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Trump sticks with tradition for presidential pen choice

Story highlights
  • Donald Trump is using Cross pens
  • Cross has provided presidential pens for decades

(CNN) President Donald Trump's John Hancock is getting some attention, but it turns out the President, who made his mark bucking tradition during the election, is sticking with a long-standing White House pen supplier.

When he signs executive orders, Trump is using a Century II black lacquer and gold roller ball pen, made by manufacturer A. T. Cross. The Trump White House put in an initial order for 150 of the pens.

Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton also used the Cross Townsend pen, although Obama later switched to the Century II. Presidents Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush were also known to use Cross pens, however, the official Cross-White House program began under Clinton.

Trump, Obama and Bush use the medium felt tip refills -- Bush in blue, Obama and Trump in black. A spokesperson to Cross North America told CNN the felt tip refill is "extremely quick to dry and can write on most surfaces."

The Century II in black lacquer is available for purchase for the general public with an MSRP of $110 for the rollerball pen, plus the $6.50 felt tip refill.

Cross sells the pen to the White House through a distributor in the Washington area, the spokesperson said. The distributor gets a discount, paying less than $50 per pen, although it was not immediately clear how much they charge the White House.

A spokeswoman for the White House declined a request for comment.

Traditionally, these pens are handed out as souvenirs to guests attending the bill signings, and Trump has used the pen for each order he's signed thus far, often holding up the paper to show off his signature.

Trump's pen first made its mark moments after the inauguration ceremony when he headed inside the Capitol to sign some bills for his Cabinet nominees alongside family members and Hill leadership.

"Yeah, I'd like to give some pens out. The government is getting stingy, right?" the newly sworn-in President said, a stack of Cross pens before him.

The congressional leaders were picky about their pens, and Trump worked to accommodate everyone.

When he tried to pass off a pen to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer that was used for a bill regarding Housing and Urban Development Secretary nominee Ben Carson, Schumer groaned, prompting a laugh from House Speaker Paul Ryan and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. Schumer also emphatically stated he didn't want the Education Department nominee Betsy DeVos pen, "No, thank you."

President Donald Trump holds up an executive order withdrawing the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership after signing it in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, January 23, 2017.

Pelosi later got her own pen from the Health and Human Services nominee Tom Price bill.

"Come here, I'll give you Elaine. Do you want Elaine?" Trump asked Pelosi.

But she passed the Elaine Chao pen over to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Chao's husband, saying: "The leader wants Elaine."

"You know what, the leader should have Elaine," the President said.

Schumer later made a pen trade, swapping Carson at HUD, for the Department of Veterans Affairs nominee David Shulkin.

"I can't get too many pens," he said.

"No no, you're only getting the one," Trump said, later adding, "I think we're going to need some more pens, by the way."

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