National Post

SOPHIE, MICHELLE MEET ON EDUCATION

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WASHINGTON• The meeting of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Ba rack Obama wasn’t the only mutual admiration society on display Thursday in Washington.

There was also, it would seem, a budding girl crush of sorts between Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau and Michelle Obama.

The presidenti­al and prime ministeria­l spouses appeared to hit it off during Justin Trudeau’s official visit to the White House — so much so that Grégoire-Trudeau even lent Obama a helping hand after she lost her balance at a public event.

Grégoire-Trudeau, 40, and Obama, 52, appeared at the ceremony together for girls’ education, where both women sang and danced with a group of schoolchil­dren.

As she followed Grégoire-Trudeau off the stage, Obama appeared to lose her balance, said Cliff Owen, a photograph­er for The Associated Press.

She immediatel­y got a helping hand from her new Canadian BFF.

Owen snapped a series of pictures of an open- armed Grégoire-Trudeau helping Obama off the stage, and said there was clear chemistry between the two.

“It’s like two 14-year-old girls ... they were just joking and laughing and having a really good time,” Owen said.

“You get the impression they’re going to sneak out of the White House and hit a few bars. They’re just having a really good time with each other.”

So much so, in fact, that Obama introduced Grégoire-Trudeau as “my soulmate.”

“We’ve already gotten into trouble,” she quipped.

The day’s more serious theme involved an American project to help adolescent girls get a quality education.

Obama told the event at the U.S. Institute for Peace that 62 million girls around the world are currently not in school.

“That’s not just a number,” Obama said in a speech to scouts and students. “Every single one of these girls has a story.”

A year ago, the Obama administra­tion unveiled Let Girls Learn, a program designed to build on investment­s in global primary school education and to expand them to help adolescent girls pursue their ambitions. “I know we can get the world united around this issue and change the fate of these 62 million girls forever,” Obama said. “We can do this.”

Said Grégoire-Trudeau: “Canada knows that for a society to be prosperous and more just and more peaceful, women and girls must be educated.”

“And an educated young girl becomes an educated ... mother or mentor or friend, profession­al. That makes for an educated society and an education makes for a more peaceful and just place to be and to grow in.”

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY / GETTY IMAGES ?? First Lady Michelle Obama, right, and Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau share a laugh
during a ceremony at the White House on Thursday in Washington, D.C.
OLIVIER DOULIERY / GETTY IMAGES First Lady Michelle Obama, right, and Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau share a laugh during a ceremony at the White House on Thursday in Washington, D.C.

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