[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 166 (Wednesday, December 15, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S10260-S10261]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OMNIBUS APPROPRIATIONS
Mr. JOHANNS. Madam President, I rise today to briefly discuss the so-
called omnibus spending package that is apparently headed this way.
This budget-busting, trillion-dollar spending behemoth is nearly 2,000
pages in length, and it is laden with over 6,000 earmarks for various
special interests.
This is a debacle that could have been avoided. Today is the 349th
day of this year. There are only 16 days until the end of the year.
There are only 10 days until one of the most sacred Christian
holidays--Christmas. Yet the majority waited until just now to unveil
our first real appropriations bill that will be considered on the
Senate floor in the entire year.
The fiscal year began on October 1 of this year. Yet we have waited
over 2 months to even consider a fiscal year 2011 spending bill. How
could anybody claim this is responsible management of our citizens' tax
dollars? There is no way to sugarcoat it. Congress has been derelict in
its duty to produce any of the 12 annual appropriations bills for the
fiscal year.
We did not even bother to debate or pass a budget resolution this
year to at least create the notion that Congress wanted to constrain
spending. While Americans across this country are taking a hard look at
their finances, prioritizing their spending, their government continues
to max the taxpayer credit card. This one is a doozy: 1,924 pages,
$1.27 trillion in spending, $9 billion more than even last year's
unacceptable spending levels, over 6,000--let me repeat that--over
6,000 earmarks that were funded more on geography and political
influence than on anything to do with merit. That is $8 billion worth
of earmarks when the American people are crying out for transparency
and thought they had sent a strong message in November.
While we should have been considering how to constrain spending, the
authors of this legislation were busy behind closed doors seeing how
much pork they could return to their States. This ``you get yours and I
will get mine'' mentality is one of the reasons we have the budgetary
hole we have dug. Yet we see 6,000 earmarks tucked away in this
legislation.
Let me just give three of the priorities, according to these
earmarks: $200,000 of somebody's hard-earned tax dollars for beaver
management; $1.5 million of somebody's hard-earned tax dollars for
mosquito trapping; $300,000 of somebody's hard-earned tax dollars for
the Polynesian Voyaging Society.
The list goes on and on. I could be here for the next 24 hours going
through the list.
When I was Secretary of Agriculture, we proposed a budget, and we
would not have a single earmark in it. But after the logrolling
occurred on Capitol Hill, we would get our funding back, and it would
be absolutely stuffed with earmarks, spending somebody's hard-earned
tax dollars.
It is a sad commentary that a few million dollars in home State pork
can often convince someone to swallow $1 trillion of government
spending. Yet that is where we end up too often. It looks to me like
this is greased, and it is going to happen again. The authors of this
legislation simply missed the message of November 2. We should be
passing appropriations bills that actually rein in spending instead of
doubling down, spending more, and adding to the era of big government.
Yet this massive bill is laden with end-of-the-year gifts.
One supporter of the spending bill actually admitted it was the
Christmas tree of all time, adorned by spending somebody else's hard-
earned tax dollars. This spending juggernaut is simply not what
Americans want or deserve.
While we are faced with numerous challenges, none is greater than
tackling this growing spending in our national debt. In fact, a
bipartisan group of almost 20 Senators came to the floor yesterday--and
I was part of that group--to pledge our commitment to address the
national debt.
How ironic that this massive spending bill is being discussed the
very next day. Maybe actions speak louder than words. It is time for us
to actually back up the rhetoric on controlling spending. A look at the
last appropriations bills just since I arrived a couple of years ago
shows spending is growing by 17 percent. The sad truth of that number
is there is no economy--no economy--that can grow the revenues fast
enough to keep up with the spending appetite of Washington, DC.
In fact, in a few years we will be spending more on finance charges
than the entire defense budget. It is like a family running up the
credit card and then looking for more credit cards. But, unfortunately,
it is now commonplace to pass bills that spend $1 trillion when our
citizens are saying: Please stop. Unfortunately, the spending has not
stopped.
I will oppose this bill, and I will do all I can to advocate that my
colleagues do the same. Government spends too much. We need to keep
more at home with the people.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
[[Page S10261]]
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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