June 26, 2009 5:17 PM

Obama Bristles As Bubble Closes In On Him

By
Stephen Smith
(The Politico)  This story was written by Carol E. Lee.


The media glare, the constant security appendage and the sheer production that has become a morning jog or a hankering for an ice cream cone - it's been closing in on Barack Obama for some time.

Now the president-elect appears increasingly conscious of the confines of his new position, bristling at the routine demands of press coverage and beginning to chafe at boundaries that are only going to get smaller.

Obama even took the unusual step Friday morning of leaving behind the pool of reporters assigned to follow him, taking his daughters to a nearby water park without them. It was a breach of longstanding protocol between presidents (or presidents-elect) and the media, that a gaggle of reporters representing television, print and wire services is with his motorcade at all times.

Then when reporters finally caught up with Obama at Koko Marina Paradise Deli and he acknowledged them for one of few times since arriving in Hawaii last Saturday, he sounded resigned.

After ordering a tuna melt on 12-grain bread, Obama approached reporters and placed his hand on the shoulder of pool reporter Philip Rucker of The Washington Post, who was scribbling away in his notebook.

"You don't really need to write all that down," Obama said.

All presidents and would-be presidents struggle with "the bubble" - the security detail and the always-there reporters that impose barriers to any spontaneous interaction with the outside world.

But Obama seems to be struggling particularly hard, particularly early.

As rapid as Obama's political rise has been, so too has his family's introduction to the bubble.

Four years ago Obama was an Illinois state senator who was on his way to the U.S. Senate. Next month, he will become one of only a handful of modern presidents who has not endured a similar bubble as a governor or top U.S. official before taking office.

Already, Obama no longer gets out for an impromptu lunch or a haircut. The barber he's gone to for 15 years now comes to him, and he mostly orders out. Soon Obama likely will be forced to give up the BlackBerry he often kept attached to his hip during the campaign.

"There's still some things we're not adjusted to," Obama said in a "60 Minutes" interview after the election. "You know, the small routines of life that keep you connected, I think some of those are being lost."

Bill Clinton grew frustrated that he couldn't go out any time he wanted, and once went Christmas shopping without the pool. After he became president, George W. Bush stopped sending e-mails to his daughters because he didn't want the personal notes to become public one day.

"It's just hard to know that there's somebody with you all the time," said Steve Elmendorf, who was deputy campaign manager for John Kerry in 2004. "Being able to get up and go biking or go for a walk, or hold hands with your wife - everything you do is not just under the scrutiny of the press or the pool."
For Obama, who received a Secret Service detail earlier than any presidential candidate since the practice began, the scrutiny is much more intense.

The glare on his family is shaping up to be unprecedented, both because Obama assumes the presidency amid a 24-hour, Web-dominated media age where many traditional boundaries don't exist and because of what he represents. He's the first African-American to be elected president. At 47, he's a young guy - as presidents go. He also has a youthful, attractive family that is social and active.

During the first week in Hawaii, Obama has had to deal with paparazzi waiting in the distance, photographing him shirtless outside his beachfront vacation home and later while spreading his grandmother's ashes at the Pacific coast.

And even though the pool photographers remained out of sight and without an image of these private moments, Obama seems to be tiring of the journalists who have followed him daily since the campaign.

"OK, guys, come on," Obama said last Sunday, looking toward photographers clicking away as he warmed up before a round of golf. "How many shots do you need?"

It's been a progression. And Obama's frustration shows in waves.

On Halloween, Obama grew testy with a Polish media crew as he took his daughter Sasha to a party at his campaign treasurer Marty Nesbitt's Chicago home.

"All right guys. That's enough. You've got a shot. Leave us alone. Come on guys. Get back on the bus," Obama said before breaking into a trot with Sasha still holding his hand.

The day before Thanksgiving, a sixth grader at a Chicago school asked Obama about his new life.

"You don't have a lot of privacy," Obama told some 200 children, adding that going to Walgreen's and riding a bicycle are now far more involved than before.

Those close to the Obamas have spoken to the media less and less since the election. Calls and e-mails to close friends and associates of the Obamas were not returned.

"My husband and I have been asked not to speak with the press about the Obamas," one of them wrote in an e-mail. "They would prefer that we stay out of the papers for now."

It seems the narrower the gap between transition and reality gets, the more private Obama has tried to become.

"You can see how he chafes at it," Elmendorf said. "It's hard for people who like to do outdoors things. It's also hard for people with young kids. … You decide at 9 in the morning, I'm not going out anymore, then at 2 p.m. you decide, 'Hey let's get some ice cream.'"

"Normal people can do that. The president or president-elect can't do that," he said.

Friday was only the second time since the election that Obama has traveled without the press pool. Reporters also were left behind in Chicago once when they couldn't gather fast enough after Obama decided to return home from his transition office.

Obama spokesman Ben LaBolt issued a statement Friday saying that because the president-elect had no further events scheduled as of 9:30 a.m., aides sent reporters back to their Waikiki Beach hotel 30 minutes away from his vacation home. But then Obama changed his mind.

