Maila Obama's Defender Jenna Bush Hager Clarifies 'Hanky Panky' And 'Kiss On The Roof' Comments
Maila Obama's Defender Jenna Bush shared that although she said she has her own "hanky-panky" but warns against people exaggerating it. Turns out kiss she said she had on the roof with her now husband Henry Hager does not warrant the huge attention it is now getting from the netizens.
On Wednesday, "Watch What Happens Live," former first daughter Jenna Bush Hager claimed that she too, had participate in some "hanky-panky" at the White house while her father, was still in office. She shared that she feels protective over the Obama sisters because she knows firsthand that it is not easy to be the daughter of the United States President. In her bid to defend Maila Obama against bashers and critics of her behaviour as the current first daughters, Jenna Bush Hager got people's tongue wagging on her "hanky panky" and what it meant. To clarify the speculations and rumours, Jenna called in to "Today" to say that the "hanky panky" she was pertaining to did not border to anything scandalous. "My husband [Henry Hager] and I did have our first kiss on the White House roof...It's not as Fifty Shades Shades of Grey as people want it to be," Jenna Bush clarified.
"Today's" correspondents then asked if the secret service tailing her looked away when she and Henry kissed on the roof, and Jenna answered that she honestly think they were not given the privacy they needed. "Maybe there was no privacy-there probably was no privacy," she said. "But in our minds, we were the only people there," she shared. She said that the kiss was so special that she and Henry ended up married and now 10 years later, they now have a 19-month old daughter.
For the past days, Malia Obama and Sasha Obama were criticized for not having "the class" that being first daughters should have. Main critic GOP aide already resigned for her comments but the sisters continuously made headlines after that. Jenna Bush felt the need to defend them saying being a first daughter can be a privilege, but it can also make growing up harder.