Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

President-elect Joe Biden is bringing dogs back to the White House - including a shelter pup named Major

Animal rescue officials are excited about the message it could send the nation.

- By Steve Annear

President- elect Joe Biden has already indicated he will take immediate steps to undo some of the Trump administra­tion’s actions from the past four years.

But the former vice president is also bringing another change come January, one that will likely enjoy strong bipartisan support. After a brief hiatus, dogs are set to return to the Oval Office in 2021. Better fetch the White House leashes, bowls, and chew toys.

Biden and soon-to-be First Lady, Jill, have two German Shepherds, named Champ and Major. The latter is a shelter dog they adopted two years ago, marking the first time in presidenti­al history that such a pet, in modern terms, will take the national spotlight.

“We’re excited because we love animal ownership and seeing the Presidents with their pets,” said Andrew Hager, historian-in-residence at the Presidenti­al Pet Museum, which was started by one of President Reagan’s dog groomers. “Seeing a President with a dog is kind of a humanising thing.”

It’s been four years since a DOTUS — Dog of the United States — has played on the White House lawn. In 2016, Trump became the first president in a century not to own a dog, and the first without a pet of any kind since around the mid- 19th century, Hager said.

Presidenti­al pets are a long tradition, from George Washington’s hounds to Bo and Sunny, President Obama’s two Portuguese water dogs.

At a rally in Texas last year, Trump said he didn’t have a dog because as President he was extremely busy and appearing publicly with a pet would come off as disingenuo­us.

“I wouldn’t mind having one, honestly, but I don’t have any time,” Trump explained to a crowd of supporters. “How would I look walking a dog on the White House lawn?"

“Feels a little phony to me," he added.

Shortly after Trump was elected, it looked as if a Goldendood­le might become the first dog. But the White House remained pet-free, and Biden took advantage, including dogs in his campaign pitch to voters leading up to Election Day.

On Nov. 1, Biden tweeted “Let’s put dogs back in the White House!” The online post included a 20- second video that showed Trump talking about why he hasn’t welcomed a canine to his administra­tion, followed by an image of Biden standing stoically beside Champ. The video was viewed nearly 2 million times.

In September, a group called “Dog Lovers For Joe” released a video to “inspire people in Red states, Blue states and Swing states that Joe Biden is a good man” focusing on his affection for dogs, the Huffington Post reported.“Choose your humans wisely,” the group’s website states. “We can all agree on the power of dogs. It’s time we had a dog-lover back in the White House.”

Champ has already spent years close to the White House, when Biden was Vice President. The family pur

chased the dog from a breeder in 2008, shortly after Obama and Biden were elected.

But Major will be new to the scene, and his pending arrival has some animal rescue advocates excited.

Though Hager said Major won’t be the first dog in the White House that was “adopted,” so to speak — President Lyndon B. Johnson’s daughter, Luci, found the family’s mixed-breed pup in a parking lot, he noted — the shepherd will be the first dog in the Oval Office who came from a shelter in a more traditiona­l sense. The Bidens adopted Major in 2018 after they initially had fostered him. The couple got the dog from the Delaware Humane Associatio­n, according to the group’s Facebook page.

For Mike Keiley, director of adoption centers and programmes at the MSPCAAngel­l in Boston, the atten

tion around Major’s background could reshape people’s perception­s of taking in rescue dogs.

“The overwhelmi­ng thought people have about shelter dogs is that there is something inherently wrong with them,” he said. “So I think this is good validation that a shelter dog is as good as any other dog."

Keiley, who has worked with MSPCA- Angell for 26 years, said it could even sway more people to reach out to adoption centers to help dogs find a permanent home.

“We’ve seen that when Presidents in the past have had certain breeds of dog, that those dogs have become automatica­lly popular,” he said. “If this brings more interest to people about adopting from a shelter, then that’s really fantastic.”

 ??  ?? President George H.W. Bush played with Millie and her puppies on the lawn of the White House in 1989.GEORGE BUSH PRESIDENTI­AL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM
President George H.W. Bush played with Millie and her puppies on the lawn of the White House in 1989.GEORGE BUSH PRESIDENTI­AL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM
 ??  ?? President Eisenhower and his dog Heidi walked along the White House in 1959.(Dwight D Eisenhower Presidenti­al Library)
President Eisenhower and his dog Heidi walked along the White House in 1959.(Dwight D Eisenhower Presidenti­al Library)
 ??  ?? President George W. Bush carried dog Barney as his wife carried Beazley as they disembarke­d from Air Force One in 2005. (AFP)
President George W. Bush carried dog Barney as his wife carried Beazley as they disembarke­d from Air Force One in 2005. (AFP)
 ??  ?? Charlie and Pushinka, Kennedy dogs, on the South Lawn, White House in 1961. (John F Kennedy Presidenti­al Library)
Charlie and Pushinka, Kennedy dogs, on the South Lawn, White House in 1961. (John F Kennedy Presidenti­al Library)
 ??  ?? President Reagan aboard the helicopter with his dog Lucky on his lap in 1985. (Ronald Reagan Library)
President Reagan aboard the helicopter with his dog Lucky on his lap in 1985. (Ronald Reagan Library)
 ??  ?? President Lyndon B Johnson sang with Yuki while his grandson looked on in 1968. (Lyndon Baines Johnson Library)
President Lyndon B Johnson sang with Yuki while his grandson looked on in 1968. (Lyndon Baines Johnson Library)
 ??  ?? Joe Biden adopted a German shepherd named Major from the Delaware Humane Associatio­n in 2018.
Joe Biden adopted a German shepherd named Major from the Delaware Humane Associatio­n in 2018.
 ??  ?? President Ford with his dog Liberty and her puppies in 1975 (Gerald Ford Library)
President Ford with his dog Liberty and her puppies in 1975 (Gerald Ford Library)
 ??  ?? President Bill Clinton throws a ball to Buddy in 1998. (William J Clinton Library)
President Bill Clinton throws a ball to Buddy in 1998. (William J Clinton Library)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka