Carson Cites ‘Safety,’ Blames Wife for Purchase of $31,000 Dining Set

Ben Carson, the secretary of Housing and Urban Development, pinned the blame for his department’s purchase of a $31,000 dining room set for his office on his wife and staff. In testimony before the House Appropriations Committee Tuesday, Carson also said the reason he authorized the purchase of new furniture for his office was “safety.”

“People were stuck by nails, and a chair had collapsed with someone sitting in it,” the former neurosurgeon and 2016 Republican presidential candidate told lawmakers. Carson also suggested his wife, Candy, was responsible for making the extravagant expense and said he canceled when he discovered it.

“You know I’m not really big into decorating. If it were up to me, my office would probably look like a hospital waiting room. At any rate, I invited my wife in to come help me,” he said, adding that senior staff presented him with catalogs to choose from. “The prices were beyond what I wanted to pay and I made it clear that just didn’t seem right to me,” Carson said. “I left it with my wife, I said ‘help choose something.'”

Carson was appearing before the committee because the purchase exceeded the $5,000 limit beyond which the HUD secretary would need to get congressional approval. His comments continued what the WEEKLY STANDARD editors write this morning is “bizarre obfuscation and attempted justification” by Trump administration officials of the various over-the-top spending scandals emerging in recent months.

Pruitt suggested he had to fly first class because the “toxic environment politically” and lack of “civility” meant flying coach presented security risks. Seriously. Carson initially denied any knowledge of the expensive furniture, telling CNN in a statement he was as “surprised as anyone to find out that a $31,000 dining set had been ordered.” But an email from a department staffer to two top Carson aides subsequently released via the Freedom of Information Act, refers to “printouts of the furniture the Secretary and Mrs. Carson picked out.” Price, who eventually apologized, initially claimed his costly private flights were necessary given the demands on his time. Our reporting suggests that Donald Trump has in mind several of these men as he considers remaking his Cabinet. Trump is frustrated, our sources tell us, by these microcontroversies and what they say about his administration. He’s thinking seriously about making examples of those who’ve been poor stewards of taxpayer money. Good for him. For whatever it’s worth, our advice to the president: Don’t make a tweet announcement during one of your exorbitantly expensive trips to Mar-a-Lago. As you said in your inaugural address: “For too long, a small group in our nation’s capital has reaped the rewards of government while the people have borne the cost.”

Related Content