Baltimore Sun

Carson: Wife picked furniture

HUD secretary dismisses questions about letting son set up listening tour

- By John Fritze john.fritze@baltsun.com twitter.com/jfritze

WASHINGTON – Ben Carson, the secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, told a House committee Tuesday that he left the decision over furnishing his office to his wife, and denied knowledge of a plan to purchase a $31,000 dining room set that has since become controvers­ial.

The retired Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurge­on and former presidenti­al candidate also told the panel that he dismissed questions from the department’s ethics counsel about the propriety of allowing his son — who does not work for the government — to set up a listening tour for the secretary last year in Baltimore.

“I’m not a person who spends a lot of time thinking about how something looks,” Carson told a House Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee. “I realized that that’s not the way of Washington and, you know, that’s a lesson that I’ve learned.”

Carson has faced increased scrutiny for the $31,000 dining room set, ordered at a time when the agency was contemplat­ing deep cuts to housing programs. When news of the purchase became public, a HUD spokesman said that neither Carson nor his wife was aware of it.

Documents obtained by the left-leaning watchdog group American Oversight last week contradict­ed that narrative. One email showed a HUD staff member referencin­g “the furniture the Secretary and Mrs. Carson picked out.” Another email showed a HUD staffer writing Carson’s wife, Candy Carson, to ask if she was available to meet with a designer about “bringing in new furniture.”

In his testimony Tuesday, Carson said he “asked my wife to help me with that.” The secretary said the office’s current table is in such disrepair that people were being stuck by nails, and a chair had collapsed.

“They showed us some catalogs,” he said. “I left it with my wife.”

The mahogany dining set was purchased from the Baltimore interior design firm Sebree and Associates. Carson said the department has since canceled the order.

“I’m not really big into decorating,” he said. “If it was up to me, my office would probably look like a hospital waiting room.”

He also blamed the news media for coverage of the controvers­y.

Carson has faced criticism for involving his wife and son in government business. He called on the department’s inspector general last month to investigat­e that involvemen­t.

In a memo published earlier this year by The Washington Post, a HUD attorney wrote that Ben Carson Jr. reached out to some of Baltimore’s most prominent leaders to request they attend events associated with the June “listening tour.” Carson Jr., who does not work for HUD but often appears with his father at official events, invited several notable local figures to the event.

“The Trump administra­tion isn’t used to people holding them accountabl­e for anything, and Secretary Carson was clearly not prepared for the committee to call him on his lies about his $31,000 dining set,” said Austin Evers, executive director of American Oversight. “Secretary Carson has a deeply troubling habit of involving his family in government business.”

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