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Marian Robinson, Obama Mother-In-Law, Enjoying White House Life

DARLENE SUPERVILLE   02/16/10 01:06 PM ET  AP

Marian Robinson, Barack Obama's mother-in-law, is enjoying life in the White House.

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's mother-in-law lived her entire life in Chicago, so it was only natural that her move to the White House came with some resistance. Try it for three months, her son-in-law says the family suggested.

A year later, it seems Marian Robinson is here to stay.

She spends a lot of time looking after granddaughters Malia, 11, and Sasha, 8, but has been carving out a new life for herself, too. In the words of the president, she's become "quite the lady about town."

The widowed Mrs. Robinson has made friends and has had friends over to the White House. She goes shopping on her own, enjoys visits to the Kennedy Center and takes Malia and Sasha to and from school just about every day – all while enjoying a level of anonymity that has Obama and her own daughter, first lady Michelle Obama, feeling both pleased and a bit envious at the same time.

"She's quite the lady about town," Obama said. "But the nice thing is that she just walks out the gate and goes."

Mrs. Robinson has given few interviews since moving to the White House. But she has made it clear that she was cool to the idea of moving and that she only did so reluctantly. She left several siblings behind in Chicago.

"They're dragging me with them, and I'm not comfortable with that," Mrs. Robinson, 72, told CBS' "Sunday Morning" last year. "But I'm doing exactly what you do: You do what needs to be done."

Mrs. Obama recently said her mother seems content in her new home.

"She wasn't completely kicking and screaming, but it was clear that her preference would be to remain in her old life, and that this new White House, all this stuff, she could just hear about," the first lady said.

"So I'm happy that she's really settled in and feels like this is home for her, as well," Mrs. Obama said.

For anyone, life in the White House is, well, life-changing, and it has been for the first mother-in-law as well.

Mrs. Robinson took her first trip abroad last year, flying aboard Air Force One with the family to Russia, Italy and Ghana. With the family, she got to meet the pope, tour Rome's ancient Colosseum and inspect a former slave holding compound on the coast of Ghana.

She joins the family for weekends at the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland. But she did not join them in Martha's Vineyard, Mass., for summer vacation, or in Obama's native Hawaii at Christmas.

Her bedroom is on the third floor of the White House (the First Family occupies the second floor), and she doesn't eat dinner with the Obamas every night so that "Michelle's family" can have time together.

Mrs. Robinson is protective of her privacy, yet seems to enjoy being out and about, too.

She attends many White House functions, including musical events in the East Room – such as a celebration last week of music of the civil rights era – the annual Easter Egg Roll and November's black-tie, state dinner for India's prime minister.

Her only solo public appearance came last summer when she and Education Secretary Arne Duncan, a family friend from Chicago, read storybooks to elementary school pupils. Answering some of their questions, she described her life as "wonderful" and said the White House is "much bigger than anything I've ever been accustomed to."

She even has an unofficial nickname: FGOTUS (pronounced fuh-GOH'-tus), an acronym for First Grandmother of the United States.

Obama told radio host Tom Joyner that his mother-in-law has been having fun hanging out with Betty Currie, former President Bill Clinton's personal secretary, and using the president's box at the Kennedy Center. She recently saw the Alvin Ailey dance troupe there.

Mrs. Obama jokes that her mother has gotten so busy doing her own thing that "pretty soon she's going to come and say, 'You know, I can't pick up those kids. I've got so much going on.'"

Those kids were a big reason the Obamas wanted Mrs. Robinson to move in with them.

She had become kind of a surrogate parent to the girls because their own parents traveled so much during the 2008 presidential campaign – their mother mostly on day trips, their father for longer stretches at a time. A gold medalist in the 50-meter and 100-meter runs in the 1997 Illinois Senior Olympics, Mrs. Robinson retired from her job as a secretary at a bank to shuttle them to play dates and after-school activities.

She helped her granddaughters get settled in a new city, a new home and new schools. Like their grandmother, Chicago is the only place they had ever lived.

And although she spoke last summer of "beginning to feel left out" because the girls are growing up, she remains an important presence in their lives, as much as they are in hers.

Mrs. Robinson's other three grandchildren live out West, where son Craig is the head men's basketball coach at Oregon State University. He has a teenage son and daughter, Avery and Leslie, and 6-week-old son Austin.

