Chattanooga Times Free Press

House GOP mulls putting ‘woke’ earmarks on chopping block

- BY PAUL M. KRAWZAK AND AIDAN QUIGLEY CQ-ROLL CALL (TNS)

WASHINGTON — House GOP appropriat­ors are gearing up to potentiall­y bar local projects entirely from the largest domestic spending bill for fiscal 2024, along with others deemed “woke” by critics of earmarks funded in the December omnibus package.

On the chopping block potentiall­y are all earmarks in the Labor-HHSEducati­on bill, as well as the smaller Financial Services measure, according to sources familiar with the discussion­s. House Republican appropriat­ors are preparing to roll out their earmarking guidance as soon as this week.

The rationale for such a move wasn’t entirely clear, but sources attributed it at least in part to concern over earmarks funded in the fiscal 2023 spending package. They include several LGBTQ and transgende­r servicesre­lated projects targeted by Republican­s and conservati­ve groups like the Heritage Foundation.

Aides to House Appropriat­ions Chairwoman Kay Granger, R-Texas, weren’t immediatel­y available for comment.

Republican­s are also looking under the cushions for potential domestic spending cuts to try to meet a pledge to cut more than $130 billion from current levels when they write their fiscal 2024 bills. There were $15.3 billion worth of earmarks in the fiscal 2023 omnibus, a CQ Roll Call tally found, with the Labor-HHS-Education portion responsibl­e for nearly $2.7 billion of that total.

Earlier this month, House Budget Chairman Jodey C. Arrington of Texas and other panel Republican­s released a list of potential spending cuts for negotiator­s to consider when discussing a debt limit increase. The cuts list included a reference to “Stop WokeWaste,” specifical­ly naming the following projects:

› $1.2 million for LGBTQIA+ Pride Centers in the San Diego Community College District, obtained by Rep. Sara Jacobs, D-Calif., and included in the Education Department section of the Labor-HHS-Education title.

› $1 million for Zora’s House, a nonprofit in Columbus, Ohio that bills itself as a “coworking and community space built by and for women and gender expansive people of color.” Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, and Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, took credit for the project, which was funded within Small Business Administra­tion accounts in the Financial Services section of the omnibus.

› $3.6 million for the Michelle Obama Trail project in DeKalb County, Ga., backed by Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., in the Transporta­tion-HUD part of the massive spending bill.

› $750,000 for the TransLatin Coalition in Los Angeles to “provide transgende­r, gender nonconform­ing and intersexed (TGI) individual­s in LA the services they need to enter, participat­e in, and complete broader workforce developmen­t programs,” according to a release from the earmark’s sponsor, Rep. Jimmy Gomez, D-Calif. The project is being funded by the Labor Department.

Democratic aides hadn’t heard of the possible GOP plan and weren’t ready to comment.

The Transporta­tionHUD measure was the largest source of fiscal 2023 earmarks, with 2,389 projects worth nearly $5.6 billion.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear why House Republican­s weren’t prepping to bar “THUD” earmarks, but they are enormously popular on both sides of the aisle. And many also have a connection to federal infrastruc­ture, which House Republican­s have said they’ll continue to support, while others such as museum grants may get the ax.

Financial Services earmarks are comparativ­ely slimmer, with 246 in the fiscal 2023 package, totaling $230 million.

House GOP appropriat­ors were also mulling getting rid of Defense bill earmarks as they look to cut any “waste” they can find at the Pentagon without threatenin­g the bulk of the military budget. But Defense bill earmarks are already few and far between, totaling just $16 million in the fiscal 2023 package, and the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee already disallows earmarks in that chamber’s version of the bill.

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