KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — President Barack Obama’s supporters often shout at him, “I love you!”
"People who are trying to make this world worse are not taking the day off. Why should I?" —Obama quoting Bob Marley pic.twitter.com/wlM4jG9agQ
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 9, 2015
But Jamaican Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller didn’t have to raise her voice Thursday. She had prime seating beside Obama from which to declare her and her country’s love for him after they met privately during his first presidential visit to her island nation.
“I just want to say to you, you might not know, but you are very loved in this country,” Simpson Miller said, before describing how many Jamaicans mistakenly had lined the route they thought his motorcade would take after he arrived Wednesday evening.
“So I just wanted to say you’re well-loved in Jamaica,” she said. “Well, first of all I can say to you publicly, `I love you.”
Simpson Miller said she hoped Obama understood how important his visit is to Jamaica.
Obama’s stop was the first here by an American president since President Ronald Reagan visited in 1982.
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Thursday’s official events had just begun but Obama appeared to already be looking ahead to Friday.
His first order of business was a stop at Jamaica House, where the prime minister and her staff have their offices.
It’s where Obama met with Simpson Miller and where he signed Jamaica’s guest book.
“It is a great pleasure to visit Jamaica, known for its beauty and the extraordinary spirit of its people,” Obama wrote. “May the deep and abiding friendships between our nations continue for generations to come.”
There was one small problem, though. He signed with Friday’s date: “10 April 2015.”
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Simpson Miller also expressed the region’s affection for Obama at a subsequent meeting with leaders in the 15-member Caribbean Community, also known as CARICOM.









