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  • 2020-11-09 (xsd:date)
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  • Will Biden’s Dog Major Be the First Rescue Dog in the White House? (en)
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  • U.S. President-elect Joe Biden will be joined by more than just his staff when he begins his tenure in the White House in January 2021. Also accompanying him will be his two German shepherds, Major and Champ — the first dogs to live in the White House after four years of no pets during the Donald Trump administration. Major, Biden’s younger German shepherd, will supposedly bring another historic first to the White House. Many headlines and readers assumed that Major would be the first rescue dog to live in the White House, but we found this wasn’t entirely true. We learned that while Major is indeed the first dog in the White House to be adopted from an animal shelter, he is not the first rescued one. He was beaten to the punch by Lyndon B. Johnson’s dog Yuki. According to the LBJ Presidential Library: While previous presidents like Barack Obama opted to purchase their dogs from breeders — individuals or groups that breed their own litters of puppies, often for sale — the Bidens chose to adopt their second dog from a shelter. Champ, the older Biden dog, was bought from a breeder. Major was brought to the Delaware Humane Association, an animal care and adoption center, when he was just a puppy, after being exposed to something toxic in his previous home, putting his health in danger. After being fostered by the Bidens, Major was officially adopted in 2018. Dogs adopted from shelters sometimes have already lived in other homes, or have been taken from unsafe situations — hence being referred to as rescue animals — while dogs bought directly from a breeder are born and raised to be sold directly to homes. In Yuki’s case, she was simply found at a gas station, and not taken from a shelter. Yuki and Major were both technically rescued, but only Major came to the Bidens from a shelter. The Delaware Humane Association posted about Major's adoption two years ago: Given that Major is not the first rescued dog to live in the White House, but is the first presidential canine to be adopted from a shelter, we rate this claim as Mixture. (en)
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