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McCaskill-led Earmark Probe Finds $834 Million In Requests

A huge :thumbsup: for McCaskill...instead of giving us lip service like Obama does with impunity, here we have a Democrat who actually supports transparency ...a truly rare breed in DC. We need more like her imo!

http://www.washingtonpost.com/polit...-in-requests/2011/12/08/gIQAl0MrlO_story.html
By Kimberly Kindy, Published: December 10

A six-month study of this year’s defense authorization bill has identified 115 spending proposals as earmarks worth $834 million, including 20 by Republican freshmen who campaigned against the pet projects, according to a copy of the report provided to The Washington Post.

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), whose staff produced the study, called the behavior a “bold flaunting” of the GOP-led moratorium on earmarks. She chastised Republican House members for removing documents about earmarks from their Web sites that would have made it easier to identify the practice.

“It was perplexing that so many Republicans had scrubbed their Web sites,” said McCaskill, who on Friday gave copies of the report to the chairman and ranking member of the Armed Services Committee. “If you are going to tout the earmarks you received, why not remain transparent? For me, the entire thing is disappointing.”

In the analysis, McCaskill’s staff said it found 40 earmark requests from House Republicans and 75 from House Democrats, the report shows. The requests, which target spending to specific projects in a member’s district, were passed over the summer, largely en masse, without public debate.

The report found that 31 other items appeared to be earmarks, but the lack of documentation made it impossible to connect them to specific lawmakers.

On Monday, McCaskill will distribute copies of the 15-page report to the full Armed Services Committee, along with a spreadsheet that names each member who requested the funding.

House and Senate members of the defense authorization committees were scheduled to work over the weekend to produce a final bill, which may be completed as soon as Monday.

McCaskill said Friday that she is asking that the conference committee strip out all of the earmarks, which were called “amendments” in the bill. If any remain, she will fight them on the floor of the Senate.

Last week, McCaskill and Sen. Patrick J. Toomey (R-Pa.) introduced a bill that would make earmarks illegal. She said her staff’s findings underscore the need for the legislation.

An earlier analysis of the defense authorization bill by Citizens Against Government Waste, an earmark watchdog group, found similar results. The organization identified 111 spending provisions it described as earmarks, 59 of which matched up with the language members used for earlier earmarks.

McCaskill said some of the most brazen behavior came from freshmen who, just months before they sought funding for their pet projects, had been on the campaign trail denouncing them.

The report highlights a request from Rep. Robert T. Schilling (R-Ill.), one of the 13 freshmen who sought earmarks, McCaskill said.

The report says Schilling added a $2.5 million earmark for Quad City Manufacturing Lab at the Rock Island Arsenal in Rock Island, Ill., for the “development of innovative manufacturing techniques and process for munitions and weapons systems.”

Schilling’s request matched the language in an earmark to the federal research facility by his predecessor, former representative Phil Hare (D), the report said.

Andie Pivarunas, a spokeswoman for Schilling, said the request is not an earmark because the funds will be awarded by the Army through a competitive process. She said the funding request was made by Schilling in response to a “policy recommendation” from the Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce, which asked for federal funds for the laboratory. She said that if the funds are allocated and the lab applies for funds, Schilling would “hope the lab would receive fair consideration under the program application guidelines.”

When Schilling was campaigning against Hare, he wrote an Oct. 17, 2010, op-ed piece for a local online news site that said: “We need earmark reform that improves transparency, roots out corruption and eliminates wasteful spending. My opponent never met an earmark he didn’t like.”
Word seeped out months ago that Republican leaders on the Armed Services Committee would try to find a way to keep earmarks alive.

At a March 16 event sponsored by the Brookings Institution, Maj. Gen. Lori Robinson, legislative liaison for the Office of the Secretary of the Air Force, said she had heard that earmarks were not dead, according to a Pentagon newsletter called Inside the Air Force.

“I haven’t seen anything in writing and I don’t know anything official but I am hearing that it’ll be called something different,” she was quoted as saying in the May 27 newsletter. “And I forget what the word is, but I do believe that we will have an earmark by a different name.”

Robinson and the Air Force press office declined to comment.
 
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You think the Teapublicans would be all over this like stink on shit...now let's see if they put their money where their mouth is....

Good read BTW.
 
Earmarks aren't inherently bad. Some earmarks are, some aren't. I've never understood the push to ban them other than the fact that it makes for good campaign fodder.
 
Earmarks aren't inherently bad. Some earmarks are, some aren't. I've never understood the push to ban them other than the fact that it makes for good campaign fodder.
And I would agree with you that earmarks aren't inherently bad...however, it's the lack of transparency that concerns me.
 
Earmarks aren't inherently bad. Some earmarks are, some aren't. I've never understood the push to ban them other than the fact that it makes for good campaign fodder.

I give you so much credit man for fighting the good fight in this forum. Sensible people have said this for years now but the idiots still foam at the mouth on this one.

Remember kids . Earmarks are a way to direct money ALREADY appropriated to your state or district. Politicians have used earmarks for decades to direct money that their constituents want spent.

Sure there have been bridges to nowhere and other seemingly stupid ways of spending money but on the whole earmarks perform a valuable governmental service that usually keeps the constituents happy.

