Malia Obama Celebrates 26th Birthday Amid Calls For Mom Michelle To Replace Biden
Malia Obama entered into her 26th year and received heartwarming birthday messages from her parents, Barack and Michelle Obama.
To honor her firstborn on her birthday, Michelle posted a childhood photo of Malia holding a bunny on Instagram that she captioned, "Happy birthday, Malia! No matter how old you get, you'll always be my little pea and I'll always be proud of you. You deserve the world and more."
The former First Lady also shared her post in her Instagram Story, adding, "Happy Fourth of July!"
RELATED : Michelle Obama Would Beat Trump In 2024 Elections By 11 Points; Everyone Else Would Lose: New Poll
The filmmaker's dad also uploaded a throwback photo -- him holding hands with little Malia while walking down the street -- for his daughter's birthday tribute.
"Happy birthday, Malia. One of the greatest joys of my life is watching you grow into the extraordinary woman you've become today -- and the fact that you're still willing to hold your dad's hand in public!" the former president wrote.
As Malia's birthday coincides with the Fourth of July or Independence Day, Barack also posted about the holiday on his social media page.
"The Fourth of July is about celebrating the big, bold, inclusive experiment that is our American democracy. And it has always been an experiment. Our democracy has never been guaranteed, which means we can't take it for granted," he wrote.
RELATED: Michelle Obama Warns Daughters Not To Follow Barack's Footsteps: 'It Will Never Happen'
"We need to keep fighting for it, keep improving it, and keep making sure it reflects the better angels of our nature instead of the worst. That, more than anything, is what America is all about."
The Obama family celebrated Malia's birthday amid the calls for Michelle to replace Biden in the 2024 Elections.
The results of the Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted after Biden and Trump's debate last June 2024 showed that Princeton University and Harvard Law School graduate would beat the ex-POTUS by 11 percentage points in a hypothetical matchup between Trump and other potential candidates.
Around 50% of registered voters said they would vote for Obama, making her capable of beating Trump -- who only got 39% of votes -- should President Joe Biden drop out of the presidential race.