"A Very Fine Man"

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Donald Trump has lost a whole host of his own political appointees since becoming President on 20 January 2017.

The latest person to leave the Trump administration is healthy secretary Tom Price whom trump described as a "very fine man" after learning that Price travelled by private jet on official business one afternoon, from Washington DC to Nashville, where he spent less than 90 minutes at two scheduled events - and then had lunch with his son, who lives in the city. 

Now this is beginning to look and sound ridiculous, so maybe Donald should just go the whole hog and fit the White House with a revolving door.

  


US health secretary Tom Price quits after plane scandal

BBC US & Canada

Image copyright - REUTERS Image caption- President Trump joked in July that if Tom Price failed on the Republican healthcare plan he would be fired

US Health Secretary Tom Price has resigned over the use of expensive private planes for official business.

He previously apologised after making 26 private flights since May at a cost of $400,000 (£300,000) to taxpayers.

Government officials, except those dealing with national security matters, are required to take commercial flights for work related travel.

Three other members of President Donald Trump's cabinet are under scrutiny for using private planes while working.

A White House statement said President Trump had accepted Mr Price's resignation, adding that Don J Wright had been designated as acting health secretary. Mr Wright is currently deputy assistant secretary for health.

The White House revolving door: Who's gone?

In his letter of resignation, seen by the New York Times, Mr Price said he regretted that "recent events have created a distraction" from the work of the health department.

An investigation by the political news website Politico found that Mr Price's travels had cost more than $1m (£750,000).

As well as the $400,000 for private flights, that figure includes the cost of military aircraft used for Mr Price's trips abroad, Politico added.

President Trump had earlier said he was "not happy" with the expense.

Mr Price had promised to repay the cost of his seats on private flights, saying: "The taxpayers won't pay a dime for my seat on those planes."

Hours before Mr Price's resignation he told White House reporters: "He's a very fine man. We're going to make a decision sometime tonight."A scandal too big to ignore

Anthony Zurcher, BBC News, Washington

In July Donald Trump joked that if Tom Price didn't get a Republican healthcare plan through Congress, he would be fired. People laughed.

Obamacare repeal went down in flames again this week, and Mr Price is out. No-one is laughing now - no Republicans, at least.

The situation is more complicated than that, of course. An ever-ballooning price tag for Mr Price's private jet trips became a scandal too big to ignore. The exorbitant spending, breaking with past practices, cut directly against Mr Trump's campaign promise to rein in wasteful spending.

If Mr Price had given the president the legislative victory he desperately wanted, the secretary may have been spared. Instead, he was marched to the gallows.

The risk for the administration has not passed. Other officials have racked up their own inordinately high travel expenses. Senior presidential adviser Kellyanne Conway was on one of Mr Price's flights - hinting that the scandal may reach inside the White House.

The precedent has been established that such extravagances can be a fireable offence.

Possible candidates to succeed Mr Price include Scott Gottlieb, currently commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, and Seema Verma, who is administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Media caption"Good man": Price resignation announced after Trump teases media

Three other members of Mr Trump's cabinet are under scrutiny for their use of private planes while on the job:

  • Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke flew from Las Vegas to Montana last June on a private jet that cost taxpayers more than $12,000, according to Politico and the Washington Post
  • Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is accused of flying with his wife to view last month's solar eclipse
  • Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt has spent more than $58,000 on non-commercial travel
As well as the Vegas-Montana trip - a route served by commercial flights - Mr Zinke is also reported to have used private jets between St Croix and St Thomas in the US Virgin Islands in March, and a military aircraft to travel to Norway in May.

Image copyright - GETTY IMAGES Image caption - Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is reported to have used a private jet on a route served by commercial flights

Interior department spokeswoman Heather Swift said in a statement that, as with previous interior secretaries, Mr Zinke "travelled on charter flights when there were no commercial options available".

"All travel is pre-approved by the ethics office before booking and the charter flights went through an additional level of due diligence," she said.



Trump and the Swamp (29/09/17)Image result for draining the swamp


The BBC reports that America's health secretary, Tom Price, travelled by private jet on official business one afternoon, from Washington DC to Nashville, where he spent less than 90 minutes at two scheduled events - and then had lunch with his son, who lives in the city. 


