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Thursday, March 12, 2009
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Pork, Anyone?
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- When President Obama boasted that there wasn't "a single pet project" or "single earmark" in his economic-stimulus bill, he was using a slightly different definition of pork-barrel spending.

In fact, there were a number of pork projects in the bill, no matter how one defines them. We know, because Calvin Woodward, an enterprising Associated Press reporter, explained how the president singled out local projects that will be bankrolled under his nearly $800 billion recovery bill.

On a trip to Elkhart, Ind., to promote his massive spending program, Obama told residents how they would benefit from the stimulus money that would pay for "roads like U.S. 31 here in Indiana that Hoosiers count on."

"I know that a new overpass downtown would make a big difference for businesses and families right here in Elkhart," Obama said. In other words, provisions in the bill were designed, or "earmarked," for specific projects.

For example, Woodward reported last month, Obama's bill contains $2 billion "for a clean-coal power plant with specifications matching one in Mattoon, Ill., $10 million for urban canals, $2 billion for manufacturing advanced batteries for hybrid cars and $255 million for a polar icebreaker and other "priority procurements" by the Coast Guard.

"There are no 'earmarks,' as they are usually defined, inserted by lawmakers in the bill," Woodward wrote. "Still, some of the projects bear the prime characteristics of pork tailored to benefit specific interests or to have thinly disguised links to local projects." Pretty clever, huh?

That's why GOP lawmakers laughed when he told a joint session of Congress that the economic-recovery bill, which he signed with great fanfare, contains no earmarks and no pork.

Now Congress has just passed the $410 billion omnibus fiscal 2009 appropriations bill left over from last year, legislation loaded with earmarks for marginal projects back home inserted by lawmakers at the request of fat-cat lobbyists and other big contributors to their campaigns.

There are nearly 9,000 tallow-ridden spending items that were not reviewed by any subcommittee or requested by any federal agency, and they will cost taxpayers close to $7 billion between now and Oct. 1.

These add-on expenditures were stuffed into the bill by lawmakers in both parties who use the appropriations process as their own personal slush fund to pass out money in their districts and states and thus earn the gratitude of special interests at re-election time. It is influence peddling and vote buying, pure and simple.

Many of the earmarks in this bill, and in previous fiscal 2009 bills, raised congressional squandering to a new level, even by Washington's corrupt standards. Estimated as high as $18 billion all told, it comes to more than the Interior Department's entire budget. See whether these fit in your wallet:

-- $143,000 for an online encyclopedia in Nevada. Have these people ever heard of Google?

-- $951,500 for something called a "sustainable Las Vegas." If we are to believe the TV ads for America's gambling mecca, this means money spent in Las Vegas stays in Las Vegas. You betcha.

-- $207,000 for a program to remove tattoos. Where else but in Los Angeles?

-- $2.1 million for New York's Center for Great Genetics. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Dr Douglas
If you please. While two% by itself isnt much When you take 9000pieces when a man has promised none then we begin to see what it is. It's the pink elephant setting in a room. Add that to the way he is dissing our closest allies and afew others like China and it's now 5 elephants in the same room. We are so far in debt to china right now that if he insults them like he did England,the good ole buck could become worthless for anything but butt paper. open your eyes.

2 per cent can be more than enough
Dr. Douglas,

If you truely believe that 2 per cent is an extremely small proportion, then you wouldn't mind drinking a cup of coffee with only 2 per cent hydrogen cyanide in it. Two percent of 800 billion dollars is more than most retired professors have just lying about. Is it really that insignificant a sum to you? Or is it that you don't mind wasting other people's money?

As for the defense budget, there is waste there too, but much of it is waste that congress forces the military to above their requests. Are you aware that more than 60 per cent of the military budget is personnel cost? Or that much of the other costs are related to the costs of the research and development associated with providing our forces with the equipment they need to do their jobs?
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