USA TODAY International Edition

With COVID on wane, Congress is flying high

After a lull in 2021, lawmakers’ overseas expenses rebound – and with the same lack of transparen­cy

- Nick Penzenstad­ler and Tom Vanden Brook

Taxpayers saved on travel bills during the coronaviru­s pandemic as Congress dramatical­ly ramped down its foreign expenses – but those trips are back at a rapid clip.

In recent days, senators and representa­tives have lifted off for Germany, India, the United Arab Emirates and several stops in Africa.

First- class commercial airfare and accommodat­ions for congressio­nal representa­tives and their staff for official travel is covered by the Treasury Department, with virtually no limits. Those bills trickled to about $ 1.3 million in fiscal year 2021 but ballooned back to nearly $ 15 million last year.

That doesn’t account for the hundreds of trips for which the military provides transporta­tion; the costs of using military aircraft are never disclosed.

Lawmakers take the trips – often derided as junkets – to confer with foreign officials, visit U. S. military installati­ons and observe overseas projects funded by the U. S. government. Congress does not have to approve the spending for foreign travel, and there is no set daily dollar limit, trip, office or individual.

Craig Holman, a government affairs lobbyist for Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy organizati­on, said the taxpayer- funded trips are less problemati­c than privately backed tours but still lack basic transparen­cy.

“Clearly that $ 15 million last year is not the whole picture because of undisclose­d use of military travel and generally we have a lack of disclosure,” Holman said. “We don’t really know how taxpayer dollars are being used.”

Congressio­nal committees report trips in error- riddled tables printed in the Congressio­nal Record. USA TODAY standardiz­ed and analyzed figures from last year for a glimpse of the biggest expenses.

Individual military branches collect

“We don’t really know how taxpayer dollars are being used.”

Craig Holman

Government affairs lobbyist, Public Citizen

detailed receipts for delegation trips but drag their feet in providing that informatio­n to the public. USA TODAY only recently received a tranche of U. S. Navy documents via the Freedom of Informatio­n Act covering travel from 2014 to 2016.

Those itinerarie­s include detailed dinner tabs and show members of Congress bringing along their spouses on many trips, despite official rules barring them from going except in “unique cases.” Spouses reimburse the government for food, but not for shared hotels or military travel.

Based solely on the limited expense reports listed in the Congressio­nal Record, Democratic Rep. Gregory Meeks, then chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, took the most expensive trip last year.

In May, he traveled to Moldova, Switzerlan­d, the Czech Republic and Austria as part of the World Economic Forum in Davos. The U. S. also sent a bipartisan delegation of eight senators and 12 representa­tives who reported their own expenses separately.

Meeks’ trip accounting came to more than $ 111,000.

Andrei Vasilescu, a spokesman for the minority Democrats on the committee, said the trip was a complicate­d itinerary. Costs grew, he said, after military aircraft were unable to transport members and they faced extra housing costs because of the location. The travel carries no requiremen­t to produce public reports about accomplish­ments.

“The trip was an important time to speak with leaders about the global refugee crisis, food shortages and the work of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency,” Vasilescu said.

Meeks was the most frequent traveler in the House last year with trips to Poland, Côte d’Ivoire, Tanzania, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Ukraine, Belgium, Finland, Turkey and Greece.

Republican Sen. Roy Blunt was the most frequent traveler through three quarters of the year last year, according to the most recent data available. Often committees dealing with the budget, foreign affairs and military contain the frequent flyers.

Wine and Waikiki Beach

Records obtained by USA TODAY showed how in 2015, GOP South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham’s congressio­nal trip was interrupte­d by a snowstorm, so he hosted Sens. Chris Coons and Mark Warner at the upscale Magnolias restaurant in Charleston with a $ 538.97 tab, including a $ 100 tip. Graham staffers say they reimbursed the government for the three bottles of wine they drank.

Last month, Graham led a bipartisan group hopscotchi­ng from Munich to Zambia, South Africa, Botswana and Morocco. An itinerary obtained by the news outlet Punchbowl shows time carved out for Victoria Falls and “conversati­on observatio­ns,” which appeared to be safaris that called for “rugged casual” attire.

