
The trappings of a normal life are vanishing for Obama
The president-elect is losing the last vestiges of his former hometown life as he awaits biggest transformation of all.
CHICAGO — Barack Obama seems to be savoring his last few days of near-normalcy.
Or at least as normal as life can be for a president-elect living in a house fortified with barriers, traveling in a motorcade, surrounded by Secret Service agents and mapping out the next administration.
Even his barber makes house calls now, depriving Obama of the regular barbershop visits he used to enjoy.
Still, after winning the presidency Nov. 4, Obama has tried to reclaim as much as he can of the family-focused routine he sacrificed while campaigning for nearly two years.
He wakes up in his own bed, heads to the gym for a workout, returns to his house in leafy Hyde Park to shower and change, and then travels to a downtown Chicago office building, 15 minutes away by motorcade. He spends several hours there before returning home to his wife, Michelle, and daughters, Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7.
The future president and first lady still go to their favorite restaurant, Spiaggia, for Italian food. Obama dropped the girls off at their school two days last week and even attended parent- teacher conferences.
In an interview telecast Sunday on CBS’ “60 Minutes,” Obama said: “I’m sleeping in my own bed over the last 10 days, which is quite a treat. Michelle always wakes up earlier than I do. So listening to her roaming around and having the girls come in and, you know, jump in your bed, . . . it’s a great feeling.”
The Obamas are planning a family vacation in Hawaii, as usual, over the Christmas holiday.
“I am not going to be spending too much time in Washington over the next several weeks,” Obama said in a recent telephone conversation overheard by reporters on his plane.
But on Jan. 20, he will become president and move his family into the White House, where almost nothing will be the same.
“It transforms their lives,” said Thomas E. Cronin, a presidential scholar at Colorado College in Colorado Springs. “All of them, no matter who they are, yearn to get away for time with family or friends.”
Obama has endured increasing restrictions on his day-today activities as he ascended the political ladder at warp speed, from the Illinois Legislature to the U. S. Senate to president- elect. It has not been easy.
After securing the Democratic presidential nomination, he bristled when news organizations insisted on having a “protective pool” of reporters and photographers shadow his every move, even when it required them to sit for hours in vans outside his gym, office and home. He eventually yielded to the inevitable, knowing that nominees, presidents-elect and presidents have agreed to such arrangements for years.
Michelle Obama told “60 Minutes” about taking the girls to school the day after the election. “Some people were cheering as I walked the kids to the class,” she said. “And I remember Malia saying, ‘That’s embarrassing.’ ”
For at least four years, and perhaps eight, life for the Obamas will certainly not be their own.
Barack Obama will not drive a car or go anywhere by himself. It is a good bet he has not since he got Secret Service protection early last year. He will not live alone in the Capitol Hill apartment just off Stanton Park anymore. The trade-off is a much bigger house, rent-free, with ample space for his daughters, the first lady and her mother.
Some days, he will not venture beyond the gates of the White House compound. Everything he needs is on site or easily taken to him.
On “60 Minutes,” Obama said he had spoken to former presidents. “All of them recognized that there’s a certain loneliness to the job,” he said.
Still, “all first families try to have some normalcy,” said Philip Henderson, a presidential scholar at Catholic University in Washington.
But even routine matters — such as picking out a puppy for the girls — are played out before cameras, lights and microphones.
Inevitably, Barack Obama’s life as a seminormal citizen is vanishing. He travels in a reinforced sport utility vehicle, with a counterassault team tailing him. He enters and exits buildings under heavy protection, through underground parking garages or back doors, out of sight from the public.
As banners congratulating Obama hang from lampposts, clusters of people gather on street corners as his motorcade zips along temporarily closed streets. Concrete barriers and steel fences surround the perimeter of his block.
And his neighborhood barbershop? Its large glass window, where crowds formed to watch Obama get a trim, made security impossible. Now the barber and Obama go to the home of one of the president-elect’s friends.
In a couple of months, the Obamas will be living in Washington — at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. — with even greater security and even more confinements.
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