In the wake of the sequester-induced cancellation of all public White House tours and the subsequent Republican fury, Donald Trump has offered to pay for the tours for the rest of the fiscal year.
On Fox and Friends Monday morning, Trump was asked about Newt Gingrich’s tweeted suggestion that he cover the White House tour expenses. After admitting that he previously hadn’t know about Newt’s proposal, he ambivalently remarked, “I think it’s so nice of Newt to suggest that […] But it sounds reasonable to me. Why not?“
As reported by NBC News, cutting the tours will save $74,000 per week and almost $2 million by the time the fiscal year ends. Instead of supervising the tours, which have been around since President Jefferson opened the White House to the public for the first time in 1805, Secret Service officers will be transferred to more pertinent security posts.
During a press briefing on March 7, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney explained that though the White House was “obviously disappointed” in its decision to cut all public tours, they believed it to be a better option for the Secret Service in comparison to “potential furloughs and cuts in overtime.” Nevertheless, many Republicans and conservative pundits are up in arms about the decision.
On CNBC’s The Kudlow Report, House Speaker John Boehner told Larry Kudlow that President Obama is simply “trying to make it tough on members of Congress” and that “it’s just silly. In a letter to the White House, John Thune and thirteen other Republican Senators questioned the suspension, arguing that “arbitrarily shut[ing] off access to a taxpayer-funded, historical building, such as the White House, is disappointing.” In retaliation to the tour suspensions, Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) filed an amendment to further prevent any government money going towards the president’s golf trips. On Thursday’s edition of his radio show, Rush Limbaugh lambasted Obama for canceling the tours while he ordered a “20-vehicle caravan [for] one half a mile” for his Republican outreach dinner at the Jefferson Hotel—even though the point of the dinner was to formulate a grand bargain for the sequester. And both Eric Bolling and Sean Hannity of Fox News have also offered to pay for the tours — but only for a week.









