Boston Herald

Dems’ push to revive earmarks divides GOP

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WASHINGTON — Can lawmakers bring home the bacon without it being pork?

It’s a question that’s vexing Republican­s as they consider whether to join a Democratic push to revive earmarks, the much-maligned practice where lawmakers direct federal spending to a specific project or institutio­n back home. Examples include a new bridge, community library or university research program.

Earmarking was linked to corruption in the 2000s, leading to an outcry and their banishment in both the House and Senate. But many in Congress say the ban has gone too far, ceding the “power of the purse” to party leaders and the executive branch and giving lawmakers less incentive to work with members of the other party on major legislatio­n.

Democratic appropriat­ors in the House see a solution and are proposing a revamped process allowing lawmakers to submit public requests for “community project funding” in federal spending bills. To guard against graft, the process includes safeguards to prevent conflicts of interest.

Whether earmarking becomes bipartisan could have enormous implicatio­ns not only for the allocation of spending across the country, but for President Biden, who is gearing up for a massive infrastruc­ture push that he hopes will attract significan­t Republican support. With earmarking in place, bipartisan­ship could prove easier to achieve, as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle could have reason to support bills they would otherwise oppose.

“This is a matter of allowing members to serve their own constituen­ts,” said Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla. “Somebody is going to be making these decisions — and I don’t want to bash federal bureaucrat­s — but somebody who has never been to my district probably doesn’t know the needs as well as I do.”

With Congress having allocated nearly $6 trillion responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, some conservati­ves are aghast at the prospect of Republican­s participat­ing in a Democratic spending spree. They say their party should resist earmarking, not revive it.

“This is not the time to fall into the swamp, or into the dark hole of earmarks,” said Rep. Ted Budd, R-N.C. “We’ve got to draw a bright line between Republican­s and Democrats right now.”

For now, the debate over earmarks is taking place mostly behind the scenes, with House Republican leadership holding a listening session on the issue Monday night.

“It really feels like a jump ball,” Budd said. “Some are adamantly opposed, as am I. The older members who have been here a lot longer, they tend to be for it.”

Worried about what’s ahead, Republican members in both chambers of Congress have sponsored legislatio­n this year to prohibit earmarks. Eleven Republican­s have added their name to a bill sponsored by Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., and 10 Republican­s have signed onto a House version from Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C.

About three dozen lawmakers also signed onto a letter Wednesday urging the leaders of the Appropriat­ions committees in both chambers to avoid a return to earmarking. Budd spearheade­d the effort and said he’s telling groups outside the Beltway and inside to contact their members and let them know “how precarious this is.”

The end of earmarking came swiftly a decade ago, when House Republican­s took the majority and quickly banned the practice. President Barack Obama pledged during a State of the Union address that “if a bill comes to my desk with earmarks inside, I will veto it.” The Senate Appropriat­ions Committee soon followed up with a moratorium of its own.

It was a popular move after headlines focusing the nation’s attention on Alaska’s $223 million “bridge to nowhere” and Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham’s guilty plea to accepting bribes from companies in exchange for steering government contracts their way. President Donald Trump pardoned the eight-term GOP congressma­n earlier this year as he was exiting the White House.

Over the years, the moratorium has been enforced by party rules and committee protocols. It does not exist in House or Senate rules, or by force of law.

Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, a veteran member of the Appropriat­ions committee, said he supports “limited fashion earmarks.”

“As long as they’re transparen­t and I have to put my name by them that I requested this stuff,” Simpson said. “I’m not gonna be asking for anything that’s stupid, that people are going to beat me up on. I’m going to say the city of Boise requested this stuff because they needed help in this area.”

 ?? Ap file ?? ‘DOESN’T KNOW THE NEEDS’: Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., speaks during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington last year.
Ap file ‘DOESN’T KNOW THE NEEDS’: Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., speaks during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington last year.

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