The Columbus Dispatch

Bush ‘shocked’ at uproar over his friendship with Obama

- Hannah Yasharoff

Michelle Obama and George W. Bush have garnered plenty of reactions over the last few years from Americans shocked to discover their friendship.

Bush thinks that reaction is a problem.

“It shocked me,” the former president, 74, told “CBS Sunday Morning” in a recent interview, recalling a moment in 2016 at the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture when the two of them went viral over a photo of them hugging.

“We got in the car and I think Barbara or Jenna said, ‘Hey, you’re trending!’ The American people were so surprised that Michelle Obama and I could be friends. I think it’s a problem that Americans are so polarized in their thinking that they can’t imagine a George W. Bush and a Michelle Obama being friends,” he said.

Some more viral moments shared between the unlikely duo: Bush sharing a cough drop with Obama at Sen. John Mccain’s funeral in 2018, and again at his father George H. W. Bush’s funeral a few months later.

Obama explained in 2018 the two are “forever seatmates” because of seating protocols for ex-presidents and their spouses at official events.

“He is my partner in crime at every major thing where all the formers gather,” she told the “Today” show. “I love him to death. He’s a wonderful man. He’s a funny man.”

Speaking the following year to “Today” host Jenna Bush Hager, Bush’s daughter, Obama opened up about how the two had found common ground despite supporting different parties – and despite her husband, former President Barack Obama, frequently denouncing Bush’s policies during his campaign and presidency. (Ellen Degeneres was criticized for befriendin­g a politician who critics argued upheld laws that threatened the safety and well-being of minorities.)

“Our values are the same,” Michelle Obama said. “We disagree on policy but we don’t disagree on humanity. We don’t disagree about love and compassion. I think that’s true for all of us.”

It would seem the two would agree on the humanity at the center of Bush’s newest project: “Out Of Many, One: Portraits of America’s Immigrants,” a new book of paintings by the former president, is out Tuesday, and features 43 portraits by the 43rd president, of immigrants he has come to know over the years, along with biographic­al essays he wrote about each of them.

Bush became well-known for his paintings after leaving office in 2009, which came as a surprise to many – including his wife, Laura Bush.

“I was shocked. He hadn’t even ever looked at art,” she said with a laugh. “I mean, we lived with a major American collection at the White House . ... He was not at all interested.”

In 2007, the former president unsuccessf­ully pushed for an overhaul of the U.S. immigratio­n system, and has said that failure to act on immigratio­n is one of the great regrets of his presidency. Now, he says he hopes this project will help create “a better understand­ing” about the role immigratio­n plays in America.

“I don’t want to be prescripti­ve. I don’t want to tell Congress how to do this or that,” Bush told CBS. “I do want to tell Congress to please put aside all the harsh rhetoric about immigratio­n. Please put aside trying to score political points on either side. I hope I can help set a tone that is more respectful about the immigrant, which may lead to reform of the system.”

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