A day in the life of the president

Vanity Fair's Todd Purdum followed President Obama around for a day. The result is an insight into the stresses and trivialities that come with the modern presidency

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A Vanity Fair journalist was allowed to spend 24 hours in the White House observing the President and his staff.

What is the president's working day like? Thanks to Vanity Fair 's Todd Purdum , we now have a fair idea. The journalist was allowed to spend 24 hours in the Oval Office earlier in the summer observing the White House staff and learning about Obama's daily routine. What he discovered was "a job of such gargantuan size, speed, and complexity as to be all but unrecognizable to most of the previous chief executives." Here are five key revelations from Purdum's article:

1. Obama gets to work at the same time as you do

Although the president rises at dawn, he doesn't sit down in the Oval Office until "just before 9:30," according to Purdum. Obama's early morning is much like that of any other hardworking, middle-aged dad: a 45-minute stint in the gym, followed by breakfast with his family and a skim of the morning's papers. Of course, before his working day begins he also reads the president's Daily Brief, a "classified summary" of intelligence, news, and rumors from around the world to which few working dads have access. White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel is usually at his desk by 7:30.

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2. Welcome to "F--knutsville"

The main thing you notice from spending time in the White House is that Washington is "broken," writes Purdum. Not only is Congress mired in "partisan gridlock," but there is also a "profusion of lobbyists," not to mention the most "hyperkinetic, souped-up, tricked-out, trivialized, and combative media environment any president has ever experienced." All of that has inspired the notoriously foul-mouthed Rahm Emanuel to invent a coarse nickname for the nation's capital: "F**knutsville."

3. Obama and Emanuel's Hawaii plans

From 9:30 a.m. until about 4:30 p.m., Obama's day is filled with meetings and briefings on everything from intelligence to the economy, federal activity, and foreign policy. "Every day feels like a week," reports Purdum. The White House agenda became so cluttered and stressful last December that Obama and his chief of staff joked they would quit it all to "open a T-shirt stand on a beach in Hawaii." Fed up with the difficult decisions of the presidency, the pair would "sell only one color and one size." Staff meetings would begin with Obama saying "white," and Emanuel replying "medium."

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4. Dinner with Michelle and the kids

Obama's working day officially ends at 6 or 6:30 p.m. — though emails and calls from the president resume at 8:30 or so until late at night. In between, Obama makes time for a daily dinner with his wife and daughters, a "rare moment of perspective" in the fractious timetable of his presidential life. "He had a father who abandoned him," chief aide Valerie Jarrett tells Purdum, "and he always wanted to be a present and involved father." It is the only part of his day that is "sacrosanct."

5. Obama's drink of choice: A martini

The president is neither a high-living nor a hard-drinking man, but he allowed himself a "rare martini" on the night the health-care bill passed in the House. Junior staffers were given a tour of the Lincoln Bedroom, and the night ended at around 1:30 a.m. Obama admitted to being "out of sorts" the next morning, writes Purdum. "I never drink that late," the president complained to Emanuel.

Read the entire article at Vanity Fair .

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Hoover Heads

Hoover Heads

An Average Day in the Life of a President

a day in the life of a president essay

By Thomas F. Schwartz

            George Aubrey Hastings served as an administrative assistant to President Herbert Hoover.  After Hoover left office, Hastings was asked to speak about his time in the White House and what he observed.  In a talk before the National Republican Club on May 16, 1933, Hastings provided a glimpse into the daily activities of President Hoover:

            “An outstanding impression of the White House is the respect shown by visitors for the President and the office.  The White House is the switchboard of the nation where the lines of the people’s hopes and fears converge.  It has been said that public opinion flows through it in a mighty stream.

            To get some idea of life in the White House, suppose you compare an ordinary day there with one of the busiest days in your own office, whatever your business or profession may be.  In the White House, which comprises both the President’s office and his residence, problems as varied as one can conceive of arise every hour of the day.  They call for knowledge of the facts, experience, executive ability, judicial attitude of mind, political grasp, patience, tact, judgment, decision and action.  They require acquaintance with details of international as well as national and local affairs.

            Supposing you were dealing in your office with matters of vast magnitude and under pressure of time and volume of work and also knew that your anteroom was filled with callers waiting to see you on business, that you had half a dozen speeches scheduled for the near future, that invitations to speak or attend some public function were pouring into your office hourly, that your daily mail was more than ten men could give personal attention to, that press representatives and photographers were waiting to see you, and that a delegation was waiting to shake hands with you—this would give you some idea of what an average day means to the President. 

