no this isn't FOX reporting this .. it's CNN.
Biden's early-presidency getaways so far outpace Trump's
https://www.cnn.com/2021/10/23/polit...way/index.html
 (CNN)President  Joe Biden decamped to Wilmington on Friday, escaping the White House  he's likened to a "gilded cage" for a weekend at his Delaware home. It's  yet another weekend away from Washington as the President has spent a  noteworthy portion of his first year in office at one of his two  Delaware homes 
or at Camp David, working remotely.
 A CNN analysis of Biden's public schedule indicates the President has spent 
a significant amount of time away from the White House,  particularly on weekends, since his January inauguration. Including  this weekend's trip to Delaware, Biden has taken 35 personal trips and  spent all or part of 108 of his first 276 days in office at one of his  Delaware homes or at 
Camp David in Maryland. That includes partial days, like Friday -- when he spent the day at the White House and departed in the evening.
 Sixty-nine  of those 108 days away from Washington were spent at his home in  Wilmington, spread over 23 visits; seven days at his Rehoboth Beach,  Delaware, beach house over two visits; and 32 days at Camp David over 10  visits.
 Typically,  his chopper commute from the White House to his Wilmington home takes  less than an hour, and a White House official noted that many of the  partial days included Biden departing the White House at the conclusion  of a normal workday on a Friday or returning to Washington before the  start of a workday on a Monday. 
 That  puts Biden ahead of the pace set by former President Donald Trump, who  had spent less time at his Florida and New Jersey getaways at the same  point in his presidency than Biden has spent in Delaware.
 
Comparing Biden and his predecessors
 While  most presidents have prioritized taking time away from 1600  Pennsylvania Avenue, this is the most time a president has spent away  from the White House on personal travel at this point in the presidency  in recent history.
 By  comparison, Trump had spent all or part of 61 days at either his  Mar-a-Lago or Bedminster properties in Florida and New Jersey,  respectively, during the same period of time, plus all or part of nine  days over four visits to Camp David. Trump also visited other  Trump-branded properties, including his Virginia golf club and Trump  Tower in New York, nearly 100 times at this point in his time in office. 
 At  the same point in his presidency, then-President Barack Obama, who had  school-age children during his term, had taken three vacation trips  spanning all or part of 15 days, according to presidential record-keeper  and CBS News veteran Mark Knoller, including a visit to his home of  Chicago, a trip to Yellowstone National Park in Montana with his family  and a weeklong escape to Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. Obama had  spent all or part of 25 days at Camp David over ten visits at this  point, Knoller said.
 And  then-President George W. Bush, per Knoller's records, had taken seven  trips to Crawford, Texas, spending 27 full or partial days at his  family's Prairie Chapel Ranch in the first months of his presidency, and  19 visits to Camp David over 57 full or partial days, for a total of 84  full or partial days in Texas or at Camp David.
 Other presidents have also 
made it a point to escape the confines of the White House:  George H. W. Bush spent time in Kennebunkport, Maine, during his  presidency; Lyndon Johnson also traveled to his Texas ranch; Franklin  Roosevelt frequented Warm Springs, Georgia; Ronald Reagan visited his  "Western White House" in Goleta, California; Richard Nixon went to La  Casa Pacifica in California; John F. Kennedy got away to Hyannis Port,  Massachusetts; and Harry Truman spent a portion of his presidency in Key  West, Florida, while the White House was under renovation. 
 
