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President Trump on Track to Charge Taxpayers $237 Million for Golf Trips
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President Trump on Track to Charge Taxpayers $237 Million for Golf Trips

President Trump is spending the majority of August at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, while his golf trips have already cost taxpayers at least $31.65 million.

President Donald Trump waves to spectators at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, on July 15, 2017. (AP/Julie Jacobson)
President Donald Trump waves to spectators at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, on July 15, 2017. (AP/Julie Jacobson)

This column contains updates.

President Donald Trump is gearing up for yet another taxpayer-funded vacation at his golf course in Bedminster, New Jersey. According to an advisory from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Trump was supposed to spend 18 days—from August 3 to August 20—at Bedminster.* However, now he is not arriving until August 4, making his trip 17 days.

This trip will mark Trump’s fifth to Bedminster in the past three months and his 12th total to both Mar-a-Lago and Bedminster since Inauguration Day.

The Center for American Progress Action Fund estimates that these trips have cost taxpayers at least $31.65 million. At this rate, Trump’s golf trips will cost nearly $237 million over his first term. In comparison, former President Barack Obama spent only $97 million on travel expenses over his eight years as president.

In between golfing trips, President Trump has pushed for massive cuts to critical programs through his proposed budget; his support for Trumpcare in Congress, which would gut Medicaid; and other policies. President Trump also cited costs as one of the main reasons behind his decision to ban transgender soldiers from serving in the military.

The money President Trump has spent on golf trips could otherwise pay for:

  • Medicaid coverage for 5,517 recipients. Trump’s budget and the House Republicans’ version of Trumpcare—the American Health Care Act (AHCA)—proposed cutting Medicaid by a combined $1.4 trillion over the next ten years, roughly cutting Medicaid funding in half.
  • Nearly six years of health care for transgender soldiers. On July 26, President Trump tweeted that the U.S. military would no longer “accept or allow” transgender soldiers to “serve in any capacity in the U.S. [m]ilitary,” citing health care cost burdens as a reason behind the ban. According to a RAND Corporation study from 2016, transition-related health care expenses would cost between $2.4 million and $8.4 million a year, equal to a 0.04 percent to 0.1 percent increase in active-component health care costs. Based on the midpoint of these costs, money used for Trump’s golf vacations could pay for nearly six years of health care for transgender soldiers.
  • Nearly 22.8 million meals through nutrition assistance programs. President Trump’s budget calls for a 29 percent cut to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the nation’s largest nutrition assistance initiative, which helps millions of families afford adequate and healthy food. The subsequent House budget also puts nutrition assistance on the chopping block.
  • 8,576 Pell Grants. President Trump’s budget proposed freezing the maximum Pell Grant amount for low-income college students as well as slashing the Pell Grant surplus, a fund meant to help cover future increases in college costs. These actions would harm low-income college students’ ability to afford college.
  • Nearly 11,500 Meals on Wheels recipients. President Trump’s budget proposed severely cutting funding for Meals on Wheels, which delivers meals to low income seniors. With the money spent on his golfing, nearly 11,500 low-income seniors could be fed for a full year.

While President Trump freely spends taxpayer money on golf trips, he cites costs as a reason to gut programs that help seniors, college students, low-income families, transgender soldiers, and more.

Methodology

The $31.65 million number was found by aggregating the costs for seven Mar-a-Lago trips, four three-day Bedminster trips, and one 17-day Bedminster trip. A trip to Mar-a-Lago costs taxpayers approximately $3.6 million, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) that analyzed a similar trip by President Obama. The author estimates that a three-day trip to Bedminster costs taxpayers approximately $839,858.76. This number includes: $358,490.90 for flight expenses, based on a Judicial Watch estimate of a President Obama flight to Westchester, New York; $43,142.86 in costs to Bedminster township, according to the town’s own estimate; $303,225 for three days of U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) per diems, based on a GAO study of expenses incurred during a similar trip by President Obama, adjusted for trip length; $135,000 for three days of Secret Service staffing, based on a GAO study of expenses incurred during a similar trip by President Obama, adjusted for trip length. A 17-day trip to Bedminster costs an estimated $3,086,242.11, which includes the same round-trip flight cost as the three-day trip, as well as Bedminster township costs, DOD and DHS per diems costs, and Secret Service staffing costs—all adjusted for a 17-day trip.

The cost comparisons were based on $5,736 per Medicaid recipient; $5.4 million per year for transition-related health care expenses for transgender soldiers—the midway estimate of the RAND study’s estimate range; $1.39 per meal through SNAP; $3,690 per Pell Grant; and $2,765 per Meals on Wheels recipient per year.

The estimate for President Trump’s total spending this term was calculated using the $31.65 million spent over his first 195 days.

Further information can be found at IsTrumpAtBedminster.org.

Molly Cain is a senior researcher at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

*CorrectionAugust 4, 2017: At the time this column was written, a FAA advisory indicated President Trump would be taking an 18-day trip to Bedminster, starting August 3. However, President Trump is now traveling to Bedminster on August 4, likely shortening his trip to the golf course to 17 days. The total cost for his Bedminster and Mar-a-Lago trips, the projected term cost of his golf trips for his first term, and the cost comparisons have been updated to reflect a 17-day trip.

 

 

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Authors

Molly Cain

Senior Researcher