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President Griswold? The nation lampoons vacations

Like the hapless Clark Griswold in the National Lampoon vacation film opus, US presidents can't get a break when it comes to taking a vacation. It's always the wrong time to appear to be away from affairs of state.

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Steven Senne/AP
President Obama (r.) rides in a golf cart with former NBA basketball player Alonzo Mourning (l.) while golfing at Farm Neck Golf Club, in Oak Bluffs, Mass., on the island of Martha's Vineyard, on Aug. 23, 2014.

I vowed that this year I would not engage in the annual madness. In past years when I鈥檝e engaged in this debate, I felt a little like Clark Griswold persuading his family to go to Walleye World (more on that below). As I鈥檝e noted in previous columns, the 鈥渄iscussion鈥 is typically a partisan exercise in which both sides defend the necessity of their guy taking a vacation and/or point out that the other team鈥檚 guy took many more. It is a silly debate, beginning with the effort to numerically document 鈥渧acation days." The New York Times is the latest media outlet to fall prey . Let鈥檚 be clear 鈥 the purported measures that papers like the Times report regarding how many vacation days each president took are really only measuring the presidents鈥 time away from the White House 鈥 a number that, as far as I can tell, says more about whether a president owns a second home that is easy to secure than it does about his propensity to go on vacation. By the logic underlying media measures of vacation time, Kennedy was taking down time when he was browbeaten by Nikita Khruschev at Vienna in 1961. (Yes, I鈥檓 guilty of repeating those numbers 鈥 see below.) In truth, presidents are almost never on vacation. Sure, golfing with Alonzo Mourning probably represents a form of pure recreation, but , you can conduct a lot of business even on the golf course.

So, if I vowed not to engage in this debate, why am I writing this post? Because I鈥檓 on vacation and needed an easy writing day. However, rather than repeat myself, I鈥檝e decided simply to repost my last discussion of this issue 鈥 August 19, 2011, under the title 鈥淰acation advice to the president: Avoid the nude beach鈥:

If it鈥檚 August, I know three things will happen:

1. France will essentially shut down;

2. I鈥檒l be late writing my American Political Science Association paper;

3. The president will be criticized for taking a vacation.

And right on cue, the lead story in most media outlets today centered on the critical reaction to the first family鈥檚 departure for a 10-day stay at Martha鈥檚 Vineyard. It is, of course, now customary for the political opposition to rail against the president鈥檚 willingness to take time off while the country鈥檚 future is at stake. And at taxpayer鈥檚 expense, no less! (Never mind that the lodging is paid for privately 鈥 what about all those security and transportation costs!) President Bush鈥檚 travels to his Crawford, Texas, ranch elicited the same indignant reaction, as did Bill Clinton鈥檚 vacations (which often included trips to Martha鈥檚 Vineyard as well), George H. W. Bush鈥檚 frequent stays at the family compound in Kennebunkport (where he terrorized the locals in his speedboat) and Ronald Reagan鈥檚 regular trips west to his California ranch to clear brush and ride horses with Nancy.

I don鈥檛 know when taking a vacation started becoming bad politics, although I think it began with Reagan鈥檚 trips to California. Of course August is always a slow news month, which makes it easier to justify running the 鈥淪hould the president be on vacation at a time like this?鈥 story. Although this is the Obamas鈥 third trip to Martha鈥檚 Vineyard, the attacks on him seem more intense this time. I think this is for at least two reasons. First, the stock market鈥檚 recent roller-coaster ride has entered another downward plunge, amid continuing reports of weak job growth. Second, we are deep into the invisible primary season, and his vacation timing and locale provides ample fodder for Republican candidates out on the campaign hustings to scold the president for his seeming obliviousness to the plight of the common man. For example, consider Mitt Romney鈥檚 remarks from two days ago: 鈥渋f you鈥檙e the president of the United States, and the nation is in crisis, and we鈥檙e in a jobs crisis right now, then you shouldn鈥檛 be out vacationing.鈥

