Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Adoptee is one of two dogs in Biden family

- CHRISTINA MORALES

Former Vice President Joe Biden, projected to win the presidenti­al election, would restore a tradition of presidenti­al pets at the White House, bringing the Biden family’s two German shepherds, Champ and Major, to the executive residence.

President Donald Trump was the first president in more than a century not to have a pet of any kind, said Andrew Hager, the historian-in-residence at the Presidenti­al Pet Museum.

In 2008, the Biden family got a German shepherd puppy from a breeder after Biden was elected vice president, according to Politico. The Bidens named the dog Champ because Biden’s father had told him growing up, “Get up, champ,” when his life was challengin­g.

In 2018, the Biden family adopted their former foster dog, Major, from the Delaware Humane Associatio­n.

Biden would not be the first to have an adopted dog in the White House. President Lyndon B. Johnson’s mixed-breed dog, Yuki, was found by his daughter at a Texas gas station.

In 2016, Lois Pope, a philanthro­pist for veterans and animals in Palm Beach, Fla., said she had offered Trump a goldendood­le puppy named Patton, after George Patton, the World War II general that Trump has said he admires, The Washington Post reported.

At a February 2019 rally in El Paso, Texas, Trump said that he didn’t have a dog because he didn’t have time, and he felt it would be “phony” for him to get one for political reasons.

“You do love your dogs, don’t you?” Trump said. “I wouldn’t mind having one, honestly, but I don’t have any time. How would I look walking a dog on the White House lawn?”

Biden’s dog Major reflects a broader trend of Americans adopting pets from shelters and how they feel about animal rights, Hager said.

“In a way, I’ve made the argument that you can look at the history of Americans and animals by looking at the president and their pets,” he said.

Biden occasional­ly posts about Champ and Major on social media.

“No ruff days on the campaign trail when I have some Major motivation,” Biden wrote on Instagram last month.

There was even a separate campaign called Dog Lovers for Joe. Its slogan: “Choose your humans wisely.”

“Red state or Blue state, we all can agree on the power of dogs,” the website said. “It’s time we had a dog-lover back in the White House.”

From the earliest days of the country’s formation, pets have been a tradition for presidents.

President Theodore Roosevelt owned dozens of animals, including a one-legged rooster, snakes, guinea pigs, kangaroo rats and horses, said Jennifer Pickens, the author of “Pets at the White House.”

One of the oddest White House pets was a raccoon later named Rebecca that was sent to President Calvin Coolidge to be served at Thanksgivi­ng dinner. In November 1926, Coolidge pardoned the raccoon and adopted it.

Pets humanize the presidency and help people relate to their owners. Dogs make for cuddly presidenti­al props and provide companions­hip when presidents make tough decisions, Pickens said.

During President Richard Nixon’s vice presidenti­al bid in 1952, he weathered a financial-impropriet­ies scandal, partly because he spoke about his dog, Checkers.

President Herbert Hoover’s stuffy, stilted image improved when he humanized himself by releasing a photograph in which he held his German shepherd, King Tut.

President Barack Obama and his family brought Bo, and then Sunny, Portuguese water dogs, into the White House. They were beloved, even after Sunny knocked down a 2-year-old visitor.

“Americans have always had pets, so the White House has always had pets,” Pickens said.

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