Influential outsiders have played a key role in Scott Pruitt's foreign travel
Source: Washington Post
Influential outsiders have played a key role in Scott Pruitts foreign travel
By Juliet Eilperin and Brady Dennis May 3 at 10:08 PM
Scott Pruitts itinerary for a February trip to Israel was remarkable by any standard for an Environmental Protection Agency administrator: A stop at a controversial Jewish settlement in the West Bank. An appearance at Tel Aviv University. A hard-to-get audience with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
One force behind Pruitts eclectic agenda: casino magnate and Republican megadonor Sheldon Adelson, a major supporter of Israel who arranged parts of Pruitts visit.
The Israel trip was canceled days before Pruitts planned departure, after The Washington Post revealed his penchant for first-class travel on the taxpayers dime. But federal documents obtained by The Post and interviews with individuals familiar with the trip reveal that it fit a pattern by Pruitt of planning foreign travel with significant help from outside interests, including lobbyists, Republican donors and conservative activists.
After taking office last year, Pruitt drew up a list of at least a dozen countries he hoped to visit and urged aides to help him find official reasons to travel, according to four people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal agency deliberations. Pruitt then enlisted well-connected friends and political allies to help make the trips happen.
Longtime Pruitt friend Richard Smotkin, for example, helped arrange Pruitts four-day visit to Morocco in December. Smotkin, who has not returned calls seeking comment, later signed a $40,000-a-month lobbying contract with the Moroccan government.
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