Politics

Gaetz was top spender in House’s reimbursement program: WaPo analysis


Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) was the top spender last year under the House’s new reimbursement program, an analysis by The Washington Post found.

The reimbursement program, passed last year by a House panel, allows members to be reimbursed for expenses from living both in their home districts and in Washington. More than 300 members were reimbursed at least $5.2 million in 2023, the Post analysis found.

The taxpayer-funded program gives back money to lawmakers for food and lodging while they’re on official business in D.C., but critics of the program say since it has very few formal rules and does not require record-keeping, and that as a result there is room for abuse.

In the first 11 months of the program, the Post reported that 153 Democrats and 166 Republicans received reimbursements.

Gaetz was the program’s top spender. He was reimbursed for nearly $30,000 in lodging expenses and more than $10,000 for food in 2023, the Post found.

In two different months he billed more than $4,000 for lodging and more than $3,000 for five different months in the 11-month period.

The Hill has reached out to Gaetz’s office for comment. A Gaetz spokesperson told the Post that he was reimbursed for lodging expenses on days when the House was not in session, but he remained in D.C. to work.

“Rep. Gaetz has always complied with House rules regarding congressional reimbursements,” a spokesperson for Gaetz said in a statement to the Post. “In 2023, Rep. Gaetz dedicated significant time to his work on the Weaponization Subcommittee, requiring his presence to be in Washington, D.C., on days often when there were no votes, which incurred additional reimbursement expenses to conduct depositions.”

The Post noted that other members of the same subcommittee expensed “significantly less” than the Florida lawmaker.

Under the reimbursement program, lawmakers can’t be repaid for principal or interest on their mortgages. They can only expense taxes, insurance, maintenance, utilities and other ancillary costs, the outlet reported.

Of the members who own D.C. homes and participated in the program, Reps. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) and Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) requested “significantly higher reimbursements” than others, the Post reported.

Mace, who owns a $1.6 million Capitol Hill home, expensed more than $19,000 during a nine-month period ending on Sept. 20, 2023, an average of more than $2,000 per month, the analysis found.

The Hill has reached out to Mace’s office for comment, but her spokesperson told the Post that they “follow all the rules for reimbursements.”

Swalwell purchased a $1.2 million home in Eckington and was reimbursed nearly $19,000 over an 11-month period in 2023.

The Hill has reached out to Swalwell’s office for comment, but his spokesperson said in a statement that his expenses reflect the actual cost of working in Washington and there’s nothing “average” about having his wife and kids live in two expensive areas.


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