Barack Obama is the Reason Hunter and Ashley Biden Lost their Secret Service Detail, Not Donald Trump

Barack Obama’s Law: Ending Secret Service Protection for Presidents’ Adult Children

March 18, 2025
In the swirl of political headlines and partisan finger-pointing, one fact often gets lost: it was Barack Obama, not any subsequent president, who signed the law that reshaped Secret Service protection for the children of former commanders-in-chief. On January 10, 2013, Obama put his pen to the Former Presidents Protection Act of 2012, a bill that reinstated lifetime protection for ex-presidents and their spouses but set a clear cutoff for their kids. Under this law, children of former presidents lose their Secret Service details once they turn 16—full stop. So when folks raise a fuss about Hunter and Ashley Biden no longer having agents shadowing them, let’s keep the record straight: they’re grown adults, and the rule’s been in place for over a decade.

The backstory here is worth unpacking. Before 1994, former presidents, their spouses, and their kids enjoyed lifetime Secret Service protection under the Former Presidents Act of 1958. It was a blanket deal—taxpayers footed the bill indefinitely. But in the ‘90s, Congress, eyeing cost savings, trimmed that down. A 1994 law limited protection to 10 years post-presidency for presidents leaving office after January 1, 1997, and left kids’ coverage vague. By the early 2000s, though, the post-9/11 world had lawmakers rethinking security. Threats weren’t fading; they were evolving. Enter the 2012 Act, which Obama signed during his first term’s twilight.

This wasn’t a slapdash decision. The bill, passed with bipartisan support, aimed to balance safety with fiscal reality. It brought back lifetime protection for presidents and first ladies—George W. Bush and Obama himself were the first affected—but drew a line at kids.

The logic? Former presidents remain high-profile targets forever; their adult children, not so much. Protection for kids was capped at age 16, unless extended temporarily by a president’s directive (up to six months post-tenure, as some, like Obama for Sasha and Malia, have done). After that, they’re on their own.

Fast forward to today, and Hunter Biden (54) and Ashley Biden (43) are well past that threshold. Their details didn’t vanish because of some recent executive whim—they aged out years ago under the law Obama signed. Sure, outgoing presidents can request short-term extensions for family, as Joe Biden did in 2021, but those expire after six months unless renewed by special circumstance. Hunter and Ashley, now private citizens with no official role, don’t qualify. That’s not a scandal; it’s the system working as designed.

The chatter on X and elsewhere sometimes muddies this. Posts cry foul over “lost protection,” but the rule’s been consistent since 2013. Obama’s daughters, Malia and Sasha, lost their details too once they hit adulthood—Sasha was 15 when Obama left office, Malia 18—and no one’s claiming they’re unsafe.

The law doesn’t play favorites; it’s agnostic about party or personality. Hunter’s controversies or Ashley’s lower profile don’t change the math—they’re adults, and the statute says 16 is the cutoff.

Why did Obama sign this? It wasn’t about denying anyone safety—it was about defining limits.

Lifetime protection for every presidential offspring, no matter their age, was a budget buster and a logistical nightmare.

The Secret Service isn’t a personal concierge; it’s a federal agency with finite resources. Post-9/11, the focus shifted to protecting those most at risk—presidents and spouses—while trusting adult children to navigate life like the rest of us. Congress agreed, and Obama, a constitutional lawyer by training, saw the logic.

So next time someone spins a tale about Hunter and Ashley being “stripped” of protection, remember: this isn’t a fresh plot twist. It’s a 12-year-old law doing what it was meant to do. Obama signed it, not out of spite, but to codify a sensible boundary. The Biden kids are adults—have been for decades—and the Secret Service isn’t their babysitter. That’s not a jab; it’s just the rules.

Phil Stilton

Phil Stilton

Phil Stilton is the Editor and Publisher of Shore News Network, an independent digital news organization covering New Jersey, national politics, public policy, public safety, and community affairs. With years of experience reporting on local government, elections, law enforcement, and issues impacting residents throughout New Jersey, Stilton has built a reputation for delivering timely news, in-depth reporting, and accountability journalism.

As the founder of Shore News Network, Stilton oversees editorial operations, investigative reporting, and breaking news coverage while working closely with journalists, public officials, and community leaders. His reporting has covered municipal government, state politics, federal policy, public records investigations, emergency management, and major news events affecting local communities.

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