Of course, the choice of locale doesn鈥檛 help. Much of the criticism centers on the message the president seems to be sending by staying in opulent vacations digs hobnobbing with the glitterati at a time when almost 1 in 10 Americans lack jobs. As one columnist put it, 鈥淲hich begs the question 鈥 why did the president go ahead with his vacation despite the worst approval ratings of his presidency, plunging stock markets, falling consumer confidence, and overwhelming public disillusion with his handling of the economy? I think the answer lies in Obama鈥檚 professorial-style arrogance, and a condescending approach towards ordinary Americans.鈥

Forgive me if I don鈥檛 share the outrage. The reality is that presidential vacations aren鈥檛 like the ones you and I take (if I ever took one)! Sure, there鈥檚 some recreational downtime. But it鈥檚 mostly much of the same daily grind: the intelligence briefing, the meeting with staff, the constant stream of memoranda and official documents. In terms of intensity, I think it鈥檚 a lot closer to vacationing with Clark Griswold and his family: Things are always going wrong, and the stress level is very high.

Moreover, Obama鈥檚 鈥渧acationing鈥 no more frequently than did his immediate predecessors. Indeed, at this point, Obama鈥檚 vacation time (I don鈥檛 count time spent at Camp David) seems about average for presidents. By one count, in their first year as president, Reagan (42 vacation days) and both Bushes spent more time on vacation than did Obama, while Clinton and Carter spent less. (I鈥檝e never been to Plains, Ga, but perhaps the locale partly explains Carter鈥檚 aversion to vacationing? Or maybe Democrats just work harder.)

In any case, Obama has a ways to go to match his immediate predecessor鈥檚 vacation time. Across his eight years as president Bush took 77 vacation trips to his Texas ranch, spending 69 days there during his first year alone. By comparison, Obama only vacationed 26 days during year one of his presidency. And this doesn鈥檛 count the more than 450 days Bush spent at Camp David. Similarly, Clinton spent 171 days 鈥渙n vacation鈥 during his eight years. Keep in mind as well that Obama has two kids, and something tells me they have some say in the vacation decision.

But there鈥檚 a more important reason why I鈥檓 not sympathetic to the 鈥渘o time for vacation鈥 crowd. History suggests that these trips help presidents cope with the burden of being president. And if they cope better, the nation benefits as well. Have you seen before and after pictures of the president? He鈥檚 clearly aged at a rapid clip since taking office. It鈥檚 worth remembering that at one time presidential vacations were viewed in a more positive light. Franklin D. Roosevelt made forty-one trips to his cabin in Warm Springs, Georgia during his presidency, often spending a week or more in a working vacation. He had purchased the property there shortly before reentering politics, in large part because he believed the warm springs to be therapeutic. Aides noted that Roosevelt invariably came back from these working vacations reinvigorated. (We now know, of course, that he spent his last visit to Warm Springs secretly rendezvousing with his former mistress, Lucy Mercer Rutherfurd, who had to be quickly secreted away when the FDR suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage and died). Of course, media criticism of FDR may have been muted because the visits to Warm Springs could be linked to the foundation he established there to treat polio victims.

But Harry Truman made 11 separate trips to the 鈥淟ittle White House鈥 in Key West Florida, often staying three weeks or more at a time.... During the day he would sit by the beach, while aides played volleyball, in between work sessions.... Most evenings Truman played small stakes poker (he was reputed to be a middling player) in a small room with close friends. (Truman sat in the corner with his back to the wall. The table is still there, complete with playing cards, if you want to visit.) Today, of course, the thought of the president gambling with his cronies at 鈥渟easide resort," while the stock market dropped 500 points, would elicit howls of outrage from the chattering class. But somehow the republic survived Truman鈥檚 trips. As I suspect it will survive the next 10 days.

Unless the president has (pardon his French!).

Matthew Dickinson publishes his Presidential Power blog at .

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