The House Oversight Committee has launched an
investigation into federal agency travel, following a series of reports
of Trump cabinet secretaries using government and private aircraft for
official and personal travel.
Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-South Carolina, and
Elijah Cummings, D-Maryland, have asked the White House and 24 federal
agencies for an accounting of all senior administration official travel
since the inauguration - including passenger names, destinations,
explanations and cost of all government-owned and private aircraft
travel.
The committee has asked the White House and agencies to produce the requested information by Tuesday, October 10th.
Several Trump administration officials have come under fire for air travel in recent weeks.
Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin has come
under fire for using a government plane for an August flight to
Washington from New York City, after a meeting with the president in
Trump Tower, as well as a request to use a government jet to fly to
Europe for his honeymoon that was eventually withdrawn.
Mnuchin has defended his use of government
aircraft, which also includes a trip to Fort Knox in Kentucky during the
solar eclipse.
Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price
has also been criticized for his use of private jets to travel for
government business. The trips, first reported by Politico last week,
included round trip flights to Philadelphia from Washington - a trip
that cost thousands of dollars and could have also been made by train or
commercial flight.
With the requests, the panel, which has a
broad mandate of oversight over the entire federal government and has
subpoena power, has opened the most expansive investigation into Trump
administration official travel to date. Several inspectors general are
investigating the travel of individual Cabinet officials, including
Price and Mnuchin.
The investigation is also one of the first
bipartisan efforts from the committee since Gowdy became chairman in
June, following the resignation of former Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah,
from Congress.
Earlier this week, Gowdy and Cummings wrote to
the White House and other federal agencies requesting details of
administration officials' use of private email and messaging systems.
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