Obama ends Hawaiian holiday, returns to Washington
APNews
Jan 04, 2010
President Barack Obama returned Monday to the White House he never really escaped.
Obama and his family took an overnight flight from Hawaii, capping an 11-day holiday vacation sure to be remembered more for the botched attempt to blow up a Christmas Day flight than the hours spent on golf courses or at luaus. The failed terror attack refocused the president's trip from R&R on the island of Oahu to a river of memos from homeland security aides.
Obama arrived back at the White House at midday Monday with nothing on his public schedule _ but much on his plate.
Privately, the president was to hear from the CIA later Monday about the attempted attack on the Northwest Airlines flight and meet with John Brennan, his top counterterrorism adviser, who is leading the review into what went wrong. The president has summoned Homeland Security officials for a broader meeting Tuesday in the White House Situation Room.
Even without those reviews, the president has a full agenda for the new year.
Lawmakers from the House and Senate must resolve differences on a health care overhaul nearing passage. Obama's departure for Hawaii was delayed until Christmas Eve, when the Senate passed its version of the White House's top domestic priority.
Financial regulations are on the verge of winning their own version of an overhaul. A State of the Union address to Congress is due during the first weeks of 2010. And the escalating war in Afghanistan is not going to run itself.
Even though it was called a vacation, the trip to Obama's childhood home was hardly the holiday most people seek. Between golf outings, he phoned his homeland security secretary and counterterrorism adviser for regular updates. Rather than restaurant recommendations, the president was handed thrice-daily updates from the White House Situation Room. And an attack that killed seven U.S. intelligence officers put him on the phone with the CIA director before heading to the island's North Shore for a party with high school friends.
Such a hyped-up tone was exactly what officials sought to dodge.
"I asked the president if he had any special message for you guys," deputy press secretary Bill Burton deadpanned to reporters on the way to Oahu on Christmas Eve. "He would like for you to relax and to not anticipate any public announcements or news-making events."
It echoed almost exactly what Burton told reporters as they headed toward Obama's summer vacation off the coast of Massachusetts. That trip saw clambakes interrupted with the renomination of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, recreation replaced with mourning the death of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.