Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Trump’s cabinet loves living large

- Eugene Robinson Columnist Eugene Robinson is syndicated by the Washington Post Writers Group. His email address is eugenerobi­nson@ washpost.com.

WASHINGTON » So are there members of President Trump’s Cabinet who don’t travel by private jet? Put another way, do any of our top officials understand the difference between public service and personal luxury?

Trump may not have Made America Great Again for you or me, but he’s made it pretty sweet for political appointees who want to jet around like billionair­es at other people’s expense. Nice work if you can get it.

Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price seems to have been the most egregious abuser. According to Politico, Price took at least 24 flights on private chartered aircraft since early May, at a total cost of more than $400,000. Until all the scrutiny, Price wasn’t picking up the tab. We the taxpayers were. On Thursday, Price said he would write a check to the Treasury Department for about $52,000 to cover the cost of his seat on those chartered jets. On Friday, he resigned.

Now, everyone understand­s that the secretary of defense would take an expensive military flight to visit the troops in a war zone, or that the secretary of state would be flown in his own government plane to an internatio­nal conference, or that the secretary of homeland security might charter a jet to reach the scene of some domestic crisis. But the secretary of HHS? Did some regional office need him to make an emergency delivery of printer ink?

Politico cited a June 6 flight Price took to and from Nashville for a morning appearance and an afternoon speech. The cost was a staggering $17,760 — while commercial flights that would have allowed Price to complete the same itinerary cost as little as $202.

There was nothing normal about this. Previous HHS secretarie­s have flown commercial. I don’t think it should be mandatory for Cabinet officials to squeeze themselves into coach, as members of Congress often do when flying back and forth to their constituen­cies; business class, when available, would seem appropriat­e. But chartering a jet for a non-urgent hop to Nashville is simply beyond the pale — especially given that Price seems to have had personal reasons for making that trip.

It turns out that Price’s son lives in Nashville, and that Price owns a condo there. In fact, Price found time during that June 6 trip — supposedly so chock-filled that he needed to go by private jet — to meet his son for lunch.

In August, also according to Politico, Price flew in a chartered jet— paid for by you and me — to St. Simons Island, Georgia, a pricey resort where he and his wife own property. He was attending a Medical Associatio­n of Georgia retreat, where he was scheduled to give a Sunday speech. Why, then, with his ohso-busy schedule, did he need to arrive on Friday afternoon?

Price has not been the only offender. Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Scott Pruitt has taken at least four charter and military flights that cost a total of more than $58,000, The Washington Post reported this week.

One of Pruitt’s flights on chartered aircraft was an Aug. 4 trip from Denver to Durango, Colorado, for a meeting with Gov. John Hickenloop­er at a site where the EPA accidental­ly triggered a spill of pollutants two years ago. The EPA explained that the commercial flight Pruitt had planned to take was delayed. It turns out, however, that Hickenloop­er offered to take Pruitt to Durango on his state-owned plane, which presumably would have cost the EPA nothing. The problem was that the governor had room to accommodat­e Pruitt but not his entourage.

That was obviously a dealbreake­r for Pruitt, who travels about the country and even his headquarte­rs building with Beyonce-level security. Unlike any previous EPA administra­tor, Pruitt demands around-the-clock protection by agency enforcemen­t agents — requiring triple the manpower his predecesso­rs needed. Pruitt also is spending nearly $25,000 to construct a secure, soundproof communicat­ions booth in his office. But my point here isn’t about paranoia. It’s about imagined grandeur.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin inquired about using a $25,000-an-hour military plane for his European honeymoon last month. That didn’t work out, but he did take a government plane on a trip to Fort Knox that seemed suspicious­ly timed to view the recent solar eclipse.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has acknowledg­ed using private jets. But she’s a billionair­e and pays the cost herself, as did billionair­e Penny Pritzker when she was commerce secretary in the Obama administra­tion.

For the others, however, all this grasping is not just wasteful but unseemly. Most of the Cabinet officials I’ve known over the years saw their jobs as a sacred trust. They felt deeply responsibl­e toward the American people and the dedicated personnel in their agencies.

For Price, Pruitt and Mnuchin, apparently, it’s more about living large.

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