"The president-elect decided to take the girls to a water park and we assembled the pool as quickly as possible," the statement said.

Later, when paying attention to his press pool and ordering treats for his daughters and their friends at Kokonuts Shave Ice & Snacks, Obama went so far as to offer reporters some shave ice.

"Guys, here's your chance," Obama said. "No? I'm telling you, this is really good."

"I don't think this is against policy," he continued. "You want one, I can tell."

Reporters declined the president-elect's offer. But, perhaps in a sign of defiance, Obama made it while standing in one of his hometown spots with his BlackBerry clipped to his hip.

By Carol E. Lee

The Politico
  • Stephen Smith

    Stephen Smith is a news producer and sports editor for CBSNews.com

Add a Comment See all 95 Comments
by jlisa79 December 31, 2008 4:45 AM EST
I don''t know if the media thinks that its readers are ignorant or what...why would you write an article on Obama "bristling" at the media, where its obvious that he''s HUMAN and get tired like anyone else would, but then in the SAME BREATH, you are basically being sarcastic by describing how he looked when he walked outside his home in Hawaii, where he took his daughter to go get snow cones, and what type of bread he ordered with his sandwich? How stupid do you think the American public really is?? It doesn''t show how "irrtated" Obama is, its just showing how IGNORANT the media is to report something as petty & childish as this article.
Reply to this comment
by hatesthecolt December 30, 2008 5:51 PM EST
Boy, you buys will latch onto anything as a sign that Obama is ''not ready to be President.'' (Where were all of you when Bush got that''deer in the headlights'' look after 9/11 and before he had a chance to ask Cheney what he was supposed to be doing?) This is a non-story about someone who has never endured 24-hour media attention adjusting to it. No more, no less.
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by biggcheese1 December 30, 2008 4:12 PM EST
Will you ultra right-wing losers stop belly-acing and stop turning everything into a weakly made political statement. Also, learn English, develop some grammar and punctuation skills and get your thoughts straight before you write something. You look really stoooopid!
Reply to this comment
by missingamerica December 30, 2008 11:14 AM EST
Wuz ya expecting somebody to argue with your conclusion, wtlib?
Reply to this comment
by missingamerica December 29, 2008 11:19 PM EST
When the media assumes the right to unsubtly criticize anyone for attempting to protect the right to privacy of themselves and their family, it is time to legislate away some of the rights the media has assumed.
Reply to this comment
by lili5044 December 29, 2008 11:04 PM EST
The media needs to concentrate on things other than what brand of toilet paper the Obama''s will use. Maybe get full time jobs working in packing plants. You know,the jobs American''s won''t do. wink wink. Just cover the news on week-ends and maybe a couple nights through the week. They need to get a life.Period!
Reply to this comment
by verycold December 29, 2008 9:58 PM EST
With each day, the tasks are mounting and the scrutiny will be stifling. No other president has had so much on his shoulders that frankly he helped put there. Obama should not have promised so much knowing how little he will be able to deliver. I didn''t vote for this junior senator but I do feel sorry for him because I see Obama as a loner and this job will make him crazy. It will be a curse to be a thinker that frankly doesn''t enjoy people very much. Bill was a thinker too, but he LOVED people and being the center of attention. Things are very different than every before. I personally think Obama will regret not giving his children a chance to grow up normal. There is that old saying...be careful what you wish for.
Reply to this comment
by themajority1 December 29, 2008 8:31 PM EST
As Obama''''s corruption grows, so will the Democrat''s desperation. -----------------------------------------------------
Posted by Centerfall94

Yep.
Reply to this comment
by sjdaud December 29, 2008 7:27 PM EST
The amount of press from this "pool" and the topic of the press as well as the photographs amounts to tabloid yellow journalism when it is "off topic" with the topic being is role as commander-in-chief to be.

No one needs their life documented to that extent and I do not know anyone who wants their life documented to that extent AND I do not care about anyone''s life to that extent. It is literally pure voyerism to be peeping into someone''s private life to that degree.

The press need to get some real jobs.
Reply to this comment
by centerfall94 December 29, 2008 6:33 PM EST
"The lieberals will PAY for saying "Bush is Hitler."
Payback''''''''s such a ***, isn''''''''t it lieberals.
"--Posted by txgrouch2008


Oh, we know Bushit isn''''t Hitler. Hitler was a brilliant, driven man, although evil. Bushit is a lazy, spoiled, marginally stupid rich kid whose daddy gave him everything.

Cheney on the other hand . . .

You gotta love the way these traitor Neocon shills are falling all over themselves to undermine the new president.

Why do Neocon scum hate America?

Posted by jbrown88881 at 09:20 AM : Dec 29, 2008

Yep. Traitors and terrorists are the neocons when they don''t get their way. As Obama''s success grows, so will their desperation. I wouldn''t be surprised if some actually try to undermine the government. They know their time is done, they have nothing left to lose.
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