President Reveals He Was Mistaken For A Valet And Waiter Before He Became President

Obama, pictured in December, was mistaken for a waiter when he was wearing a tuxedo at a black-tie function before he became President.
Obama, pic­tured in December, was mis­tak­en for a wait­er when he was wear­ing a tuxe­do at a black-tie func­tion before he became President.

President Obama revealed how he was mis­tak­en for a valet and a wait­er before he became President in a deeply per­son­al inter­view on race rela­tions in the U.S. “There’s no black male my age, who’s a pro­fes­sion­al, who has­n’t come out of a restau­rant and is wait­ing for their car and some­body did­n’t hand them their car keys,” the President told People mag­a­zine, con­firm­ing that he had expe­ri­enced being tak­en for a valet. The President was joined by the First Lady for the mag­a­zine inter­view, “How We Deal with Our Own Racist Experiences.”

Michelle Obama also remem­bered that when he was a guest at a black-tie din­ner, “some­body asked him to get cof­fee.” Before the fam­i­ly moved into the White House in 2009 and Obama became com­man­der-in-chief, “Obama was a black man that lived on the South Side of Chicago, who had his share of trou­bles catch­ing cabs,” the First Lady added. Wall Street Journal reporter Katie Rosman had pre­vi­ous­ly shared how she wit­nessed Obama on the receiv­ing end of dis­crim­i­na­tion at a New York City book par­ty host­ed by Tina Brown in 2003. Rosman had been chat­ting with Obama at the soirée and when they fin­ished their con­ver­sa­tion, a fel­low guest inquired after the man’s iden­ti­ty, admit­ting that he had mis­tak­en him for the wait staff. “I was approached by anoth­er guest, an estab­lished author. He asked about the man I had been talk­ing to. Sheepishly he told me he didn’t know that Obama was a guest at the par­ty, and had asked him to fetch him a drink. In less than six years, Obama has gone from being mis­tak­en for a wait­er among the New York media élite, to the pres­i­dent-elect,” Rosman wrote. Despite the inci­dents in his past, the President told People that racial rela­tions have got­ten bet­ter, but more progress is need­ed. He says the small indig­ni­ties they have expe­ri­enced pale in com­par­i­son to young men who have been mis­tak­en for crim­i­nals just for being “dressed the way teenagers dress.” llarson@​nydailynews.​com