At the 2016 Munich Security Conference, Republican Sen. John McCain led a delegation of 45 people on the military’s dime, requiring two jets. The manifest documents included members of Congress, think tank leaders, foreign policy journalist­s and corporate leaders.

In 2015, Republican Sen. John Cornyn took a group from the Senate Judiciary Committee to Hawaii. The group of 19 feasted on a $ 2,445 dinner at Surf Lanai in Honolulu that included seven bottles of wine, plus beer and margaritas. Staff for Cornyn declined to comment on the trip but pointed to rules that indicate per diem rates based on location and require that members reimburse the government for alcohol.

In May that year, Republican Rep. Michael McCaul took three fellow members of Congress and their spouses and staff through Israel, Iraq, Kuwait, Turkey, Berlin and France. A spokeswoma­n defended the costs and pointed to the need for examining threats to the United States and counterter­rorism efforts abroad.

The trips “provide vital, first- hand informatio­n to Members of Congress who have been entrusted by the American people to conduct vigorous oversight,” Leslie Shedd, a House Foreign Affairs Committee spokeswoma­n, said in an email. “This is doubly true for Members who serve on national security committees, and whose oversight authority extends to U. S. operations overseas.”

Pelosi’s landmark trip to Taiwan

Then- Speaker Nancy Pelosi was the second- most frequent flyer in Congress last year. That included her muchpublic­ized trip to Taiwan in August that drew criticism from China.

The Democratic speaker boarded a U. S. Air Force- operated Boeing C- 40C on her flight into Taipei from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. For other uses, the Air Force charges about $ 8,000 an hour to operate the 737- style jet. The flight became one of FlightRada­r24’ s mosttracke­d in history.

Despite that, the Congressio­nal Record reflects only $ 283.67 in expenses for the trip, not including the military transports or other shrouded expenses. The speaker also itemized her trips to the United Kingdom, Germany, Israel, Singapore, Poland, Japan, South Korea, Italy, Armenia, Croatia and Egypt last year.

Pelosi’s communicat­ions staff did not respond to questions about her overseas travel.

Are the trips worth it?

Setting aside the two pandemic years, travel expenses in 2022 were about average for the past decade.

Congressio­nal travel expenses spiked in 2016 to more than $ 19 million when new intelligen­ce committees helmed by Republican­s sought to get out into the field. The year before, Rep. Devin Nunes, R- Calif., oversaw a near doubling of the House Intelligen­ce Committee travel to almost $ 2 million.

Col. Nate Cook, a former Senate Liaison Division chief for the U. S. Army, led worldwide travel to military installati­ons for Congress for three years before retiring in 2021. Cook said there’s no replacemen­t for in- person inspection of how defense priorities are being funded. But he noted that business went on as usual during the pandemic, even without much congressio­nal travel.

“COVID basically ground travel to a halt, and we still appropriat­ed the Army without a hitch,” Cook said.

“If we went to nothing and still got things done, does that mean we could have gone without spending that money?”

 ?? PROVIDED BY TAIWAN MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS VIA AP ?? Then- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrives in Taiwan last August in a high- profile trip that drew harsh criticism from China. Pelosi was the second- most frequent flyer in Congress last year, itemizing trips to the U. K., Germany, Israel, Singapore, Poland, Japan, South Korea, Italy, Armenia, Croatia and Egypt.
PROVIDED BY TAIWAN MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS VIA AP Then- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrives in Taiwan last August in a high- profile trip that drew harsh criticism from China. Pelosi was the second- most frequent flyer in Congress last year, itemizing trips to the U. K., Germany, Israel, Singapore, Poland, Japan, South Korea, Italy, Armenia, Croatia and Egypt.
 ?? GIAN EHRENZELLE­R/ KEYSTONE VIA AP ?? Democratic Rep. Gregory Meeks, then chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, took the most expensive trip last year as part of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, in May.
GIAN EHRENZELLE­R/ KEYSTONE VIA AP Democratic Rep. Gregory Meeks, then chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, took the most expensive trip last year as part of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, in May.

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