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January 23, 2018 09:56 AM
 
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"Earmarking is the surest way for Republicans 
to infuriate voters and get thrown 
out of office in 2018."

 
- Adam Andrzejewski and Stephen Moore
Published on the Chicago Tribune Editorial Page
 
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"COMMENTARY: DON'T REOPEN THE 
EARMARK FAVOR FACTORY"
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Published on the Chicago Tribune Editorial Page
January 26, 2018

Adam Andrzejewski | CEO of OpenTheBooks
Stephen Moore | Economist at the Heritage Foundation, served as an economic adviser to Pres. Donald Trump 
 
 
Forget about our near-trillion-dollar annual budget deficits and our $20 trillion in national debt - pork is about to be back on the table in Washington. 
 
We're talking about the old-fashioned practice of stuffing special-interest pork barrel projects into federal spending bills. The practice is known as earmarking, and for decades it was the "currency of corruption" in Congress. 

Former U.S. Senator Dr. Tom Coburn R-Okla. said earmarks were "the gateway drug to runaway spending bills."
 
Each year, hundreds of these projects - from teapot museums, to potato research, to studies on the mating habits of crabs - were inserted into spending bills, adding billions and even tens of billions to the taxpayer tab.
 
Has Congress forgotten the cascade of earmark-related scandals that led to federal investigations or convictions? 
 
  • Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert bought up Illinois farmland for $15,000 per acre. Two years later, he inserted a $207 million earmark into the federal highway bill to construct roads near his new land. Four months after the bill was signed, Hastert's trust sold the land, and the speaker reaped millions.
  • Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif., went to jail after he tearfully confessed conspiring to pass out earmarks and pocketing $2.4 million in bribes, including a Rolls-Royce, a yacht and a 19th-century Louis-Philippe commode.
  • At a recent hearing on whether to bring back earmarks, Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, even defended the infamous $200-million "bridge to nowhere" in Alaska - which would have served an island with a few hundred residents. He says the federal dollars belonged to Alaska and that "it should have been built. There's never been a bridge anywhere that had anything on the other side until it was built." Yes - build it, and they will come.
The truth is, even with the ban on earmarks, clever members of Congress find ways to abuse the appropriations process and sneak local projects into bills. 
 
Our forthcoming "OpenTheBooks Oversight Report: Where's the Pork?" details hundreds of millions of dollars in waste and insider trading. Consider just three examples:
 
  • $1.5 million for the California Prostitutes Education Project - This project describes itself as a "youth-centered initiative" that "works with street prostitutes" to teach "safer sex and needle use" in a way that's respectful of their clients' "lifestyles and choices." Prostitution is illegal in California.
     
  • $2.5 million for "Space Racers: An Animated Children's Cartoon" - This grant from NASA to the Alabama Space Science Exhibit Commission supports an animated children's cartoon in which the main characters embark on several space adventures. Isn't this why we have the Cartoon Network?
     
  • $568,000 to use soap operas to reduce HIV in urban black women - Northeastern University received a grant from the Department of Health and Human Services to try and reduce urban black women's risk of HIV by streaming soap operas to their mobile devices. This wouldn't be quite so hard to swallow if we didn't already have a government that borrows some $2 billion a day.
It's ironic that members of Congress want to bring back earmarks so they can serve bacon to their districts and get re-elected. 

Instead, earmarking is the surest way for Republicans to infuriate conservative voters and get thrown out of office in 2018.
 
 
Join the Transparency Revolution! It's Your Money.
 
Jessie_signature
Jessie Fox
Communications Specialist
 
Adam Andrzejewski (say: Angie-eff-ski)
CEO & Founder, OpenTheBooks.com
Matthew Tyrmand
Deputy Director at Large

Want to see the 63,000 Illinois public employees making $100,000 ? Click here to read our Forbes piece and search our interactive map.
 
Please donate to OpenTheBooks today. It's a tax-deductible gift that holds the political class accountable across America.
 
Help OpenTheBooks today with a donation of $25, $50, $100, $250 or $500.
It's Your Money. Join The Transparency Revolution!
 
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