04-29-2013, 07:51 AM
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Confirmed User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: San Francisco, CA
Posts: 1,966
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Obama spent more time golfing than saving the economy?
Now before you bitter clingers start criticizing the guy for devoting so little of his time to the most important issue facing the country today, I'll remind you that he needs to decompress after all his stressful activities.
Like having dinner with Beyonce and Jay-Z...
(from http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Governm...-As-On-Economy)
Quote:
According to a new report by the nonpartisan Government Accountability Institute (GAI), President Barack Obama has spent over twice as many hours on vacation and golf (976 hours) as he has in economic meetings of any kind (474.4 hours).
The report, ?Presidential Calendar: A Time-Based Analysis,? used the official White House calendar, Politico?s comprehensive presidential calendar, and media reports through March 31, 2013 to calculate its results.
GAI?s findings may actually understate Obama?s recreational hours. Last year, Obama told CBS News that playing golf is ?the only time that for six hours, I'm outside." But instead of six hours, GAI counted a round of golf as taking just four hours. Likewise, for presidential vacation hours, researchers attributed just six hours of any day of vacation to leisure activity.
?Like most people, presidents still do work while on vacation,? said GAI President Peter Schweizer. ?So we really went out of our way to fairly and accurately reflect how the president spends his time.?
The study applied a similarly generous assessment to Obama?s time spent in economic meetings by counting anything on the official White House calendar even remotely related to the economy as an economic meeting. For example, ?Obama meets with Cabinet secretaries? and ?Obama has lunch with four CEOs? counted as economic meetings.
GAI?s new report dovetails with its presidential calendar analysis last July that found Obama devotes little time to economic meetings. Asked whether the latest numbers paint a negative portrait of presidential economic leadership, Schweizer says that is for others to decide.
?People understand that presidents have the most stressful job in the world and need a break from time to time,? said Schweizer. ?There will be some who will be encouraged by the numbers and some who will wish the president spent more time in economic meetings. As a government watchdog group, we just tabulate the numbers and let others decide how to interpret them.?
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