  


US health secretary apologises for private plane travel

BBC US & Canada

Image copyright - AFP

US Health Secretary Tom Price has apologised over his private plane trips on official government business.

The former Georgia congressman said he will reimburse taxpayers and fly commercial in future.

His apology comes a day after US President Donald Trump said he was "not happy" with Mr Price's trips.

Government officials, except those dealing with national security matters, are required to take commercial flights for work-related travel.

An investigation by Politico found Mr Price had taken at least 24 such flights since early May at a cost to taxpayers of $300,000 (£223,000).

"To make sure everyone knows that this will never happen again, I am taking the following steps," said Mr Price in a statement on Thursday.

He said he would continue to co-operate with a review into the matter by his Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) inspector general.

"I will take no more private charter flights as Secretary of HHS," he added. "No exceptions.

"Today, I will write a personal check to the US Treasury for the expenses of my travel on private charter planes. The taxpayers won't pay a dime for my seat on those planes."

Two other members of Mr Trump's cabinet are under scrutiny by inspectors general for their use of private planes while on the job: 

  • Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is accused of flying with his wife to view last month's solar eclipse
  • Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt has spent more than $58,000 on non-commercial travel
When asked if he would fire the Health and Human Services Secretary over his trips, Mr Trump said on Wednesday: "We'll see."

Mr Price's flights have included travelling from Washington DC to Nashville for the afternoon, where he spent less than 90 minutes at two scheduled events and had lunch with his son, who lives in the Tennessee city.

The Learjet round-trip cost nearly $18,000 of taxpayers' money, according to Politico.

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform released a letter on Wednesday asking Mr Price about his use of "government-owned aircraft for personal travel or private non-commercial aircraft for official travel".

The committee gave Mr Price two weeks to hand over the records.

Tesia D Williams, a spokeswoman for the HHS inspector general, told the BBC the agency is reviewing whether it was "potentially inappropriate travel".

Draining the Swamp (14/02/17)

Image result for draining the swamp

Will Hutton has some great turns of phrase in this piece from The Observer in which he pours scorn on Donald Trump's promise to drain the Washington 'swamp' of its vested, all-powerful business interests.

In fact the new President has nominated a cabinet of American millionaires and billionaires, the wealthiest in his country's history, as Hutton says the opposite of what Trump promised as during the election campaign:

"Far from draining the swamp, he is opening the sluicegates; the money men are not so much being hurled out as in full occupation of the economic citadel." 

A timely piece and powerfully argued piece, if you ask me.

  


https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/feb/12/not-draining-swamp-trump-money-mens-best-friend

Instead of draining the swamp, Trump has become Wall Street’s best buddy
By Will Hutton - The Observer

The president promised a radical overhaul of banking, but is encouraging the money men’s worst excesses
 

‘In office, Trump has proved to be a great deal friendlier to the titans of Wall Street and their interests than he suggested he would be as a candidate.’ Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

President Trump was an accident waiting to happen. The US had entered a zone of fragility: there were too many inequalities, grievances and accompanying disillusion in a system felt not to work .

A chief reason for that economic and social fragility was the behaviour of the American financial system. It is still astounding how close to disaster high finance brought the US and global economy in 2008. It provoked a vast bailout, and the recovery that followed has been one of the most anaemic sort, during which the wages of average Americans have scarcely grown.

The hangover of debt and legacy of banks trying to rebuild their shattered balance sheets has held the economy back. Meanwhile, some of the weak links in the system, like the sheer scale and opacity of the derivative markets, plus business models riddled with conflicts of interest, have remained unaddressed. Fortunes are still being made and very few have paid the price for cataclysmic mistakes.

On the campaign trail, Trump unfailingly tarred Clinton as compromised by, and enmeshed with, Wall Street and its mega banks. Goldman Sachs had “total control” of her; she was in thrall to a “global power structure that is responsible for the economic decisions that have robbed our working class, stripped our country of its wealth and put that money into the pockets of a handful of large corporations and political entities”.
Trump would drain the swamp, he claimed, and reinstate a “21st-century” version of the law separating main street banking from Wall Street – Roosevelt’s Glass-Steagall Act – which was scrapped by President Bill Clinton, in one of his worst decisions. Trump would throw the money men out of the temple, he said. He would reshape finance for the “little guy”. His audiences roared him on.  

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