Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Even during crisis, urge for pork prevails

-

After nearly a week of haggling, Congress finally passed a $2 trillion coronaviru­s stimulus bill on Friday. The package contains direct payments to families, money for state and local government­s, loans for corporatio­ns and small businesses — and pork. Lots of pork.

Much of the spending can be justified as a reasonable attempt to mitigate the massive damage imposed by the virtual shutdown of large sectors of the economy to combat the spread of coronaviru­s. While many critics chafe at the “corporate welfare” contained in the legislatio­n, a coherent argument can be made for such aid when government­s across the country have ordered workplaces to close.

Less justified is the practice of using the urgency of the situation as a cudgel to advance unnecessar­y expenditur­es at a time of great uncertaint­y. The $25 million appropriat­ion for the Kennedy Center has received plenty of attention, but it’s barely the tip of the iceberg.

The measure also includes “$100 million for NASA constructi­on and environmen­tal compliance and the Legal Services Corporatio­n, as well as $300 million for the National Endowment for the Arts, National Endowment for the Humanities and Corporatio­n for Public Broadcasti­ng,” writes Michael Grunwald of Politico. Then we have “$20 million for the Bureau of Reclamatio­n to the $33 million for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.”

Mr. Grunwald also notes that House Democrats stuffed their bill with $31 million for “bio-surveillan­ce of wildlife,” $45 million for the Agricultur­al Marketing Service and, at a time when air travel has virtually ground to a halt, $26 million for TSA overtime.

Kimberely A. Strassel of The Wall Street Journal picks up the theme.

“The Forest Service gets $3 million for ‘forest and rangeland research,’ $27 million for ‘capital improvemen­t and maintenanc­e’ and $7 million for wildfire management,” she wrote Friday. Then there’s an “odd $78,000 ‘payment’ to the Institute of American

Indian and Alaska Native Culture and Arts Developmen­t. A water project in central Utah gets $500,000. Appropriat­ors can sneak a lot into 880 pages.”

Not content with all the above, Democrats included plenty of sops to their favorite constituen­cies, particular­ly organized labor. The Postal Service and its powerful union got $25 billion, while the measure includes “a major bailout of underfunde­d multi-employer pension plans that coal miners, Teamsters and other labor groups have been pushing for years,” Mr. Grunwald reports.

Some of the measures in the original House bill didn’t make it into the final legislatio­n, yet the exercise was instructiv­e.

“But if the Capitol Hill negotiatio­ns exposed the GOP as the stingier party when it comes to helping workers and vulnerable families, and the more generous party when it comes to helping bailed-out companies avoid strict conditions,” Mr. Grunwald observes, “the House bill does reinforce stereotype­s of the Democrats as the party of Big Government, exploiting a pandemic to pour taxpayer dollars into heating assistance for the poor, runaway youth programs and subsidies for little-used airports serving smaller cities. It wouldn’t be a Democratic economic relief bill without an extra $1 billion for Head Start, even when Head Start programs are shuttered for the pandemic.”

In addition, Ms. Strassel points out that while Democrats insisted on certain conditions for corporatio­ns that will benefit from Washington’s assistance, they saw no need to impose similar shackles on how state and local government­s use the billions they will receive under this legislatio­n.

No one know wheres this crisis will end. Lives are at stake from both the coronaviru­s itself and the economic fallout. Extraordin­ary action is necessary to help many Americans survive, and there will no doubt eventually be a fourth round of “stimulus” coming out of Washington. When it does, is it too much to hope during these extraordin­ary times that our representa­tives resist their worst instincts and confine their generosity to programs actually intended to blunt the damage caused by the coronaviru­s? The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

 ?? The Associated Press ??
The Associated Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States