The White House will not turn to billionaire real estate mogul and political provocateur Donald Trump for help funding tours of the grounds that were halted by sequestration last week.
“The Donald Trump option is not an option. What we have to do is deal
with the sequester,” White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer told CNN
on Tuesday.
Earlier this week, Trump responded to outrage in conservative circles over the White House's closure to the public by claiming that he'd be willing to pay to keep the tours running.
Estimates had placed the cost of the tours at at least $74,000 a week, the amount the Secret Service pays to make sure the tour route is appropriately staffed by agents.
Pfeiffer said the Secret Service was faced with a tough alternative to cutting from its tour budget.
“The choice with the tours was we could ask the hardworking and brave
men and women of the Secret Service to take additional furloughs to
essentially pay for Congress’ inaction, or we could take the step that
no one wants to take to close –- to suspend White House tours,” he said.
But Pfeiffer also suggested that Trump and others were glossing over a
larger point that the White House has long tried to make: that the
consequences of sequestration are real.
“It doesn’t work that way. We can’t have private individuals paying
the Secret Service -- so, that’s not how it works,” Pfeiffer said. “This
is about a very tough budget cut that the Secret Service has to take
because of the sequester. It’s why we should have avoided the sequester
to begin with.”
Obama stated in an interview with ABC News broadcast Wednesday that he's talking with the Secret Service about possibly restoring some White House tours.
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