*Malia Obama was recently spotted in London hanging with boyfriend, Rory Farquharson.
According to The Sun, the daughter of Barack and Michelle Obama also “partied with students from University College London,” while she was in town, “having been invited by a male school pal who lives in the house-share where the bash was thrown,” the outlet writes.
One of his housemates reportedly revealed on Twitter that the former First Daughter left late after partying into the early hours.
The Sun report claims Twitter user @president- will, which has since been made private, wrote: “My room-mate is really wealthy and from (Washington) DC and Malia Obama is coming over. Next time I need my room-mates to clean I’ll say Malia Obama is coming over. I’ve never seen them like this.”
OTHER NEWS YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED: Gayle King Denies Oprah Dropped Out of Russell Simmons Rape Doc Due to Pressure from Music Mogul
Asked if Obama had indeed showed up, the Twitter user replied: “Yes, and a window was somehow broken and my house is filthy.”
He also added this about any future parties: “No marijuana smoked in my house! No spilling tequila all over my kitchen! It will be a civilised party. None of what happened last night.
“Based off all of my room-mate’s friends from high school coming over last night, Malia has a wild life. I cannot party as hard as her and her people.”
Recently it was reported that Malia and her man spent Christmas break together in London, where she was a guest at Rory’s multi-million, million six-bedroom home in Woodbridge.
The couple have been dating for about two years and are both students at Harvard.
View this post on Instagram
#maliaobamaboyfriend #maliaobama
A post shared by Jason Lennon (@jasonethanlennon) on
As noted by Celebrity Insider, in a 2019 interview with Duchess Meghan of Sussex, Michelle Obama had this to say about her daughters: “In some ways, Malia and Sasha couldn’t be more different. One speaks freely, and often, one opens up on her own terms. One shares her innermost feelings, the other is content to let you figure it out. Neither approach is better or worse because they’ve both grown into smart, compassionate, and independent young women, fully capable of paving their paths.”
She added: “As a younger woman, I spent too much time worrying that I wasn’t achieving enough, or I was straying too far from what I thought was the prescribed path. What I hope my daughters will realize a little earlier is that there is no prescribed path, that it’s OK to swerve, and that the confidence they need to recognize that will come with time.”