Albuquerque Journal

Senate appropriat­ions earmark requests start rolling in to Congress

Money for water projects, community centers for states

- BY JENNIFER SHUTT

The Senate has officially kicked off its process for inserting “congressio­nally directed spending” into appropriat­ions bills for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, with almost all Democrats but only 15 Republican­s in that chamber participat­ing thus far.

The first batch of publicly disclosed earmark requests went live Friday, under Senate Appropriat­ions Committee guidelines that members post their requests within 15 days of submitting them.

The first panel deadline for requests was June 16 for the Energy-Water subcommitt­ee, responsibl­e for the highly popular Army Corps of Engineers accounts, among others, though requests have also trickled in for the Agricultur­e subcommitt­ee, which had a June 17 deadline.

Senate Republican­s have been split on the subject of earmarks since it became apparent Democrats in both chambers intended to restore the practice this year after a decadelong absence, due to various “pay to play” scandals in the mid-2000s and the appearance of wasteful spending.

Of the 15 Republican­s who’ve submitted requests so far, nine are members of the Appropriat­ions Committee, led by ranking member Richard C. Shelby of Alabama, who’s retiring after this Congress.

Six Republican­s on the spending panel haven’t asked for local projects yet, including Kentucky’s Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader and a onetime prolific earmarker, and Florida’s Marco Rubio, who faces a potentiall­y tough swing-state reelection fight next year.

One noteworthy Republican who’s asked for earmarks is South Dakota’s John Thune, the No. 2 GOP senator and McConnell’s top vote counter. Thune’s sole request at this point is $21.9 million for a Bureau of Reclamatio­n project in Tea, South Dakota, to build additional water delivery lines and expand the number of communitie­s served in his home state as well as neighborin­g Iowa and Minnesota.

On the Democratic side, just two senators have yet to submit requests: Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, considered one of the most vulnerable incumbents on her side of the aisle, and Montana’s Jon Tester, the top Democrat on the Senate Defense Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee, which isn’t accepting earmark requests this year.

One Appropriat­ions panel Democrat whom party leaders need to be especially attentive to is West Virginia’s Joe Manchin III, whose independen­t streak in the 50-50 chamber means much of President Joe Biden’s agenda hinges on him.

Manchin has submitted requests so far for both the Agricultur­e and Energy-Water bills; the largest is nearly $12.9 million for stormwater system improvemen­ts in the town of Rainelle, West Virginia.

Other sizable Manchin requests include $7 million for a community developmen­t center at Eastern West Virginia Community and Technical College, and $4 million for an activity center in Baker, West Virginia, including “a pool, racquetbal­l courts, indoor basketball court, tennis court, public library, fitness center, table tennis with an attached shell building with inside walking/jogging track.”

Republican­s’ earmark requests are also important because they will determine how much finding GOP senators ultimately get for their states.

 ??  ?? Sen. Joe Manchin
Sen. Joe Manchin

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