Jamaican News

As turbulent 2014 comes to an end, Obama arrives in Hawaii hoping for quiet family getaway

The motorcade carrying President Barack Obama to play golf at Marine Corps Base Hawaii passes a waving child in Kailua, Hawaii, Saturday, Dec. 20, 2014. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
The motorcade carrying President Barack Obama to play golf at Marine Corps Base Hawaii passes a waving child in Kailua, Hawaii, Saturday, Dec. 20, 2014. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

KAILUA, Hawaii _ A tumultuous year all but behind him, President Barack Obama set off for his annual winter getaway in Hawaii hoping for one thing: Quiet.

Air Force One touched down late Friday evening at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, with the president, first lady Michelle Obama, their daughters and two dogs on board. On Saturday, the family was to begin their roughly two-week retreat from the hubbub in Washington on the lush island of Oahu.

Vacationing in Hawaii, where the president was born and spent much of his childhood, has been a tradition every year that Obama has been in the White House. This year, the trip comes as Obama closes out a chaotic sixth year in office on something of a high note.

Lofty aspirations to overhaul immigration laws, early childhood education and U.S. wages were scuttled by stubborn opposition to Obama’s agenda in Congress, and on his watch, Democrats took a drubbing in the November midterm elections that will relegate them to the minority in Congress for Obama’s last two years. Crises erupted in Ukraine, the Middle East and West Africa, diverting Obama’s attention time and again.

Yet as Obama packed his bags for Hawaii, he appeared buoyed by what he had managed to accomplish on other fronts, including the resumption of relations with Cuba last week after a half-century of antagonism. In his year-end news conference Friday, Obama said he felt energized, citing signs of major progress in the economic recovery and his recent executive actions on immigration and climate change.

“Going into the fourth quarter, you usually get a time-out,” Obama said. “I am now looking forward to a quiet time-out, Christmas with my family.”

He also wished reporters a “mele kalikimaka” _ Hawaiian for “Merry Christmas.”

Obama and the first family spent Saturday morning at their vacation home in the breezy seaside town of Kailua and were greeted by sunny, blue skies. A handful of protesters stood outside the home’s entrance holding signs that read “Close Guantanamo Now!” and “No more drone killings.” Bicyclists and joggers swooshed by taking little notice of the heavy security around the neighbourhood. Obama’s Hawaii vacations have become part of the holiday experience on Oahu.

The White House Press Office said Obama headed out before noon to play golf with three friends at Marine Corps Base Hawaii on Kaneohe Bay, an emerald-colored bay flanked by jagged mountains just north of Kailua.

Typically, Obama spends much of his vacation playing golf on Hawaii’s lush courses, joined on the green by longtime friends and occasionally a celebrity or professional athlete. A gym at the Marine Corps Base allows the president to get in an early-morning workout. He and Mrs. Obama also dine out at landmark restaurants in Honolulu, and join daughters Sasha and Malia for hikes, beach time and trips for shave ice _ a Hawaiian treat similar to a snow cone.

In years past, Obama’s vacation has been interrupted by pressing crises, sometimes forcing him to delay his departure or even return to Washington temporarily. This year, with Congress having approved must-pass legislation just ahead of its year-end deadlines, White House aides were cautiously optimistic that this year’s trip wouldn’t be disturbed.

Obama has no public events scheduled during his stay, but islanders typically have a few opportunities to spot the president and his family out and about during their stay.

Obama is scheduled to return to Washington on Jan. 4.

By Josh Lederman

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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