If we go demonizing everything single thing that happens because it CAN be abused there would be nothing left of society on the whole....

There goes my P&N post for the month...
 
Earmarks aren't inherently bad. Some earmarks are, some aren't. I've never understood the push to ban them other than the fact that it makes for good campaign fodder.

True, but along with transparency this is pointing out the hypocrisy:

McCaskill said some of the most brazen behavior came from freshmen who, just months before they sought funding for their pet projects, had been on the campaign trail denouncing them.

The report highlights a request from Rep. Robert T. Schilling (R-Ill.), one of the 13 freshmen who sought earmarks, McCaskill said.

The report says Schilling added a $2.5 million earmark for Quad City Manufacturing Lab at the Rock Island Arsenal in Rock Island, Ill., for the “development of innovative manufacturing techniques and process for munitions and weapons systems.”

Schilling’s request matched the language in an earmark to the federal research facility by his predecessor, former representative Phil Hare (D), the report said.

While running for election:
http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/747159/remember_the_%22ban"_on_earmarks/

"When Illinois Republican Robert Schilling was running for the House last year, he based part of his platform on his opposition to earmarks. “We need earmark reform that improves transparency, roots out corruption and eliminates wasteful spending,” he wrote in an op-ed two weeks before the election. “My opponent never met an earmark he didn’t like.”"

. . . . apparently neither did Schilling. And transparency? Who needs it once you're elected. (Just ask Obama.)

"Meet the new boss, same as the old boss."
 
I'd rather see lump sums handed to each State for local allocation based on true local needs/interests that could be determined via referendums on local ballots; or, better yet, cut Fed taxes, eliminate earmarks, then raise State taxes and allow each State to control their own fate from the get-go...
 
I'd rather see lump sums handed to each State for local allocation based on true local needs/interests that could be determined via referendums on local ballots; or, better yet, cut Fed taxes, eliminate earmarks, then raise State taxes and allow each State to control their own fate from the get-go...

What state can purchase c-17 cargo planes? Senators earmark the money to fund the Air Force's acquisition of these planes. This in turn keeps people employed in the senators district. Even though the Air Force has more planes than they need.

Earmarks can be used to get funds to maintain federal property in the congressman's district.

As the OP said... transparency is the key. The public should be able to see where this money is going without having congressman do research projects.
 
And I would agree with you that earmarks aren't inherently bad...however, it's the lack of transparency that concerns me.

Yes, this. The test for any given piece of spending is not whether it is an earmark, but whether it is in the general public's best interests. The only trouble with earmarks is the way they get obscured by being bundled into larger bills. If they were broken out into separate pieces of legislation, then presumably the bad ones would get voted down.
 
What state can purchase c-17 cargo planes? Senators earmark the money to fund the Air Force's acquisition of these planes. This in turn keeps people employed in the senators district. Even though the Air Force has more planes than they need.

Earmarks can be used to get funds to maintain federal property in the congressman's district.

As the OP said... transparency is the key. The public should be able to see where this money is going without having congressman do research projects.

I would like to State's rights advocates/smaller Gubermint forum members reply to that ...lol
 
What state can purchase c-17 cargo planes? Senators earmark the money to fund the Air Force's acquisition of these planes. This in turn keeps people employed in the senators district. Even though the Air Force has more planes than they need.

Earmarks can be used to get funds to maintain federal property in the congressman's district.

As the OP said... transparency is the key. The public should be able to see where this money is going without having congressman do research projects.
Perhaps since this particular discussion centers on DOD-specific allocations being made through earmarks, maybe this was the wrong thread to discuss general earmark practices and possible solutions...

That said, why should any DOD project be financed and/or awarded using anything other than the standard nation-wide RFP and acquisition processes?
 
Every piece of pork is someone's essential program, which is why we'll never solve the problem fighting for my good earmarks and against your bad earmarks. Any program worth doing should be able to stand on its own.
 
I heard about her report. She included things which were already removed from the legislation as if they were still there.
 
I heard about her report. She included things which were already removed from the legislation as if they were still there.

If a person tried to get the earmark in while publicly denouncing earmarks, they are still a hypocrite regardless of the current funding status. And regardless of party of course.

The first sentence seems clear enough to me that not all were included:

"A six-month study of this year’s defense authorization bill has identified 115 spending proposals as earmarks worth $834 million, including 20 by Republican freshmen who campaigned against the pet projects,"
 
If the earmark is no longer in the bill, it is not being proposed. Might as well provide a list of earmarks from the 1994 defense bill if she is going to give us a list of items which includes those no longer actually being proposed. It becomes useless with non-proposed items listed as if they are actually being proposed.


EDIT: Realized I never said it. He should never have proposed any earmarks at all, since he ran on a platform of being against them. However, she also needs to remove the items which are not actually being proposed from her list of items she claims is being proposed.
 
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Every piece of pork is someone's essential program, which is why we'll never solve the problem fighting for my good earmarks and against your bad earmarks. Any program worth doing should be able to stand on its own.

Except of course all lawmakers don't have identical motivations. Why should a guy from South Carolina care about a bridge in Minnesota if it doesn't help him in any way?

There are plenty of bad earmarks out there and I'm glad people dedicate themselves to exposing them. Eliminating them doesn't solve the problem though.
 
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