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Obamas book sparks controversy, rebuttal PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 12 January 2012 16:44

NEW York Times correspondent Jodi Kantor’s  biography The Obamas has been criticised for not being entirely accurate by some, but one thing is certain about the book: It’s certainly generating its share of headlines.
The Obamas –– published by Little, Brown & Company –– has already generated an avalanche of media coverage, along with a sharp refutation from White House press secretary Eric Schultz.


In the book, Kantor claims that First Lady Michelle Obama (pictured below) has experienced numerous tensions with the West Wing staff. Michelle, the book claims, refused to attend events and once became so enraged with former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel after he said that she would campaign at an event for the 2010 mid-term elections that she refused to campaign at all.


Michelle also reportedly drew the ire of former press secretary Robert Gibbs.


Kantor’s book claims that, infuriated by a quote in a French book claiming that Obama had told French First Lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy that life in the White House was “hell”, Gibbs went on a furious mission to find out if the quote were true.


Frustrated by the lack of response from Michelle Obama’s staff, Gibbs was reduced to cursing out the First Lady during an early-morning meeting with an adviser.


In a strongly-worded blog post published on the White House’s web site Monday, Schultz criticised The Obamas for its reliance on second-hand accounts and Kantor’s own interpretation of events.


“The book, an overdramatisation of old news, is about a relationship between two people whom the author has not spoken to in years. The author last interviewed the Obamas in 2009 for a magazine piece, and did not interview them for this book,” Schultz’s statement reads.


Kantor defended her book asserting that the White House hasn’t “disputed any of the facts” in the book. Asked if she had interviewed President or First Lady Obama for the book, Kantor hedged, “The book is mostly reported through top aides and close friends of the president and First Lady.


I’m one of the only people to get access to the East Wing and the First Lady’s staff there. What I found is that aides and friends were able to tell stories that the Obamas don’t talk about.” –– Reuters.

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