CBS News
The president is coming to town for vacation. Get ready.
Santa Barbara, California – Even presidents need to take a vacation. But what is a vacation for the commander-in-chief is a lot of work for the people in places where the president chooses to relax.
Hotels book up fast with the entourage that follows a president — Secret Service, aides and the press. Restaurant reservations become impossible. Traffic created by a presidential motorcade leads to local streets shut down.
Almost every president has been tied to their favorite getaway in the popular imagination: President Biden and Rehoboth Beach; former President Donald Trump and Mar-a-Lago; former President Barack Obama and Martha’s Vineyard; former President George W. Bush and Crawford, Texas; and former President Bill Clinton and the Hamptons.
This week, Mr. Biden is vacationing in Santa Ynez, California — a small Southern California town located in the heart of Santa Barbara wine country. But as the world monitors tensions in the Middle East and the Democratic National Convention goes on in Chicago, the president can never be truly unplugged.
“There’s no such thing as a presidential vacation,” says Russell Riley, co-chair of the Miller Center’s Presidential Oral History Program and author of “Inside the Clinton White House: An Oral History.” “It is certainly true that they go away and that there’s a different dynamic, and that the change of pace can be restful. But they’re still on duty.”
And if the president is on duty, so is the president’s team. Everywhere the president goes, a temporary Situation Room has to be set up and ready to go if needed.
A town more used to the president’s presence is Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, where the Bidens own a vacation home and often visit during the summer.
Mr. Biden has been seen to frequent a brunch restaurant there called Egg. Hope Snider, a manager at Egg, said she was nervous at first to wait on the first family, but that they and the Secret Service were nothing but friendly and easygoing.
“We appreciate that out of all the restaurants they come to ours,” says Snider. “It creates a buzz around town. They hear the president was in last weekend. It definitely brings a few people in.”
Ahead of such a seemingly casual breakfast, Secret Service agents scout the area days in advance, checking every entrance, exit and potential security threat.
“Especially right now, with an assassination attempt already in the forefront of every Secret Service agent’s mind, I am very confident that though it’s a lame duck president, they’re still very concerned about that security perimeter,” says Johanna Maska, former White House director of press advance for President Obama. “Because the president is still the person who’s making every decision when it comes to our biggest global issues, and has the nuke codes with him everywhere he goes.”
Maska said that Obama, like other presidents on vacation, would limit his movements, particularly on a holiday if it would cause too much disruption for the town. But regardless, every potential stop, be it a beach or coffee shop, had to be checked in advance by the Secret Service.
One of the worst ways a presidential visit can affect a town is hours-long traffic jams.
When the Clintons took a trip to the Hamptons, on Long Island, in 1998, locals feared it would take 10 to 12 hours to get in and out, leading residents to stock up on groceries the Thursday before the president’s arrival, according to archives of the local paper, the Sag Harbor Express. But the fear of traffic was so great that many people simply did not go out that weekend, resulting in quieter roads than on a typical Hamptons summer day.
The optics of a vacation location can also be a consideration for White House teams.
Clinton reportedly solicited polling in 1997 to find out what “married people with kids” approved of for vacation activities in order to improve his image. According to political adviser Dick Morris, the results suggested fishing and hiking in a mountain location, so the Clinton family traveled to Wyoming for an all-American vacation out West instead of a fashionable East Coast hotspot.
“There was a sense that going to Martha’s Vineyard or the Hamptons was communicating a lesson to the American people that this wasn’t quite a small ‘d’ democratic vacation. So they went out there, but Clinton had allergies, and I don’t think that trip went very well,” says Riley.
So as Mr. Biden vacations in wine country, another town will be hard at work accommodating the traveling White House that follows the leader of the United States.
CBS News
What’s in the continuing resolution to avert a government shutdown? See key details from the spending bill.
Washington — Congressional leaders unveiled a stopgap measure late Thursday to keep the government funded for three months, pushing a larger funding fight into the new year.
But the 1,500 page measure, known as a continuing resolution, would do more than keep the government funded at current levels to prevent a government shutdown. The bill is laden with dozens of add-ons that make it resemble the massive end-of-year spending packages that GOP leaders have vowed to avoid.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said ahead of the measure’s release on Tuesday that it was originally intended to be “a very simple, very clean” stopgap funding measure to get the party into the new year. But the Louisiana Republican said a “couple of intervening things” occurred, and he is now left to deal with growing discontent among members of his own party.
Here are some of the bill’s major add-ons:
Disaster funding
The legislation includes $110.4 billion in disaster aid: $29 billion for FEMA’s disaster relief fund; $8 billion for federal highways and roads; $12 billion for the Community Development Block grants and disaster relief; and $3.25 billion for Tribal Assistance grants. It also replenishes the Small Business Administration’s disaster loan program with $2.2 billion. The program was exhausted in the aftermath of Hurricanes Milton and Helene earlier this year.
