Feb 06, 2017 · Obama donated $15,000 to the fund in its first year and $1,000 the next year. He also pitched in $17,000 to help pay for the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, which opened in 2011. Over the years,...
Feb 10, 2017 · in addition, obama donated money in the wake of tragedies, including the boston bombing in 2013 ($2,000 to a fund that helped families affected by the bombing), the sandy hook shooting in 2012...
Apr 15, 2016 · April 15, 2016 6:05 PM EDT P resident Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama donated more than $64,000 to charity in 2015, about 15% of their income, according to a copy of the couple’s tax...
On top of the $1.1 million, Obama donated all of the $1.4 million he received after winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009. Trump is not the first president to give up his salary, either. Both...
According to an analysis of Obama's tax returns from 2009 through 2015, he donated over $1 million of his own money to charities while he served as President of the United States. How exactly was Barack Obama able to donate that much money while he was serving as President?
Obama donated his money to a variety of different causes, but the cause he overwhelmingly gave the most support to centered on children; he gave away over half of his donations to causes that support children.
He also gave $20,500 to groups fighting hunger in Illinois and $11,500 to a Chicago's Midtown Educational Foundation. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) The largest beneficiary of Obama's donations was the Fisher House Foundation, which supports families of veterans.
It’s true that the current president donates his salary, but Obama donated about $2.5 million to charities while in office. Michelle Obama’s staff was about 25, but Melania Trump’s is about 11.
Trump and Obama on salary. U.S. presidents make $400,000 a year. It’s true that Trump donates his salary. Though presidents are required to be compensated for their work, Trump takes just $1 each year from his paychecks. He has donated a quarter of his annual salary to a different government agency each fiscal quarter.
Michelle Obama’s staff was bigger than Melania Trump’s, but numbers are off. According to the 2020 annual report to Congress on White House office personnel, there are eight roles directly tied to the first lady via title. But there are other staffers who work for the first lady and do not have that phrase in their title.
Obama’s 2013 budget proposes to spend $47 trillion over the next 10 years, the most in world history by far, increasing federal spending by $1.5 trillion above the current CBO baseline. Ryan’s budget proposes to cut that by $6.8 trillion.
Obama worked with Pelosi’s Democratic Congress to pass an additional, $410 billion, supplemental spending bill for fiscal year 2009, which was too much even for big spending President Bush, who had specifically rejected it in 2008.
That budget shows federal spending increasing from $2.983 trillion in 2008 to an all time record $3.796 trillion in 2012, an increase of 27.3%. Moreover, before Obama there had never been a deficit anywhere near $1 trillion. The highest previously was $458 billion, or less than half a trillion, in 2008.
By 2022, Ryan’s budget would be spending nearly a trillion dollars less per year than President Obama’s budget. Ryan proposes tax reform to consolidate the current 6 individual income tax rates, ranging up to 35%, to just two rates of 10% and 25%.
That debt continues on a sharp decline from there, as the long term effects of Ryan’s structural entitlement reforms phase in. Debt held by the public is reduced to 53% of GDP by 2030, 38% by 2040, and 10% by 2050. That means the national debt is all but paid off by 2050, and would be soon thereafter.
As Hans Bader reported on May 26 for the Washington Examiner, the budget approved and implemented by Pelosi, Obama and the rest of the Congressional Democrat majorities provided for a 17.9 percent increase in spending for fiscal 2009!
Even with the Reagan defense buildup, which, remember, won the Cold War without firing a shot, total federal spending as a percent of GDP declined from a high of 23.5% of GDP in 1983 to 21.3% in 1988 and 21.2% in 1989.
In 2008, Robert Roche , a U.S. businessman based in Shanghai with extensive commercial ties to the Chinese government, bought the website Obama.com. Roche, a big-time bundler for Obama, was given a place of honor at the head table with Obama and first lady Michelle Obama at a 2011 state dinner for Chinese President Hu Jintao.
In 1996, Chinese agent Johnny Chung gave almost $100,000 to American politicians, much of it from powerful members of China's military. Chung reportedly gave $300,000 to President Clinton's campaign.
The Government Accountability Institute, which is headed by Stanford University Professor Peter Schweizer, used sophisticated Internet investigative tools — including something called "spidering" software — to determine how the web is being used to raise political funds. What it found should be of concern, since it suggests ...
Corruption: A new study suggests that President Obama's campaign systematically pursued foreign contributions to fuel his run for the presidency, a violation of law.
Under federal election law, contributions from foreign sources are prohibited. But the law also doesn't require a campaign to disclose the source of contributions less than $200, and it doesn't even have to keep records for those giving less than $50.
In short, the National Institutes of Health awarded the New York-based environmental health nonprofit EcoHealth Alliance a $3.7 million grant to fund research into how bat coronavirus could emerge and spread to human populations. A portion of that money — about $600,000 — went to the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
This photograph was taken in December 2014 at the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, and shows Obama and Fauci with U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Sylvia Burwell and Chief of the Biodefense Research Section Nancy Sullivan.
In July 2020, a photograph supposedly showing then-U.S. President Barack Obama, Dr. Anthony Fauci, and Melinda Gates at a laboratory in Wuhan, China, in 2015 started to circulate on social media: This is a genuine photograph of Obama and Fauci — but it was not taken in Wuhan, China, in 2015.
Francis Collins went on to write in the blog: Today, we had the great honor of welcoming President Barack Obama to the campus of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, MD—to see first-hand the progress that biomedical research is making against Ebola virus disease.
Full Story. As a candidate during the 2016 campaign, President Donald Trump criticized the international agreement to curb Iran’s nuclear weapons’ program — formally called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action — that had been adopted the year before. He suggested that the U.S. had returned $150 billion to Iran as part of the deal.
Trump pulled out in May 2018. Editor’s note: FactCheck.org is one of several organizations working with Facebook to debunk misinformation shared on the social media network.
First of all , former President Barack Obama didn’t give “ 150 billion in cash” to Iran. The nuclear agreement included China, France, Germany, Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union, so Obama didn’t carry out any part of it on his own. The deal did lift some sanctions, which lifted a freeze on Iran’s assets ...
The part that the meme gets right, though, is that the deal didn’t get congressional approval. The Obama administration had maintained that the agreement wasn’t a treaty, which would have required approval by the Senate.
Committees working on behalf of President Barack Obama's 2012 re-election campaign unknowingly received approximately $1.87 million in foreign contributions as a result of an alleged criminal conspiracy to funnel illegal donations to the campaign and conceal their true source.
The indictment also alleges that by funneling campaign contributions through straw donors, Michel caused a presidential joint fundraising committee to submit false reports to the Federal Election Commission (FEC), including a false amended report in June 2013.
U.S. law prohibits foreign nationals from contributing to federal, state, or local election campaigns. It also prohibits donors from making campaign contributions in anyone else’s name. The defendants stand accused of conspiring to do both, as well as making false statements to the Federal Election Commission (FEC).