Foreign Official Gifts
Even
though heads of state have traditionally exchanged gifts as expressions of
goodwill, the Constitution (Article I, Section 9) prohibits anyone in the US
Government from receiving a personal gift from a foreign head of state without
the consent of Congress. Today, the handling of gifts from a foreign official
to any Federal Government employee, including the President, is largely
governed by the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act of 1966 and further
legislation passed in 1977. Congress has allowed Federal employees to retain
any gift from a foreign government, as long as the total
Domestic Gifts
Any gift not from a
foreign government official is considered a domestic gift. Domestic gifts to
the President and/or First Lady may be disposed of in any manner the President
and First Lady wish. If they want to keep a domestic gift, they do not have to
purchase it from the Government.
The
President and First Lady keep for themselves only a small percentage of the
gifts that they receive. Reasons for this include the following:
President Reagan with a gift
from Vice-President Bush.
·
The requirement to pay for certain foreign official
gifts (see first section).
·
The White House Gift Unit constantly receives items from
the general public, and it is impossible for the President and First Lady to
ever see most of them.
·
To protect the President and his family, the Secret
Service requires destruction of food and drink gifts, combustible items which
may release fumes, and colognes and other substances that are applied to the
skin.
·
Any gifts retained by the President and First Lady that
are not from a close relative – including foreign official gifts that they keep
– may have to be declared in an annual disclosure report to the Office of
Government Ethics.[2]
·
The President and First Lady may have to pay federal
taxes on the appraised value of gifts that they keep.
Most
foreign official gifts which the President and First Lady do not retain for
themselves are transferred to the National Archives by the Gift Unit, and
become part of a presidential library museum collection. Most domestic gifts
that the President and First Lady do not keep are given to charitable organizations
or other non-Government recipients by the Gift Unit, or transferred to the
National Archives for the future presidential library museum.
[1] During the Reagan
Administration, the maximum retainable value was raised, in steps, from $100 to
$180.
2 During the Reagan
Administration, the law required an annual listing of all retained gifts “from
any source other than a relative” which were valued at $35.00 or more, if the
total value of such gifts that were received from that source during the year
totaled $100.00 or more. For example, if President Reagan had kept three $35
gifts which he received from a particular individual in 1981, all three gifts
would have been declared to OGE on the report for 1981, as their aggregate
value would have been over $100.