General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Can you spell tone deaf? H-I-L-L-A-R-Y. Hillary Clinton: We Were 'Dead Broke' Upon Leaving WH [View all]pnwmom
(110,174 posts)as Governor and as President. Presidents and Governors have to reimburse the government for their personal living costs other than housing.
A salary worth $35K twenty years ago would be worth about $59K today, considering inflation. Any graduate of Harvard Law School would have been able to make far more money than that in the corporate world, and he was a top graduate.
From an article on "The Poorest Presidents in History"
http://www.twcc.com/articles/2014/03/11/t/the-poorest-presidents-in-u-s-history
Bill Clinton (1992-2000): Hope, Ark.
William Jefferson Clinton was born to a single mother in the poor, dirt-farm town of Hope, Arkansas. His father, a traveling salesman, died in an auto accident a few months before he was born. After several years in the care of his grandparents, Clinton moved with his mother and new husband to Hot Springs. Clinton says his stepfather, a gambler and a drunk, regularly abused him, his mother and his half-brother. Since leaving the presidency, Clinton has earned millions as an author and public speaker.
http://mentalfloss.com/article/20681/who-pays-obama-familys-food
President Obama may have his own executive chef now, but when his family and personal guests eat what's coming out of the kitchen, he'll have to foot the bill himself. Luckily for him, though, the government picks up the tab if he's having a state function at the White House, which could get pricey since the White House's website touts that its five chefs can crank out dinner for 140 or hors d'oeuvres for over a thousand people.
Does someone really keep track? Apparently, the White House functions like a luxury hotel in this regard. At the end of each month, the president receives a bill for his food and incidental expenses. Nancy Reagan was famously taken aback by this practice when an usher presented her first bill in 1981, saying, "Nobody ever told us the president and his wife are charged for every meal, as well as incidentals like dry cleaning, toothpaste, and other toiletries." (Once they got used to the bills, though, the Reagans loved the White House; President Reagan often joked that all the amenities made it like living in an eight-star hotel.)
The president and his family get to pick what snacks they want, what brand of toothpaste they use, and what menu they want the chef to prepare for them, but it can still get a bit pricier than new commanders in chief expect. In a fascinating article in this month's National Geographic, former White House chief usher Gary Walters said that he couldn't remember any first families not complaining about the high prices of the food. Walters added that Rosalynn Carter was particularly miffed by the high-priced fare, which must have been a bit more expensive than what she'd been getting in Georgia.