USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing view: Politician­s love bullet-train boondoggle­s

- Grover Norquist Grover Norquist is president of Americans for Tax Reform.

The Democrats’ “Green New Deal” calls for building “high-speed rail at a scale where air travel stops becoming necessary.” There are 5,000 airports in the USA. This is tens of thousands of miles of “bullet trains.”

California just pulled the plug on its plan to connect just two cities. From the beginning, California’s bullet train was a politician’s solution in search of a problem. California wasted 11 years and billions of state and federal taxpayer dollars trying to figure out how to transport people from Los Angeles to San Francisco.

Hint: You can purchase a round-trip flight from LAX to SFO for $149 and arrive in an hour and a half.

In 2008, state authoritie­s said this bullet train would cost “only” $33 billion with the first segment completed by 2018. By the time Gov. Gavin Newsom scrapped much of the project, estimated costs ballooned to $98 billion. No passengers have gone anywhere.

These promises followed by waste, fraud and corruption join a host of other failed promises in areas ranging from light rail to publicly funded broadband.

And yet the politician­s love such mega projects. Especially if paid for by taxpayers from other states. Every single American helped pay for this California boondoggle. The project received $3.5 billion in Obama “stimulus” spending for “shovel ready” projects. Expensive shovels.

No one’s life is a complete waste. Some people serve as bad examples. Let us learn from the broken promises of California politician­s and President Barack Obama.

“The Music Man” fooled the townsfolk in city after city, but eventually he was exposed in Riverdale. And the fraud ended.

Back in 2009, Obama’s Transporta­tion secretary, Ray LaHood, optimistic­ally predicted, “One of the legacies for this administra­tion, for the president and the vice president, will be highspeed rail. That will be their transporta­tion legacy.”

If we learn to avoid repeating failures, it will be a positive legacy.

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