The measure also includes $21 billion in disaster relief for farmers and $10 billion in economic assistance for farmers, along with a one-year extension of the farm bill.
RFK stadium transfer
The legislation clears the way for a long-sought priority in Washington, D.C.: transferring administrative jurisdiction over the RFK Memorial Stadium Campus to the district, which will allow the city to negotiate the return of the Washington Commanders football team.
The Commanders currently play in Landover, Maryland, and D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser has vowed to bring the team back to the District.
Baltimore bridge rebuilding
The measure also includes a commitment from the federal government to pay the entire cost of rebuilding Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge, which collapsed in March.
Sens. Chris Van Hollen and Ben Cardin of Maryland said in a joint statement Tuesday that the provision “will allow the bridge to be built as quickly as possible.” And they noted that federal taxpayers will be reimbursed by insurance payments and through the results of litigation against the company that operated the cargo ship that crashed into the bridge.
Pay raise for members of Congress
After more than a decade of blocking pay raises in Congress amid concern over the issue becoming a political liability, the continuing resolution includes a provision that allows an automatic cost of living increase to go into effect for lawmakers.
Since 2009, lawmakers have earned $174,000 annually, with higher salaries for some members of leadership.
Health care policy extenders and reforms
Within the legislation is a health care package that spans hundreds of pages. It takes on a number of priorities for lawmakers, from extending telehealth flexibility under Medicare to a five-year reauthorization of legislation aimed at combatting the opioid crisis and a measure to prevent pandemics. The legislation also requires pharmacy benefit managers to provide detailed data on drug spending and pass on the full amount of rebates to lower drug costs for American consumers.
Transparency in ticket and hotel prices
The funding measure also includes provisions aimed at making hotel and live-event ticket prices more transparent by prohibiting deceptive advertising. The legislation requires that ticket sellers and hotels must disclose the full price, while the ticket sellers must guarantee refunds in the event of cancellation or postponement.
Addressing drone threats
Among the legislation is a measure to counter threats from drones following a slew of mysterious drone sightings on the East Coast that have prompted concern. The legislation extends a portion of the Homeland Security Act that authorizes officials to track unmanned aircrafts and disrupt their control.
contributed to this report.
CBS News
Ancient inscription could rewrite history of Christianity north of Italy, archaeologists say
Archaeologists have discovered an inscribed silver amulet that one theologian now says may rewrite the history of Christianity north of the Alps mountain range.
The inscribed amulet was found buried in a grave in Frankfurt, Germany in 2018, according to a news release from the city. The amulet is just over an inch in size, the city said, with an inscribed thin silver foil rolled up inside. It took years to determine what the inscription said: It had to be deciphered by a computer scan because the foil was too fragile to unroll. The so-called “Frankfurt Silver Inscription” was presented to the public earlier in December.
The inscription was determined to be a statement of faith in Jesus Christ, written in Latin. The statement shows that the wearer “was clearly a devout Christian, which is absolutely unusual for this time,” the city said.
Researchers dated the grave where the amulet was found to between 230 and 270 AD. This is the earliest evidence of Christianity north of the Alps, the city said: All other finds are several decades younger, with “reliable evidence” of the religion in the region dating back to the 4th century.
The inscription mentions no religion besides Christianity, which researchers said is unusual. Up until the 5th century, these kind of amulets “always contain a mixture of different faiths,” such as Judaism or paganism. Instead, it is entirely based on Christianity. At one point the invocation “Holy, holy, holy!” is present. Researchers previously had dated that invocation no earlier than the 4th century. The amulet also included quotations from the Bible used by Christians at that time.
“The ‘Frankfurt Inscription’ is a scientific sensation,” city mayor Mike Josef said in a translated statement. “It will force us to turn back the history of Christianity in Frankfurt and far beyond by around 50 to 100 years. The first Christian find north of the Alps comes from our city: we can be proud of that, especially now, so close to Christmas. Those involved have done a great job.”
Researchers said that this find will lead to a reevaluation of the burial ground where the amulet was uncovered. It will also lead to a revision of ideas about Christianity north of the Alps.
German church historian Ulrich Volp told the Evangelical Press Service that the amulet can be used to help understand how Christianity spread through the Roman Empire in the 3rd century, even amid persecution.
“The significance of the discovery can hardly be overestimated,” Volp said.
The news comes about six months after a experts in Germany said a newly deciphered manuscript dating back 1,600 years was determined to be the oldest record of Jesus Christ’s childhood.
CBS News
Accelerating semiconductor innovation with AI and data insights
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.