The Palm Beach Post

Who paid for all those Trump Tower visits by job applicants?

How such trips are funded is as varied as the candidates are.

- By Vera Bergengrue­n Tribune News Service Private dollars spent: Percentage private:

WASHINGTON — Since the elec tion, more than 100 p o t e n t i a l a ppoi n t e e s t o Donald Trump’s administra­tion have traveled from all over the country to Manhatt an to meet with the president-elect. The ways these transition meetings are financed have been as varied as the c andidates themselves.

When S o u t h C a ro l i n a Gov. Nikki Haley traveled to Trump Tower in November, the Republican Governors Associatio­n and the Republican National Committee covered her travel costs, according to her office. After the meeting, Trump nominated Haley to be the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

In other cases, state taxpayers picked up the tabs for their officials’ trips to New York. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, who was appointed v i c e c hai r woman of t he Tr ump- Pe nc e pre s i de ntial transition team, used the state plane for her visit to Trump Tower. The trip cost Oklahomans more than $6,000, mostly for the cost of the fuel.

M o s t p e o p l e w h o responded to McClatchy’s requests for informatio­n had paid their own way. Former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue traveled to New York in a Delta coach seat “with no mention or expectatio­n of reimbursem­ent,” his spokesman said.

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach also went a budget-savvy route. He used his Southwest Airlines frequent flier miles to pay for the flight to New York, which, according to a spokesman, cost him only $5.60. And he found an unusual deal in a $125 hotel room in New York.

Re p . J e b H e n s a r l i n g , R-Texas, who was under considerat­ion for treasury secretary but was ultimately passed over, paid for his travel to Trump Tower with campaign funds, according to a spokeswoma­n.

The cost of the presidenti­al transition itself is split between public and private dollars. Presidents- elec t financed their own transition­s until 1963, when the Presidenti­al Transition Act allowed for public funding. The law put the General Services Administra­tion in charge of providing support for a smooth transfer of power.

This election cycle, the GSA received $9.5 million in taxpayer funds to support Trump’s transition. This can be used for staff compensati­on, office space, travel and communicat­ion, among other needs. The funds comprise $6 million for support as requested 0 by the president-elect and vice president-elect, $1 million for orientatio­n of politic al appointees and $2.5 million to support the outgoing president and vice president. $5.0 million. percent 55

While some of these funds are usually spent on office space and administra­tive support in Washington to pl a n t he t r a ns f e r t o t he White House, Trump set up his transition headquar- ters in his New York skyscraper.

The president-elect is also allowed to raise funds to pay for transition expenses.

President Bill Clinton covered more than 60 percent of his transition costs with private dollars. He raised $5.3 million and spent $3.485 million of the appropriat­ed funds. Obama’s team spent $5.2 million in appropriat­ed public dollars and $4 million in private donations, while President George W. Bush’s transition spent $5 million in private money and $4 million in public funds.

Dur i n g Obama’s t r a n - s i t i o n , h i s c a m p a i g n chairman, John Podesta, announced that the team would not accept donations from federal lobbyists, corporatio­ns, political action committees, labor unions and foreign agents. At the time, Podesta called it the “strictest and most far-reaching ethics rules of any transition team in history.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States