The first daughters are sticking together. Ivanka Trump and Chelsea Clinton are both speaking out in defense of Malia Obama, urging people to respect her privacy after new photos surfaced of former president Barack Obama‘s eldest daughter. The eldest Obama daughter is in her first year at Harvard University.
This week, a number of media outlets and tabloids have snapped photos of the college student kissing a young man. Other pictures appeared to show the 19-year-old smoking have also circulated on the internet.
“Malia Obama should be allowed the same privacy as her school aged peers. She is a young adult and private citizen, and should be OFF limits,” Trump, 36, tweeted on Friday, November 24.
This isn’t the first time Barack and Michelle Obama‘s eldest daughter faced a violation of privacy. In October 2015, photos surfaced online of her at a party she attended at Brown University while on a college tour. The university’s students apologized to Malia for posting photos of her allegedly playing beer pong during her visit to the school’s campus.
The White House confirmed in a statement in May 2016 that Malia had decided to enroll at Harvard after taking some time off once she graduated high school. “The President and Mrs. Obama announced today that their daughter Malia will attend Harvard University in the fall of 2017 as a member of the Class of 2021,” the statement read at the time. “Malia will take a gap year before beginning school.”
Before moving into housing on the campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in August this year, Malia scored an internship with Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein and started working in the New York office of the Weinstein Company in January.
Former first lady Michelle Obama said in September that her daughters “struggled with handling fame,” People reported.
Michelle said her daughters get approached by 20 to 30 people a day who asked for their photographs.
This week, a number of media outlets and tabloids have snapped photos of the college student kissing a young man. Other pictures appeared to show the 19-year-old smoking have also circulated on the internet.
“Malia Obama should be allowed the same privacy as her school aged peers. She is a young adult and private citizen, and should be OFF limits,” Trump, 36, tweeted on Friday, November 24.
Bill and Hillary Clinton’s only child, Chelsea, also spoke out in the teen’s defense. “Malia Obama’s private life, as a young woman, a college student, a private citizen, should not be your clickbait,” Clinton, 37, tweeted on Friday. “Be better.”Malia Obama should be allowed the same privacy as her school aged peers. She is a young adult and private citizen, and should be OFF limits.— Ivanka Trump (@IvankaTrump) November 24, 2017
The informal society of presidential children has historically been protective of its youngest members, without regard for political party.Malia Obama’s private life, as a young woman, a college student, a private citizen, should not be your clickbait. Be better.— Chelsea Clinton (@ChelseaClinton) November 24, 2017
This isn’t the first time Barack and Michelle Obama‘s eldest daughter faced a violation of privacy. In October 2015, photos surfaced online of her at a party she attended at Brown University while on a college tour. The university’s students apologized to Malia for posting photos of her allegedly playing beer pong during her visit to the school’s campus.
The White House confirmed in a statement in May 2016 that Malia had decided to enroll at Harvard after taking some time off once she graduated high school. “The President and Mrs. Obama announced today that their daughter Malia will attend Harvard University in the fall of 2017 as a member of the Class of 2021,” the statement read at the time. “Malia will take a gap year before beginning school.”
Before moving into housing on the campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in August this year, Malia scored an internship with Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein and started working in the New York office of the Weinstein Company in January.
Former first lady Michelle Obama said in September that her daughters “struggled with handling fame,” People reported.
Michelle said her daughters get approached by 20 to 30 people a day who asked for their photographs.
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