WASHINGTON, June 20 (Reuters) -
President Barack Obama and wife Michelle both worked minimum-wage jobs
before they got law degrees: a character-building experience they said
they also want their teenage daughters to share.
The
president scooped ice cream at Baskin-Robbins, waited tables at an
assisted-living facility for seniors and also worked as a painter. The
first lady worked at a book binding shop.
"I
think every kid needs to get a taste of what it's like to do that real
hard work," Michelle Obama said in an interview with Parade magazine,
slated to run on Sunday.
"We
are looking for opportunities for them to feel as if going to work and
getting a paycheck is not always fun, not always stimulating, not always
fair," the president said. "But that's what most folks go through every
single day."
The first
couple has taken pains to keep their daughters Malia, 16, and Sasha, 13,
out of the public eye while in the White House. But Malia was recently
spotted on the set of a CBS television program, working as a production
assistant for a dayThe Obamas gave the interview to promote a summit the White House is holding on Monday to discuss policies to help working families.
"There
are structures that can help families around child care, healthcare,
and schooling that make an enormous difference in people's lives," Obama
said in the interview. (Parade: http://bit.ly/1lCnKai)
This
year, Obama has tried to focus on issues such as ensuring equal pay for
women, expanding early childhood education and hiking the minimum wage.
These issues so far have failed to gain traction in Congress, but do
resonate with Democratic voters.
To
advance his agenda, he needs Democrats to keep control of the Senate
after November midterm elections, where Republicans stand a good chance
of getting a majority, and likely also will retain control of the House
of Representatives.
"If we
can highlight these issues and sustain it over the next year, it's still
possible to see bold action out of Congress," Obama said.
In
the interview, the Obamas talked about how they lived for a year on the
second floor of the house of Michelle's mom Marian Robinson after law
school, drove a used car that they bought for $1,000, and worked through
the stress of being saddled with student loans and small children.
They
acknowledged that their careers gave them the chance to earn good
incomes and negotiate family leave when they needed it - a luxury that
most minimum-wage workers do not have.
"But
what it made me think about was people who were on the clock," the
president said. "If you're an hourly worker in most companies, and you
say, 'I've got to take three days off,' you may lose your job. At
minimum, you're losing income you can't afford to lose," he said.
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