[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 163 (Tuesday, November 15, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S6327]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EARMARKS
Mr. FLAKE. Mr. President, a lot like indigestion, the desire for
earmarks keeps coming back up. Tomorrow afternoon our colleagues in the
House will vote on a provision to overturn the Congressional ban on
earmarking. As someone who helped put that ban in place, I believe it
is important to explain why it is very much still a necessity.
Consider the following: A teapot museum in North Carolina, an indoor
rain forest in Iowa, bridges to nowhere in Alaska, a sheep institute in
Montana, a Woodstock museum to commemorate the 1969 concert in New
York, a $350 million rocket launch site in Mississippi that was
mothballed upon completion that has been derided as the ``tower to
nowhere,'' and the weather museum in Punxsutawney, PA. These are just
some of the more infamous pork projects that were tucked into bills in
Congress here during the bygone earmark era.
During the heyday of earmarking in 2006, I believe there were some
16,000 earmarks spread around among the appropriations bills at that
time. Members of Congress gleefully touted the outrageous manner in
which billions of dollars were being misspent on obscure, parochial
projects. Earmarks were the currency of what was dubbed the ``favor
factory'' by a superlobbyist who would eventually go to jail for
corruption.
Earmarks were used to reward campaign donors and political supporters
and to buy and sell the votes of politicians. The deciding vote that
was necessary to pass ObamaCare, for example, was secured with an
earmark for Nebraska and derided as the ``Cornhusker Kickback.''
Republicans lost control of Congress in 2006, in part, as a result of
the public's disgust with the corruption within the favor factory. When
Republicans retook the House of Representatives in 2010, a moratorium
was put on Congressional earmarking, which the Senate also adopted.
That remains in place to this day.
Now some Republicans in the House are pushing to reopen the favor
factory by lifting the moratorium, promising this time it will be
different. Taxpayers ought to know that these promises are simply
hogwash. Having spent years fighting against earmarks, I am
disappointed that one of the very first votes after this election will
be on a Republican-led proposal to bring back earmarks.
Congress should instead immediately pass legislation to make the ban
on earmarks a permanent statutory prohibition. After all, you cannot
drain the swamps by feeding the alligators pork. With our national debt
approaching $20 trillion, taxpayers expect Congress to focus on cutting
wasteful and unnecessary spending instead of pigging out at the trough.
One of the worst parts of earmarks is that we spend our time here
when we are earmarking not providing oversight for the massive
appropriations bills that get passed. That is the worst part of it. We
spend time doling out what amounts to a small portion of the Federal
budget, but it takes so much time and effort from Members and their
staffs just to secure that small bit of money that we are not spending
the time we should providing oversight on the rest of the budget. That
is the biggest crime of earmarks.
Instead of bringing them back, I hope that we will actually pass a
statutory prohibition that will remain.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
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