CNBC pundit next adviser
HOUSING AND Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson said he was as “surprised as anyone” when he learned his staff had ordered a $31,000 dining set — but newly released emails appear to show he and his wife personally selected the furniture.
An email from Carson’s assistant was sent in August with the subject line: “Secretary’s Dining Room Furniture Needed.” It cites “printouts of the furniture the Secretary and Mrs. Carson picked out.”
The documents were obtained through a Freedom of Information Act Request from American Oversight — a watchdog group helmed by former Obama administration officials.
HUD spokesman Raffi Williams initially denied the Carsons were involved in selecting the pricey set, instead blaming “career staffers in charge of the building” during an interview with CNN last month.
Several days later, Carson said he was shocked to learn of the purchase and that he would cancel the order, which included a custom wood table, chairs and a hutch.
“I briefly looked at catalogs for dining furniture and was shocked by the cost of the furniture,” he wrote. “My wife also looked at catalogs and wanted to be sure that the color of the chair fabric of any set that was chosen matches the rest of the” decor.
News that Carson dropped $31,000 in federal funds to swap the old table set out of his HUD suite made national headlines and sparked immediate backlash when it was first reported in February — around the same time the housing agency had proposed stripping more than $6 billion from its affordable housing budget.
Approached Tuesday night about the discrepancies between his statement and emails regarding the dining room furniture, Williams told CNN: “When presented with options by professional staff, Mrs. Carson participated in the selection of specific styles.”
The newly released emails show conversation surrounding the furniture in the secretary’s suite going back to May. Around that time, a pair of aides sent in requests that the chairs be tightened up as “most of them are loose and wiggling.”
Several months later the HUD’s scheduling office sent an email to the secretary’s wife, Candy Carson, to set an appointment to look at potential new furniture.
The scheduler emphasized there was an approaching deadline they have to have the order in by should they want “to use the money allocated for the fiscal year.”
The furniture was quoted as being $24,666, but receipts show the final bill was nearly $7,000 more after delivery and installation charges in addition to a small up-charge for the upholstered chairs. PRESIDENT TRUMP tapped CNBC commentator and freetrade proponent Larry Kudlow as his top economic adviser Wednesday, replacing Gary Cohn.
Kudlow, who served in the Reagan administration’s budget office, accepted Trump’s offer to serve as the director of his National Economic Council, declaring that the U.S. economy will soar thanks to last year’s tax cuts.
“The economy is starting to roar and we’re going to get more of that,” said Kudlow, 70.
The CNBC commentator will take over for Cohn, who left in protest of Trump’s tariffs announcement.