Her husband, Fraser, who worked swing shifts at Chicago's water plant despite crippling multiple sclerosis, died in 1991.

Mrs. Robinson's move to the White House puts the Obamas in the same category with at least 1 million American families in which the head of the household shares the home with both his or her parents and children, according to AARP, which represents people age 50 and older.

Many of these arrangements aren't because the grandparent can't live on their own anymore, but because being there somehow makes life better, said Elinor Ginzler, AARP's senior vice president for livable communities. That includes looking after grandchildren.

Multigenerational living arrangements are becoming more common, rising to 6.2 million households in 2008, up from 5 million in 2000.

Having presidential relatives living in the White House isn't new. Mrs. Robinson is just the latest to do so.

Ulysses S. Grant's father-in-law, Frederick Dent, lived there for a few years. Harry S. Truman's mother-in-law, Madge Gates Wallace, moved in despite her dislike for Truman. Woodrow Wilson's second wife, Edith, had both her mother, Sally Bolling, and sister, Bertha, live with them.

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Cakey4814
LuvBlogger
01:55 PM on 02/18/2010
Glad that she's found her niche in Washington. If she's like my mom (who at 80 is set in her ways) it had to be hard to leave her friends and daily routines behind in Chi-Town but she's adjusted and doing her thang. Here's to you Mrs. Robinson..
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DnDCfromChi-town
09:22 PM on 02/17/2010
"Many of these arrangements aren't because the grandparent can't live on their own anymore, but because being there somehow makes life better, said Elinor Ginzler, AARP's senior vice president for livable communities. That includes looking after grandchildren."

Thank God for grandparents!
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KellyRyan
A micro-bio for one who has none.
03:38 PM on 02/17/2010
Lovely woman, enjoying her grandchildren, remaining familial, and keeping her privacy.
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SPQR1052
05:50 PM on 02/16/2010
REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!REAL FAMILY VALUES. Love it!
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DnDCfromChi-town
09:25 PM on 02/17/2010
keep posting it. Living family values.
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:31 PM on 02/16/2010
I think it is great that she has this time with her grandchildren. My mother had Alzheimer's by the time our kid was 3, so she never had the time with her that I'd have liked her to have. Grandparents are a wonderful thing!
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12:48 PM on 02/16/2010
I'm sorry to hear that. I still have both of my grandmothers and my paternal great-grandmother. They are all an integral part of my life.
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02:14 PM on 02/16/2010
I agree and I think it is a win situation for everyone for her to be there on a daily basis to help with the kids and spend time with them. It is wonderful for kids to know their grandparents. It's also great for the President and First Lady to have someone they totally trust their children with. As I said, it is a positive and winning thing for all involved.
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Robin08
12:17 PM on 02/16/2010
Nice story. I'm glad she's adapted so well and is really loving it and thriving in DC after her reluctance to live in the WH. Sounds like she's having a great time in her senior years. Makes my heart and my face smile.
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11:50 AM on 02/16/2010
So what does the party of "family values" do with their aging relatives? I can't even imagine what sort of person you would have to be to leave your elderly parent alone to fend for herself (even without the hostile climate the Obamas face) when you have the ability to offer her safety and security in a loving environment..

Only a sociopathic rethug would even think to use this loving gesture as a criticism. Insane but typical.
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katieandtom
11:54 AM on 02/16/2010
well actually in this repub family, our families worked hard, saved for retirement, had nice inheritances and retired quite well and then left nice inheritances to their beneficiaries.

all of our family members moved to retirement communities and paid for their own wonderful care. their last days were comfortable and happy.

with dems in power, this may not happen in this generation.
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12:05 PM on 02/16/2010
There are lots of poor republicans who don't own anything. There are lots of people who vote republican and rely on public assistance, disability payments or social security for their income.

Mrs. Robinson had a comfortable pension and was entirely self-sufficient prior to moving to DC. Try again.
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12:10 PM on 02/16/2010
Well maybe Grandma Obama didn't want to go to a "retirement community" . Maybe she (and many others)..especially African Americans feel it is cold, impersonal and a place where people who don't want to be bothered with PERSONALLY caring for their older relatives stuff them. Many I know are NOT impressed with that sort of treatment of grandma.
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misterz
11:44 AM on 02/16/2010
Guess the "family values" crowd has changed their tune now that someone they don't like is in the White House. Hypocrisy reigns these days.

