Kline – Earmarks Waste Your Hardearned Tax Dollars
Congressman John Kline (R MN2) has a great Opinion piece in the Strib today about the plague that is Congressional earmarks.Â
Sphere: Related ContentJohn Kline: Earmarks waste your hard-earned tax dollars
The system by which Washington spends your money is broken and needs to be reformed.
In Washington today, Congress decides how to spend many of your hard-earned tax dollars through an “earmark” system that is both broken and corrupt. Any member of Congress can request funding for a project — no matter how outlandish it may be. And you would be shocked at how Congress decides which of these earmarks will receive funding.
Most Minnesotans who manage their own family budgets would expect Washington to base projects on their merits. But rather than using an orderly, reasoned system for setting priorities on how taxpayer money is spent on earmarks, decisions in Washington are based on a member’s seniority, committee assignment or party affiliation. This is wrong. And what is worse: There is no accountability. Members of Congress are not even required to disclose to taxpayers what projects they have requested funding for.
In an effort to make sure your tax dollars are spent wisely and to reform a broken system abused by both Democrats and Republicans, a growing number of members of Congress are not requesting earmarks. More than 30,000 requests were made last year for pork-barrel projects ranging from teapot museums to lighting for the posh L.A. Fashion District. Minnesotans should not be asked to spend their hard-earned money on lighting for an upscale shopping mall for Hollywood’s elite when there are much-needed projects here at home. Federal spending priorities should be based on a project’s merit rather than having Washington’s politicians award money based on an entirely arbitrary system.
Last year, Congress spent more than $15 billion on earmarks. Supporters of this broken system argue that earmarks account for just 2 percent of total spending appropriated by Congress. Attempts to minimize Washington’s annual spending spree by belittling $15 billion — an amount equivalent to the entire annual budget for the state of Minnesota — are insulting to Minnesota taxpayers who are tightening their budgets to pay for the soaring cost of gas and other everyday household items.
An example of how Congress spends your money: In order to secure funding for a transportation project in my district — the intersection of County Rd. 5 and Hwy. 13 in Burnsville — I was forced to vote for a bloated $286 billion transportation authorization bill that included the infamous $223 million “Bridge to Nowhere.” Worthwhile initiatives should not be pitted against projects prioritized solely by seniority. That is why Congress needs to fix this broken system.
The only way for members to take on this battle for major reform and maintain any credibility is to come at it from the outside and not request any earmarks. Last year, I was practically alone in refusing to request earmarks and in calling for comprehensive reform. This year, the ranks are growing. Currently, nearly 50 House members — including California Democrat Henry Waxman — are sitting out of this round of the wasteful pork-barrel spending process and are working for much-needed change. Meanwhile, many colleagues in Congress continue to bring home the bacon as they reach deeper and deeper into taxpayers’ wallets for pork projects that range from lavish to laughable.
Earlier this year, House Republicans sent a letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi calling for an immediate halt to earmarking. We also called for the establishment of a bipartisan committee to identify ways to bring fundamental change to the way Congress spends taxpayers’ dollars. Unfortunately, the majority leadership rejected our call for reform. The 2008 pork-barrel spending game is under way, and the race to the trough is on.
In this time of economic uncertainty, Minnesotans are naturally growing more concerned with how their tax dollars are being spent. In Washington, we can begin to earn back their trust by enacting comprehensive bipartisan earmark reform — and stopping the pork. As members of Congress, we should continue to work for Americans, not at the trough of broken principles, but by fighting to rid Washington of wasteful pork-barrel spending.





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