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WASHINGTON -- Which of the three living former presidents costs taxpayers the most money? The most recent to become a former president, Bill Clinton, according to the Congressional Research Service's latest figures.
The globe-trotting former president with the New York office and a worldwide charitable enterprise is seeking $1.16 million in taxpayer money for fiscal 2008. That is more than double the amount requested by fellow Democrat Jimmy Carter and substantially more than that by Republican George H.W. Bush.
Clinton's office makes no apologies, saying taxpayers are getting a bargain.
Funding requests for former presidents Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, fiscal 2008:
Carter/ Bush/ Clinton
Pension:$191,000/ $191,000/ $201,000
Staff:98,000 /160,000 /161,000
Travel: 2,000 /56,000 /50,000
Rent:102,000 / 175,000 / 516,000
Telephone:10,000/ 17,000/ 79,000
Postage:15,00013,00015,000
Other services:83,00076,00065,000
Printing:5,00014,00014,000
Supplies:5,00015,00026,000
Equipment:7,00069,00035,000
Total:$518,000/ $786,000 / $1.16 million
CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE, GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION ALLOWANCES FOR FORMER PRESIDENTS, FISCAL 2008 REQUEST
"Given his tireless work on behalf of the U.S. government abroad with the tsunami and state funerals, including leading the U.S. delegation to Boris Yeltsin's recent funeral, his work at home with Hurricane Katrina recovery, and his vigorous charitable foundation work to fight AIDS, climate change and childhood obesity, I'd say the American people are getting more than their money's worth from President Clinton," spokesman Jay Carson said.
Clinton's office blames much of the cost on New York City's pricey rents, noting that his Harlem neighborhood office costs half a million dollars a year, far more than Bush's Houston office ($175,000) and Carter's Atlanta digs ($102,000). "Thanks in no small part to the Clinton economic boom of the '90s, rent in Manhattan isn't cheap in any neighborhood," Carson said.
Clinton, who has earned nearly $40 million in speaking fees since leaving office, also wants a lot more for telephone expenses than the other former presidents.
And though all three former presidents are entitled to pensions of $191,000 next year, Clinton has requested $10,000 more for health insurance.
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