Muscatine

U R gonna pay-

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  • nedl
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This is just a sampling of the 11,331 ''earmarks'' (a 426 percent increase over last year) that this Congress snuck into its annual appropriations bills and accompanying reports for fiscal year 2008 -- nearly 10,000 of them in the omnibus bill alone. Want more?

-- $700,000 for a bike trail in Minnesota.

-- $200,000 for a post office museum in downtown Las Vegas.

-- $1 million for a river walk in Massachusetts.

-- $150,000 for the Louis Armstrong Museum in Queens, N.Y.

-- $200,000 for the Hunting and Fishing Museum in Pennsylvania.

-- $113,000 for rodent control in Alaska.

-- $4 million for a Beverly Hills veterans' park.

-- $37,000 for the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago.

-- $8.8 million for the Rural Domestic Preparedness Consortium at Eastern Kentucky University.

-- $2.4 million for renovations in the Haddad Riverfront Park in Charleston, W.Va.

-- $250,000 for construction work at the Walter Clore Wine and Culinary Center in Prosser, Wash.

-- $126,000 for the National First Ladies' Library in Canton, Ohio.

-- $10.4 million to the ProLogic company, a firm in West Virginia that is allegedly under federal investigation.

If one special interest in the country has been left out of these bills, it would be hard think of one. It contains money for everything from New York's Center for Grape Genetics to peanut production in Georgia, from

Pennsylvania's Center for Dairy Excellence to the Bronx River Restoration Project.

Keep in mind, these are projects that the administration did not request money for, nor were they recommended or formally evaluated by any of the appropriating committees. These are items that were inserted into spending bills, with the full approval of the majority leadership of Congress, to buy political support in their states and districts to help them win another term in the 2008 elections.

To be sure, earmarking is a bipartisan affliction. Its abuses occur on both sides of the aisle. Nevertheless, powerful Democrats in Congress control the legislative machinery and they are among its chief abusers.

And don't look for any substantive change from the Democrats who are running for president. Since her election to the Senate, Hillary Clinton has been responsible for more than half a billion dollars in earmarks that went to 59 corporations, according to a Los Angeles Times investigation. Nearly two-thirds of these firms donated money to her campaigns through their executives, board members or their lobbyists.

In a classic case of mutual back-scratchery, her campaigns have raked in more than $1 million from beneficiaries of her earmarks. Clinton has delivered more than $2.3 billion in earmarked pork to her state since 2001. She's not the biggest abuser of pork, though she ''does significantly more earmarking than most others,'' the Times discovered.

Among the spending bills that passed this year, she was responsible for 216 earmarked projects totaling $236.6 million. So much for her claim of fiscal responsibility.

Her rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination are tucking into the hog meat, too. Barack Obama, promising to change the way things are done in Washington, is responsible for $90.4 million in earmarks.

President Bush presumably had little choice but to hold his nose and sign the omnibus spending bill to keep the government running. But he has asked Budget Director Jim Nussle to come up with innovative ways not to spend this money.

The Heritage Foundation has three suggestions, which the White House is studying: Cancel non-binding earmarks by executive order; ban ''phone-marking,'' in which lawmakers pressure agency heads to demand funding for their pet projects; and rejecting vaguely worded earmarks.

Good ideas. It's time for the White House to take the gloves off and get tougher with lawmakers who won't take no for an answer.



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We need to have line item vetos

The only problem is congress has to pass the law giving the President the authority to line item veto but they won't for fear it may get used on one of their pork barrel projects. Business as usual.
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  • mil
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only item

It should me that a bill is only about that spefic bill. No pork. Then there would be no reason for line item. If a bill is for I80 road work then it is ONLY that. Goverment should K I S S alot. Keep It Simple Stupid. Maybe that would cure alot of problems.
Bill Clinton

was granted the line item veto while he was president, but the Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional claiming the congress didn't have the power to grant that authority.
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