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To: dennisw
Starr only spent 40 million in 5 years
... Hillary Clinton's most expensive Pentagon travel bill was $2.3 million for a 12-day
tour of North Africa with daughter Chelsea in March 1999, about ...
alt.impeach.clinton - Aug 18, 2000 by Spaz - View Thread (3 articles)

Clinton wastes more money than Starr!!
... The most expensive of these was Clinton's six-nation tour of Africa, which included
a retinue of more than 200 White House aides, 13 helicopters ...
alt.impeach.clinton - Jun 5, 2000 by Superman - View Thread (1 article)

 

Our globetrotting president sets records 
By THOMAS HARGROVE 
Scripps Howard News Service June 02, 2000

WASHINGTON - Although President Clinton boasts about his domestic agenda, he also has set records for foreign travel by a chief executive with 47 official trips to 63 nations.

During his two terms, Clinton has spent 226 days abroad, according to a travel log obtained from the National Security Council, which oversees the president's foreign excursions. That figure does not include his eight-day trip to Portugal, Germany, Russia and the Ukraine ending Monday.

No chief executive in U.S. history has come close to this level of travel.

The only president in the jet-age to complete two full terms, Ronald Reagan, spent 120 days abroad in a series of 26 trips, according to travel logs obtained from Reagan's presidential library in Simi Valley, Calif. Clinton seems certain to at least double Reagan's total travel before he leaves office in January.

President Dwight Eisenhower did relatively little foreign travel and was incapacitated by a heart attack during his presidency. No other president has had the necessary time in office and access to jet transportation to challenge Clinton's record.

"Even though there are a great many trips to be made, this president has made more than any other," Sen. Craig Thomas, R-Wyo., complained during floor budget debates last year.

Clinton's rate of travel has increased steadily through his administration. He spent only eight days abroad in 1993 during trips to Korea, Japan and Canada. Last year, he was out of the country for 50 days in 11 separate trips that included Macedonia, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Morocco, New Zealand, Turkey and Kosovo.

White House officials bristle at suggestions that Clinton's rate of travel is the result of frustration over his status as a lame duck who can accomplish little with the Republican-dominated Congress.

"There is an emphasis on domestic issues because the president has said, from the beginning, that he's going to be an activist president until the last day he's here," White House Press Secretary Joe Lockhart said last year.

But Clinton's agenda appears to be increasingly focusing on foreign matters, where he can claim successes. In Germany on Friday, he was awarded the prestigious International Charlemagne Prize for his work in promoting European unity.

"This trip, at least in part, is an opportunity to take stock of the progress that has been made and to build on the vision that the president articulated in 1994 (of) a peaceful, undivided, democratic Europe for the first time in history," National Security Adviser Samuel Berger said last week when explaining the purpose of Clinton's current eight-day travel.

Congress is increasingly critical of the cost of Clinton's trips. Republican senators ordered the General Accounting Office to conduct a spot check by auditing the cost of three trips the president made to Africa, China and Chile in 1998.

The most expensive of these was Clinton's six-nation tour of Africa, which included a retinue of more than 200 White House aides, 13 helicopters and enough communication and security equipment to require 98 air cargo missions. The tally for the trip was $43 million.

The GAO estimated the cost of all three trips that year at $72.1 million, of which 84 percent was charged to the Department of Defense, which supplied the necessary military transport aircraft.

"Does not it appear excessive to pin $72 million on three trips billed as goodwill tours?" asked Rep. Joel Hefley, R-Colo., in a House floor statement late last year. "Bill Clinton gets my Porker-of-the-Week Award."

Clinton apparently set an all-time record in travel expenses in March during a nine-day trip to India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Switzerland. The U.S. Air Force estimated it spent as much as $75 million to provide an armada of 76 transport and support aircraft for the trips, although a final tally has not been released.

"I don't think there has been a time in recent history where a president has embarked on a foreign tour in the extensive way that he did and come up totally empty-handed," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. "It again emphasizes the need for a steady hand at the tiller, a person who is interested really in foreign policy and doesn't view it as a photo op, which apparently this trip was primarily motivated to achieve."

61 posted on 05/08/2003 10:39:14 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw


66 posted on 05/08/2003 11:02:41 AM PDT by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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To: dennisw
Clinton spent practically the entire year of 1999 traveling abroad in order to avoid answering questions about Monica Lewinsky. Byrd has a helluva nerve...
76 posted on 05/08/2003 4:14:41 PM PDT by Bush2000
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