            President Hoover usually was at his desk by 8:30 in the morning.  He glances at the newspapers and attended to correspondence requiring his personal attention until 10 o’clock, saw callers at 10 or 15 minute intervals until 12:30 or 1 o’clock, shook hands with persons calling ‘to pay their respects,’ and took a brief interval out for lunch.  Before he returned to his office perhaps received a new diplomat calling to present credentials.  In the afternoon, he conferred with Cabinet officers, members of Congress or others whom he had summoned to his office.  He attended to more correspondence, worked on addresses or a message to Congress, prepared for the next meeting of the Cabinet and finally left the office (perhaps with a folder of papers under his arm) at 6:00 or 6:30 for a brief rest.  Dinner was served at 8:00.  Usually guests were present.  Some nights there was a reception afterward.  Most nights, sooner or later, found the President in the Lincoln study working on documents and problems before retiring.  And tomorrow up at 6:30 for a short session of medicine ball on the White House grounds, then to the Executive Offices to go through the day’s grind all over again.  The word leisure was scarcely in his vocabulary.”

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A Day in The Life of a President

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Published: Jan 25, 2024

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The life of a modern university president is more a case study in perpetual motion than of academic ritual. For Harvard President Drew Faust , the workday begins and ends under artificial light. This photo essay depicts the ebb and flow of a busy day in which she addressed the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce and introduced Harvard faculty, students, and staff to Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, U.S. Secretary for Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan, and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. In between, she ran a staff meeting, met with academic program heads, and conferred with aides. She fielded phone calls, lunched with alumni and deans, rewrote speeches, and answered e-mails. Well into the evening, she hosted an informal dinner party in honor of the American Repertory Theater ’s new director, Diane Paulus, and stood smiling in the doorway when the last guest departed.

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What does the president do all day?

Here's how to find detailed records.

Former U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama address the audience during the

Presidents are seemingly everywhere: campaigning for themselves and like-minded politicians, promoting their agenda among the public and Congress, and even hosting winning sports teams at the White House.

But what, exactly, does the U.S. president do all day?

Being a president isn't only about the public speeches and ceremonial meetings with foreign leaders. It's also the day-to-day running of an apparatus that Terry Sullivan, executive director of the White House Transition Project, a nonpartisan organization that helps incoming presidential administrations get settled, described as being bigger and more impactful than the role of CEO at a major global company.

Related: What was the deadliest day in US history?

One way to assess the job is to measure how many hours a day the commander in chief works. In recent decades, presidents have almost immediately started working more than they did on day one, said Sullivan, who is also an emeritus faculty member at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

In an unpublished data set Sullivan collected on the first 100 days of the presidencies of Dwight Eisenhower through George H.W. Bush, or 1953 through 1993, each president saw his day lengthen by about 10% from the first day he arrived through the 100th day. 

"Even President [Jimmy] Carter's already extraordinarily long day (averaging 17.4 hours) stretched an additional 8%" from his first to 100th day in office, Sullivan told Live Science in an email.

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So, if presidents were rapidly ramping up their number of working hours, what were they spending their time on? The answer: They spent more of their time on exactly what many think a president should be doing — serving as the country's commander-in-chief, for example, and less time on political party matters.

On average, about 35% of the president's waking hours were devoted to roles unique to the office, including commander-in-chief, or the head of the armed forces, as authorized by the U.S. Constitution, and acting as the country's chief diplomat, according to the paper by Sullivan , being prepared for publication and shared with Live Science. Another 31% of the president's time involved legislative duties, such as meeting with congressional leaders and signing bills into law, and managing the White House, which means overseeing the work of his appointed chief of staff and other high-level assistants. Only about 1.4% of daily activities, on average, were given over to economic management, perhaps because that role was often delegated to experts in the field, Sullivan suggested.

About 9% of the president's time was spent on tasks related to leadership of his political party and to communications, Sullivan's analysis concluded. (The remainder of the president's day was allocated to travel and personal time.)

All the president's time

Anyone curious about how presidents have spent any given day over the past century can easily access it, as long as they have internet access. Beginning with Franklin D. Roosevelt's tenure in 1933, presidents kept what is now known as a "daily diary," and many of those diaries can be found online at various presidential libraries, said John Woolley, co-director of the The American Presidency Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). (The UCSB project also seeks to be a comprehensive online archive for presidential public documents.)

Related: How did the Pentagon building get its shape?

"[The diary] gives you a really granular sense of what the president did, as opposed to the schedule of main events released to the press and public," Woolley told Live Science.

The diary of modern presidents is now assembled by National Archives staff, authorized by the Presidential Records Act of 1978, from sources including the president's daily schedule, Secret Service logs and notes from White House staff, according to the White House Historical Association . 

In one example, on July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson started his day at 9 a.m. with breakfast with his wife, Lady Bird Johnson, according to that day's diary, archived by the LBJ Presidential Library . There were bill signings, meetings with legislators, ambassadors and the Cabinet. There's even an entry that says Johnson sent a handwritten note to his daughter Luci for her 17th birthday.

It wasn't until 6:45 p.m. that Johnson signed one of the most important pieces of legislation of the 20th century: the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Among many historic figures, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was in attendance, according to the invitee list and official photographs .

President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act, with Martin Luther King Jr. standing behind him, in 1964.

The official day didn't end until Johnson fell asleep after reading the papers on the presidential jet en route to the LBJ Ranch in Texas, at 10:46 p.m., according to the diary.

However, there are limitations to the daily diary. Sometimes, because of national security issues, the records can be vague about what occurred at a given meeting. Or, the list of people who attended a meeting might not be complete, though that's usually due to an accidental omission. 

But, overall, the daily diary is a gold mine of data that we'll never have for most historical presidents. Those looking for the day-to-day activities of presidents from the country's earlier years might have to hit the history books or, if interested in original research, visit the archives themselves.

For example, George Washington kept diaries, some of which, along with correspondence and financial papers, are in the Library of Congress . Samples are available online; however, because these were handwritten, deciphering them from digitized copies may prove challenging.

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All presidents, no matter what circumstances they inherit or face during their administrations, have consistent forces shaping the outline of their days, Sullivan's paper noted. Two wartime presidents, Eisenhower during the Korean War and Richard Nixon during the Vietnam War, didn't shift time spent on commander-in-chief duties substantially.

But when the Bay of Pigs crisis arose during the first 100 days of John F. Kennedy's administration, his attention to military duties more than doubled.

Originally published on Live Science.

Paula Schaap writes about science, business and religion. Her articles have appeared in Salon, Bloomberg, The Deal and Episcopal News Service. Before turning to journalism, she was a commercial litigator in New York. She has an M.A. in journalism from American University, an M.F.A. in film from Columbia University, and a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School.

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a day in the life of a president essay

Joe Biden's daily routine

Updated May 10, 2024

Joe Biden

President Biden has been in politics for most of his adult life, becoming a Senator at 29. Now, as President of the United States, he spends most of his time in the White House and the Oval Office.

As President of the United States, Joe Biden's life is anything but routine as he has to make many domestic and international trips. Meetings and phone calls happen according to the business of the day.

He has, however, managed to maintain some of his daily routines, like working out and phoning his son, despite what one reporter called the "extreme scripting and almost surreal regimentation" of his days.

Find out how much Joe Biden is worth . It's more than you might think.

Coming up next

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Joe Biden is up every day before eight in the morning. He starts the day with a workout, weight lifting while watching the news, or meeting with his personal trainer. Biden's predecessor, President Donald Trump , was an avid consumer of TV news in the mornings too. Then, he goes through a daily news bulletin before leaving home. He usually has a protein shake for breakfast.

Just after 9 am, he heads for the Oval office to start the day with phone calls, meetings, and a daily security brief with Vice President Kamala Harris .

The President has a notoriously sweet tooth and keeps sweet treats in the Oval Office for an occasional snack. He occasionally walks through White House gardens with his dogs — both are German Shepherds — throughout the day.

Failure at some point in your life is inevitable, but giving up is unforgivable. ~Joe Biden

President Biden generally has a light lunch of salad and grilled chicken or a bowl of soup washed down with his favorite drink, a Gatorade or Coke Zero. He often has lunch with former President Obama and Kamala Harris. Biden carries a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and a protein bar if he's on the run, as he often is.

In the afternoon, he usually has several meetings with his top advisors. He may also spend time speaking to heads of state.

President Biden heads home at about 7 pm. He has dinner with his wife and chats about his day in the office. After dinner, he makes calls to various advisors.

He ends every day with a call to his son, Hunter , who has struggled with an addiction problem over the years. If Hunter fails to answer, he sends him a text message instead.

Life is a matter of really tough choices. ~Joe Biden
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A day in the life of the President of the United States

A day in the life of the President of the United States

The President wakes up pretty early, but his routine usually includes a morning workout before heading into the office.

Source: NBC News

He arrives at the Oval Office between 8:30 and 9 a.m., and gets a rundown on the day's schedule from his personal secretary, Ferial Govashiri (right).

At around 10 a.m., he receives the classified presidential daily briefing from his national security advisor. sometimes the briefing is delivered via tablet..

Source: White House

The contents of the brief provides the President with new intelligence he needs to know and alerts him to possible crises in the world.

The day usually includes plenty of phone calls., and meetings., if he's in the middle of a legislative battle, the president will meet with congressional leaders on both sides., he'll also meet with his own staff to discuss legislative strategies., there are also the 'handshake sessions', where obama briefly meets and greets people in the white house., he often gives talks to key constituent groups., on other days, the president will host a world leader. here he is in 2012 with then-afghan president hamid karzai., on rare occasions, he'll talk to the press., and if he takes a short trip outside d.c. on the marine one helicopter, he's not going to escape the meetings. there's often someone with him (like british pm david cameron here) hoping for some of the president's limited time., the end of the normal workday for president obama is around 6 p.m., and he'll usually have dinner with his family around 6:30pm., he tries to hang out with his daughters malia and sasha after dinner for a bit., but the work doesn't totally stop. he often works on paperwork or writes until 11:30pm or so., then he tries to get in about a half-hour of reading before lights out., around midnight — but sometimes even later, he heads to bed. if he isn't interrupted by a late-night phone call, he'll get about six hours of sleep., for more on the first couple..., 28 romantic photos of michelle and barack obama >.

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