I wouldn't rule out one of the Taiwan presses made from the 1980s onward - Craftsman, Jet, and dozens of other brand names. Are they as good as the others mentioned above? Heck no. BUT they are inexpensive and readily-available. Quality can vary so it's worth checking for runout, smoothness, table flatness, etc. when you go look at one.
A couple of years ago, I picked up a near-new-condition 20" Craftsman (late 1980s vintage, Taiwan-made) at an estate sale a few blocks away (so close that I walked over to see it, nice). It has a nice large table, built-in light, 5/8" chuck, and has a 150rpm (or 200? can't remember) minimum speed which I wanted for drilling larger holes in metal (I have a set of reduced-shank drills up to 1 1/2" diameter that I picked up at a surplus sale). It will meet all of my drill press needs for the rest of my life.
I found my brother a variable-speed Clausing several years ago (3-phase). He had to do a fair bit to work on it (bearings, hard-to-find belt, etc) and has a 3-phase rotary converter in his shop since he has several large woodworking machines which all have 3-phase motors on them. He is very happy with it. He does a lot more metalwork and woodwork than me, and I do much less than I used to.
So short story long, don't necessarily rule out a newer drill press. Some of the older Craftsman ones have V-belts which are so tiny they look like they came out of a sewing machine, so not everything older is necessarily better.