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View Full Version : Congress's Globe-trotting Over Memorial Day


Capt. Stamina
07-17-2008, 03:14 PM
So, while we're scrimping to save money for our vacation, and gave up going to other Faires because we can't afford the cost to fly, rent a car, and get a hotel or it's too long to drive and can't afford the gas, I guess maybe I should quit my job and become a congressman.

3 pages worth here (http://www.usnews.com/articles/news/politics/2008/07/16/taxpayers-and-private-companies-pay-for-congresss-globe-trotting-over-memorial-day.html?s_cid=congresstravel)

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The Aspen Institute brought the lawmakers to Rome for a seminar called "Political Islam: Challenges for U.S. Policy." But it wasn't just the members of Congress who benefited, at no cost to themselves, since all but one brought along a spouse or child. Trips for two soared as high as $20,120, and the bottom line for members and their companions rose to nearly $263,000, according to disclosure reports.

Nine Democrats were on the Rome trip: Sens. Evan Bayh of Indiana and Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico and Reps. Earl Blumenauer of Oregon, Rush Holt of New Jersey, Nita Lowey of New York, and Howard Berman, Susan Davis, George Miller, and Henry Waxman, all of California. Eight Republicans also were on board: Sens. Robert Bennett of Utah, Richard Lugar of Indiana, and George Voinovich of Ohio and Reps. Charles Boustany of Louisiana, Geoffrey Davis of Kentucky, John Duncan of Tennessee, Fred Upton of Michigan, and Greg Walden of Oregon. All but Bingaman brought one relative, most often a spouse; Blumenauer took a son. Three members, Lowey, Miller and Upton, extended the trip to Italy at their own expense. Aspen, which has been holding such conferences for lawmakers since 1983 and now puts on about five a year, marks a milestone in August with its 100th conference in Paris, according to Dick Clark, who directs the Aspen Congressional Program. Those meetings will probe the cultural and ideological aspects of Islam.
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Yeah, must be lots of Muslims in Catholic Rome.

but this is the part that really pisses me off:

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Ten lawmakers went on a weeklong, taxpayer-paid trip from May 23 to 30 for meetings of the Transatlantic Legislators' Dialogue in Ljubljana, Slovenia, with subsequent stops—and la dolce vita—in Venice and Naples. The dialogue unites lawmakers with peers from the European Parliament. Seven in the U.S. delegation had a spouse along, says Lynne Weil, spokeswoman for the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

The group was rounded out by six aides and the House chaplain, according to reports on official foreign travel, which do not list accompanying spouses. The reported costs were $53,992, a figure that understates the bottom line since most lawmakers flew on military planes and the Pentagon refuses to release details such as the aircraft, manifest, and estimated cost. Spouses fly free aboard such flights, Weil says. A draft itinerary leaked to the Washington Post showed the lawmakers were to visit a Slovenian castle, dine near Naples at a Michelin two-star restaurant, and, at their own expense, take in opera in Venice. The group was led by House Democrat Shelley Berkley of Nevada. Her spokesman, David Cherry, confirmed the outings but stressed the business at hand: from a wreath laying at a U.S. air base to discussions on topics including climate change, energy, trade, port security, Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan. Berkley, in a statement to U.S. News, said the dialogue was a forum for U.S. and European allies "to learn from one another and build even stronger ties."

Berkley, along with Reps. Russ Carnahan of Missouri, Phil Gingrey of Georgia, Cliff Stearns of Florida, Joe Barton of Texas, and Gary Ackerman and Steve Israel of New York, all brought spouses. Reps. Eliot Engel of New York, Sheila Jackson-Lee of Texas, and Loretta Sanchez of California traveled solo.
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Go ahead, read the rest of the article if you want to get your blood boiling. No wonder they got an approval rating of 14%.

Bean
07-17-2008, 04:37 PM
Now, I didn't read the whole article, but this type of thing has been going on since the dawn of time. It's going to take alot of screaming and yelling from the general public to curb this type of Congressional waste, but until then it's just a perk of the job.

Isabelle Warwicke
07-17-2008, 10:51 PM
Oh *grrrrr.*