‘Major’ pain: Biden’s dog involved in a second biting incident
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s younger dog, Major, was involved this week in his second biting incident of the month, the White House said Tuesday.
The dog “nipped someone while on a walk” on Monday, said Michael LaRosa, press secretary to First Lady Jill Biden, adding that Major “is still adjusting to his new surroundings.” The individual was seen by the White House Medical Unit “out of an abundance of caution” and returned to work without injury, LaRosa added.
The dog had been seen by reporters on a walk around the White House South Lawn before the president and first lady traveled to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial early Monday evening.
The German shepherd only just returned to the White House last week, along with fellow dog Champ, after causing a minor injury to a U.S. Secret Service employee on March 8.
After that incident, the president said Major was “a sweet dog.” In an interview with ABC News, Biden explained the biting by saying that the dog had “turned a corner, there’s two people he doesn’t know at all, you know, and they move and moves to protect.”
Biden added at the time that “85% of the people there love him.”
President Biden’s wayward pup is no longer in the doghouse.
Major, a 3-year-old rescue dog, and Champ, who is 12, were moved to the Bidens’ Delaware home after the previous incident. The president said Major was being trained in Delaware but disputed the idea that the pup had been sent away. He said the dogs went to Wilmington because the first couple was going to be out of town.
“He was going home,” Biden said. “I didn’t banish him to home. Jill was going to be away for four days. I was going to be away for two, so we took him home.”
The dogs met the Bidens two weekends ago at Camp David in Maryland and came back to Washington on March 21. Last week, one of the two German shepherds waited on the balcony of the White House as Marine One landed on the South Lawn, having ferried the president back from a speech in Columbus, Ohio.
“The dogs will come and go and it will not be uncommon for them to head back to Delaware on occasion, as the president and first lady often do as well,” said White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki.
This week’s biting incident was first reported by CNN.
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