November 27, 2013 (WASHINGTON) -- President Barack Obama is continuing an annual family tradition by helping to pack bags of food and distribute them to the needy on Thanksgiving eve.
Obama, his wife, Michelle, daughters Malia and Sasha and his mother-in-law, Marian Robinson, dropped in on the Capital Area Food Bank, one of the largest serving the Washington area.
They dropped bundles of sweet potatoes, onions, carrots and apples into reusable bags people held open as they walked by. They also handed out small white boxes stamped with the presidential seal that contain M&M's candy.
Obama wished people a "Happy Thanksgiving," and Malia shook their hands.
It's the third straight Thanksgiving that Obama and his family have helped out at this particular food bank.
Obama was spending the holiday at the White House.
Obama pardons turkeys as part of annual rite
President Barack Obama spared two turkeys from the brine and the oven Wednesday, fulfilling the annual tradition of a presidential pardon for a couple of lucky birds ahead of Thanksgiving Day.
Obama pardoned Popcorn, who shared the stage with the president on the North Portico of the White House on a cold, drizzly day. An alternate turkey, named Caramel, also received a pardon, though it did not have the benefit of a face-to-beak meeting with the president.
"The office of the presidency, the most powerful position in the world, brings with it many awesome and solemn responsibilities," Obama began. "This is not one of them.
The two turkeys, 38-pound gobblers hatched the same day on a farm in Badger, Minn., were each up for top billing as the national Thanksgiving turkey. After an online White House crowdsourcing election, Popcorn won.
The event is usually an opportunity for droll commentary by the president and the kind of inside detail that the White House rarely shares with reporters.
Popcorn, the White House said, likes to feed on corn and strut to Beyonce's "Halo," while Caramel prefers soybean meal and Lady Gaga.
Good to know.
Popcorn's victory, Obama said, proves "that even a turkey with a funny name can find a place in politics."
As for Caramel, "he's sticking around and he's already busy raising money for his next campaign," the president said.
The turkeys will be on display at George Washington's Mount Vernon Estate and Gardens through Jan. 6.
Presidents have spared turkeys off and on as far back as the Lincoln era, according to the White House. The first official pardon was granted by President George H.W. Bush.
House Speaker John Boehner, meanwhile, was taking a different tack. His Twitter account was drawing attention to a CNN article on his special recipe. "Nice to see the Boehner turkey brine get attention," he tweeted.
Later Wednesday, Obama, wife Michelle, daughters Malia and Sasha, and mother-in-law Marian Robinson volunteered at a local charity - the Capitol Area Food Bank - distributing bags of sweet potatoes, onions, carrots, apples and small white boxes of the presidential M&Ms.
Obama said the family also planned to deliver a couple of turkeys to the food bank - these, not spared.
"Tomorrow, as we gather with our own friends and family," Obama said on a serious note, "we'll count ourselves lucky that there's more to be thankful for than we can ever say and more to be hopeful for than we can ever imagine."