This column frequently extols the virtues of self-control,
responsibility and discipline, both individually and institutionally.
Consequently, I have been critical of the fiscal irresponsibility
displayed by Congress and President George W. Bush over the past several
years. Neither has shown the restraint necessary to rein in the Federal
Government's deficit spending and begin paying down the national debt.
Instead, the focus has been on expanding social programs at taxpayers'
expense and on securing enough financial goodies for the local folks in
Congressional districts to guarantee their support for incumbent
politicians.
So I was pleasantly surprised when President Bush brought up the subject
of Congressional earmarks in his final State of the Union speech on
Monday. Republicans were criticized extensively during the 2006
Congressional elections for their spending habits. The President signed
an executive order on Tuesday directing Federal agencies to ignore any
future earmarks included in report language, although not in the actual
text of appropriations legislation, which is generally how earmarks
receive their designation. The practice, which President Bush
criticized for its lack of transparency, is a deceitful way for
lawmakers to secure special funding without having to make it public
during a vote. While signing the executive order President Bush stated,
"it's very important for Congress to earn the trust of the American
taxpayer, and one way [it] should do so is to end the practice of
earmarks. Now, I said last year that [Congress] should voluntarily cut
the number [of earmarks] in half - not only the number, but the amount
of earmarks in half. They chose not to do so. So last night I told the
Congress that I would veto any bill, appropriations bill, that does not
cut the number and the amount of earmarks in half."
It is a welcome change for the President to acknowledge the corruption
and fiscal irresponsibility of the earmark process. That said, the
executive order is not enough. Just last month Bush signed into law
what the WASHINGTON POST calls "a phone-book-size spending bill that
funded virtually the entire federal government." It included, notes THE
POST, $150,000 for a visitor's center at the Louis Armstrong House
Museum in Corona, New York; $975,000 for curriculum development at the
Clinton School of Public Service at the University of Arkansas; and
$100,000 to turn the old Coca-Cola bottling plant in Romney, West
Virginia into an arts and culture center. All of these projects will be
allowed to keep their money. Bush's executive order will not take
effect until Fiscal Year 2009, which begins October 1, 2008. According
to THE POST, Democratic leaders plan to hold back spending bills this
fall in the hope that a Democratic President will be in office next year
and will pass all of their spending bills unaltered, thereby ignoring
Bush's executive order.
A group of Republican Congressmen hopes to change the status quo in
Washington by pledging to forego permanently all earmarks for their home
districts, encouraging others to do so and signing a moratorium on the
practice with Democratic leaders, who themselves vociferously criticized
the practice early in 2007. In the Senate, Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R-KY) appointed a Fiscal Reform Working Group this week to
"review the earmark process for spending and revenue and recommend
additional means for the Senate to bring greater transparency and fiscal
responsibility to government spending." Let's hope that the Group will
succeed and a bipartisan effort in Congress permanently will end the
practice.
It was important for the President to remind Americans and Congress of
the troubling problem earmarks pose for fiscal responsibility (and, I
would add, their potential for corruption). Unfortunately, his plan, as
declared in his State of the Union, is too little, too late.
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