A 'gilded cage'
 The  Covid-19 pandemic has fundamentally changed the work habits of  white-collar workers, with many Americans adopting more flexible  schedules and eschewing commuting five days per week to instead work  from home. The White House doubles as the President's workplace and  home, but Biden can work remotely with secure communications equipment  and facilities anywhere he travels, and does so.
 "Presidents  of the United States are constantly on the job, regardless of their  location; whether they're on a state visit overseas or just 100 miles  from the White House for a short trip to Wilmington," White House  spokesman Andrew Bates told CNN. 
 Bates  added, "Wherever he is, the President spends every day working to  defeat the pandemic, to ensure our economy delivers for the middle class  -- not just those at the top -- and to protect our national security.  Also, as all Americans can agree, it's important for leaders to avoid  becoming ensconced in Washington, DC."
 In  the post-presidency, former presidents have frequently lamented the  restrictions of home life at the White House, with Truman calling it  "the great white jail" and Michelle Obama referring to it as "a really  nice prison," making it not unusual for a president to seek respite at  more familiar digs.
 "Even  in the residence on the second and third floors, the president and his  family are rarely alone. They can often hear the chanting of protestors  in Lafayette Park across the street. During the Vietnam War, Luci and  Lynda Bird Johnson could hear it from their bedrooms," said Kate  Andersen Brower, a CNN contributor and author of "Team of Five: The  Presidents Club in the Age of Trump."
 Brower  added, "There's a sense of claustrophobia that comes with the  territory. People are coming in and out for tours (in pre-Covid times)  and reporters work not far from the Oval Office."
 Biden has expressed similar 
sentiments himself since taking office.
 "I  said when I was running, I wanted to be President not to live in the  White House but to be able to make the decisions about the future of the  country," Biden 
said four weeks into his presidency at a CNN Town Hall.
He  continued, "And so living in the White House, as you've heard other  presidents who have been extremely flattered to live there, has -- it's a  little like a gilded cage in terms of being able to walk outside and do  things."
 Pressed on Biden's predilection for getting out of town, White House press secretary Jen Psaki defended her boss.
 "Because  it's his home. You like going home, right? So does the President. He's  human, too," Psaki told reporters at an August briefing.
 And  in early March as Covid-19 cases remained high and the vaccination  program was ramping up, Psaki was asked whether Biden should be doing  more to set an example about personal travel during the pandemic.
 "Well,  the President lives in Wilmington. It's his home. That's where he's  lived for many, many years. And as you know, as any President of the  United States does, he takes a private airplane called Air Force One to  travel there. That is, of course, a unique -- unique from most  Americans, but I think most Americans would also see that as a unique  circumstance," she said.
 
Getting away from Washington
 While  in Wilmington, Biden spends time with his family, including the first  lady and his grandchildren, but he also uses his home as a workplace.
 "Even  the president is affected by the new pandemic white-collar lifestyle of  working from home, wherever that may be," Brower said.
 
She  added, "The Oval Office no longer refers to just the physical space,  it's really become wherever the president is. And that's the case for  many people who have the luxury of working remotely."
notice the spin doctoring? they didn't say that when Trump was in office. 
 Both  at or away from the West Wing, Biden, a White House official told CNN,  is "constantly strategizing with staff, being briefed on the economy and  national security, speaking with lawmakers to advance his legislative  agenda, and more." Modern technology, the official added, makes it  "easier than ever" for a president to do the job fully from anywhere,  with many staffers working remotely at the start of the administration. 
    
Biden  typically attends mass on Saturday or Sunday while in town, and he's  played about a dozen rounds of golf at the nearby Fieldstone Golf Club.  He stopped by a local coffee shop, Brew Ha Ha! earlier this month with  his granddaughters. 
Earlier  this month, he and the first lady traveled to his sister's nearby home  for a "small family wedding" of his nephew, Cuffe Owens, to Meghan  O'Toole King, a former cast member of the Real Housewives of Orange  County. He's also spent some time in the area on more mundane tasks,  like seeing a doctor for a follow-up visit after a foot injury.
Biden  has received virtual briefings from his team while away from the White  House, per his public schedule, and always travels with senior staff for  both domestic policy and national security, White House Communications  Agency military personnel, and other aides, the White House official  said.
 Biden,  the official added, is "in frequent touch with a wide spectrum of other  staff to continue making progress on all the issues he works on during  the week."
 
The cost of escape
 No matter how near or far, there are always taxpayer resources incurred when a president travels.
 "There  is a significant level of taxpayer expense any time the president  departs the White House grounds, whether that's just for a local stop in  Washington, DC, or an overnight in Delaware," said Jonathan Wackrow, a  former US Secret Service agent and CNN law enforcement analyst.
 Those  expenses include travel and lodging for Secret Service as agents,  officers, and technical professionals descend to the President's  destination. There is secure communications infrastructure installed by  military personnel. Local law enforcement and other public safety  entities, including the fire department and emergency medical services  (EMS), are deployed when a president visits. There are also  transportation considerations, Wackrow said, including Marine One and  its support structure, fuel, mechanical considerations and aircraft  security.
 Whoever  is in office, and wherever they are going, Wackrow says, "There is a  massive bubble that moves with the president. The reason why it's so  large is because you can't have any interruption in his ability to  respond to a moment of crisis -- it has to equal that of all the  resources in Washington."
 Biden's  trips to Camp David, which is a permanent military installation, are  less resource-intensive, however, because the presidential retreat is  heavily fortified and supported by the military.
 "The  infrastructure is built in -- Camp David has the built in SCIFs, it has  the built-in presidential emergency command centers, it has all of the  resources that you typically would bring in temporarily, they're  permanently built in at Camp David," Wackrow said.
CNN's Kate Bennett contributed to this report.