I miss my mother and so do my kids. If she were alive and could be living in our house with us, it would be a great gift for all of us. I am happy to see any family living happily with three generations under one roof. Isn't that what family is all about? And as for taxpayers whining about this,...EVERY president has had guests and family members staying in the White House and every president and his family has had protection. To even bring up the subject is incredibly childish and petty.
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katieandtom
11:41 AM on 02/16/2010
all i can say is, i wish i had a mom like that. as a mom raising two kids without any grandparent assistance, it is hard. my little boy was really sick this past week and i sure could have used the wise advice and helping hand of a grandparent.

i say good for them. helps the kids keep a schedule with someone who loves them not just nannies and helpers.

who would begrudge a child more love and guidance? this is from a meanhearted repub who loves kids no matter what political affiliation.
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12:39 PM on 02/16/2010
Ha! Well maybe you can use that "nice inheritance" Grandma left to hire a babysitter. Or were you not one of the beneficiaries that you spoke of earlier?
01:51 PM on 02/16/2010
Thank you katieandtom. Even if people don't always agree politically, you can't say that having a loving grandparent around for guidance and help is not great for families and especially for the grandchildren..

Honestly, if MY family was in the White House, I am pretty sure my mom would want to be First Grandma too! But the important thing is that it sounds like she has been able to provide a lot of stability for two growing girls, and to maintain a family routine, but at the same time, take some time to herself and step back to let her daughter's family grow on their own. A lot of grandparents never learn that, no matter what house they live in! All the kids in the country should be so lucky as to have a grandma like her.
11:37 AM on 02/16/2010
Its a shame the Stormfronters are allowed to infest these boards with their profound ignorance on a daily basis. The sheer hatred they have for the First Family because of the color of their skin is pathetic.
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11:39 AM on 02/16/2010
F*#k them. They're punished daily anyway because no matter how much they cry, whine and throw tantrums Mrs. Robinson and the Obamas will still be living in the White House.

I find that downright funny.
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Josh Seipp
02:36 PM on 02/16/2010
Absolutely. I think they may just be terrified that they are a dying breed.
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11:36 AM on 02/16/2010
Lots of outraged white folks over here. Funny that none of them are posting on the white woman blames fictitious black or mexican man to cover up her crime thread. Since they're so concerned about taxpayer money you'd think they'd be concerned about postal employee who embezzled funds.
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katieandtom
11:39 AM on 02/16/2010
oh puhhhlease dct.
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11:45 AM on 02/16/2010
Now kt, you know you and I rarely agree but often appreciate each other's posts.

What have I said that has earned your "oh puhhhlease"?
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11:58 AM on 02/16/2010
Right, again.
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CubfanBudman
He Ain't Heavy, He's my Brother
11:31 AM on 02/16/2010
And the conservatives spread their hate.
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11:40 AM on 02/16/2010
Lots of conservatives have expressed admiration for the first family.

You're talking about racists, and lots of them are democrats/liberals/progressives.
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:18 PM on 02/16/2010
Yeah, it's amazing how suddenly they are concerned with the WH budget, and how much expense one senior citizen will incur...
11:30 AM on 02/16/2010
are taxpayers footing this bill too?
11:32 AM on 02/16/2010
Yes and I'm happy to do so.
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katieandtom
11:44 AM on 02/16/2010
truly jrobert, someone needs to help with the children, why not their grandmother? you need to remember this is the first white house in a long time to have small kids. it does give room for adjustments. think of your own children.

do not confuse the obama children with their fathers political agendas.
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CintiBlue
11:21 AM on 02/16/2010
I'm delighted Mrs. Robinson is enjoying the move. "Our house" is meant to be lived in and I always felt if she decided to join her family it would be wonderful all the way around.

Thanks for the article.
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nana4g
11:15 AM on 02/16/2010
As those little girls grow and are teen agers, they will need their Grandmother the same, more, in different ways. She is continuity for them, as well as comfort and guidance and stability.

We are not paying her a salary and her consumption of food, utilities, etc, does not make that much of a dent in operational expenses. I do not consider it a "waste" of any money when a Grandmother is included in the life of her grandchildren and pretty much earns her keep.

I do think there is a lot of "sour grapes" out there and it is pretty ugly for those who pick and eat those grapes.