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Thursday, March 22, 2007
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Pork-barrel politics put troops at risk
by Donald Lambro
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House Democratic leaders want to add $24.6 billion to President Bush's $95 billion request for U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq, but it's not for more weaponry or life-saving armor.

Most of the added money stuffed into the emergency supplemental bill, which was expected to come up for a vote this Thursday, is for the kind of costly, pork-barrel, special-interest, vote-buying handouts that Democrats promised they would end if they won control of Congress.

But less than three months after taking over the House leadership, the Democrats returned to the old logrolling practice of buying votes for a bill whose micromanaging war provisions to ultimately defund our troops has raised deeply troubling doubts in the minds of many of their members.

The bill contains $25 million in subsidies for spinach growers hurt by last year's E. coli outbreak to persuade Rep. Sam Farr, D-Calif., to hold his nose and vote for it. There's another $75 million "to ensure proper storage for peanuts" to convince three conservative Democrats from Georgia to do likewise.

Other doubting Democrats were offered $1.48 billion for livestock ranchers, plus $20 million to reclaim damaged farmlands, $500 million for "urgent wildland fire suppression" and $120 million for shrimp and Atlantic fishing interests.

With so much at stake in the latest attempt to reduce the violence in Iraq and give the Iraqi government time to regain some semblance of control over the country, the spectacle of Democrats using a war-funding bill for pure political vote-buying pork was sickening.

"The war supplemental legislation voted out of the Appropriations Committee last week was an exercise in arrogance that demonstrated the utter contempt the majority has for the American people and their hard-earned tax dollars," said Rep. John Shadegg, R-Ariz.

"We are at war with a ruthless global terrorist network, yet the appropriators allocated hundreds of millions in funds to gratuitous pork projects," he said.

The opening paragraph on page two of the bill begins this way: "Title I -- Supplemental Appropriations for the Global War on Terror Chapter 1, Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service."

"Forget the Marines; send in the meat inspectors," the Wall Street Journal said in an editorial titled "'Peanuts' for (David) Petraeus,'" the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq.

The political rationale behind the Democrats' pork-barrel gambit was the difficulty of coming up with a 218-vote majority in the House where many in their party were squirming over the prospect of imposing a complicated obstacle course of "benchmarks" that could force a U.S. pullout to begin within 180 days.

But even if Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her anti-war aide-de-camp John Murtha were able to come up with 218 votes, it's doubtful the bill would have any chance of passing the Senate, where Democrats have been unable to move any pullout legislation.

Last week, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid couldn't even cobble together a simple majority for a bill that would set a deadline for U.S. troop withdrawal that faced a certain veto from Bush. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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We need "500" or so... Dr. No's
We need to fill the House and Senate with the likes of Ron Paul the constitutional conservative from Texas, often referred to as Dr. No for not voting for any legislation that would be consider unconsitutional.

If we ever want responsible fiscal government we need statesmen that will go to Washington ready to cut programs rather than spend borrowed money for new redundant social programs.

America is at a crossroads in 2008, much bigger super-sized government or back to Constitution sized Government.

It's really a no brainer for all across the conservative spectrums of the Repub party. Principles or Politics.



http://www.ronpaul.org

Proud American
Europe & Asia both have used one day strikes to straighten out Government.
In America it would be most affective to hold a one day strike in your auto, on the freeway or other arterial traffic, so it shuts down everything and everyone is forced to comply because they can't get to work anyway.
This also makes it hard to retaliate.

I find letters & e-mail to Legislators, (Stark & Feinstein anyway), are a waste of patience.
The form letter reply often does not even relate to the subject matter.
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