Earmarks Are Back, and They're Just as Sleazy and Secretive as Ever
Lawmakers packed $8 billion of pork into the omnibus bill that passed Congress last night.

After a decadelong ban on the practice, members of Congress are once again loading up legislation with pork-barrel spending that the rest of us have to pay for.
The $1.5 trillion omnibus government funding bill that cleared the Senate on Thursday night (after passing the House earlier this week) marks the return of earmarks, spending that individual members of Congress can direct to their home districts. According to The Hill, citing a report being circulated among Senate Republicans, the 2,741-page bill includes more than 4,000 earmarks.
Sen. Mike Braun (R–Ind.), an earmark opponent whose office has been tallying up the projects included in the omnibus bill, claims the final total is about $8 billion.
That includes items like $3 million for a Palo Alto History Museum in California, according to a partial list of earmarks in the new legislation being compiled by Americans for Tax Reform, a conservative nonprofit. "The city is highly affluent and home to nine Forbes 400 billionaires," the group asks. "Why can't this be paid for with local or private dollars?"
A fair question, and one that could be equally asked of just about any earmark. Do federal taxpayers need to fund $800,000 for "artist lofts" in Pomona, California? Is there no other way to raise $3 million for a museum dedicated to Mahatma Gandhi in Texas or $500,000 to build a new ski jump in New Hampshire or $1.6 million to ensure "equitable growth of shellfish aquaculture" in Rhode Island? (Actually, yeah, it might be tough to attract private funding for that last one.)
According to the documents made public by Braun's office, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) appears to be one of the big winners in the latest earmark sweepstakes. Schumer's name is attached to 142 different projects, including $1.1 million for Sullivan County's "rail trail," $3 million for the Brooklyn Museum, and $1.5 million for capital improvements at St. George Theatre.
Yes, each of those items is only a few drops in the ocean of government spending, but they add up. And the bigger problem with earmarks has always been that they are secretive and opaque, often slipped into legislation with no public oversight or process for determining whether the spending is really needed. That makes them ripe for corruption—and suggests that lawmakers are well aware that many requests wouldn't stand up to scrutiny. It's often not even clear which lawmaker has requested what spending, which makes it difficult for voters to hold anyone accountable after the fact.
That's exactly why Congress outlawed the use of earmarks a decade ago after several high-profile scandals involving lawmakers steering public funds to pet projects for personal gain. Since then, some members of Congress and political observers have argued for a return of earmarks in order to grease the skids of government by providing a form of political currency for leaders to spend.
"It was only a small piece of it, but [earmarks were] something that you could do to bring that reluctant person along," Jonathan Rauch, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, told Reason in a 2015 interview. "When you lost it, both because of procedural changes and because the Tea Party said we're gonna vote against people who take earmarks, it was kind of in some ways the straw that broke the camel's back."
Other advocates for resurrecting earmarks promised that doling out pork could be done in a way that was more transparent and accountable. When the House Select Committee published a 2020 report proposing the return of earmarks—now to be known as "community-focused grants"—it promised that the new earmarks would be transparent, trackable online, and subject to greater scrutiny before being approved. The Select Committee's official recommendation is that those grants should be used only to support "meaningful and transformative investments in local communities."
"We laid out a framework that we thought could avoid some of the abuse of the past," Rep. Derek Kilmer (D–Wash.), the chairman of the Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress, told The Wall Street Journal in 2020.
Is that what we got in the omnibus? Hardly.
Instead, lawmakers rushed a 2,700-page bill through both the House and the Senate just days after the text was unveiled. There's no website tracking earmarks, no public process for connecting lawmakers to certain requests. Reporters and analysts have had to sift through the text of the bill to identify projects—which, again, are identified only by spending amounts and locations ($3 million for a history museum in Palo Alto, for example). Braun's office has helpfully published information about which members have requested which projects, but that's a far cry from the level of transparency that was promised.
"When lawmakers were pushing to bring earmarks back they promised unprecedented transparency, limits to projects, and greater scrutiny," Steve Ellis, president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a spending watchdog group that works to expose waste, tells Reason. Ellis says his staff have been poring over "hardly legible, and certainly not sortable and searchable" documents provided by various congressional committees.
"I would be able to tell you more if Congress had actually produced a downloadable, searchable, sortable database of the sort we were promised," he says.
On Thursday night, Braun tried to amend the omnibus bill on the Senate floor to strip out some 367 pages of pork projects. The amendment failed, and the bill passed with a broadly bipartisan vote of 68–31, sending it to President Joe Biden's desk.
"This spending bill," Braun tweeted soon after the vote, "is a disgrace."
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Acceptable norms Eric. That's what you asked for.
But no more mean tweets.
Actually, lots of mean tweets.
It's just that they are directed AT the president, not FROM the president.
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#FuckJoeBiden
So none of this spending actually does anything economically except create debt.
Were getting screwed like Kamala by Willie.
It's not your debt so don't worry about it.
That's what you really believe, isn't it? Oh, are you in for a surprise.
Within normal limits, as P.J. O'Rourke said.
That is what Boehm the Birdbrain voted for. Never, ever let the dumb SOB forget that.
Adults in charge
"And the bigger problem with earmarks has always been that they are secretive and opaque, often slipped into legislation with no public oversight or process for determining whether the spending is really needed."
Kind of like the entire damn bill this time.
I wish some republican would grow a pair and read the entire bill out loud on the floor; both to publicize the lack of review and debate, and to stall the bill while highlighting the democrat sneakiness.
Fuck Joe Biden.
Just sayin'.
Fuck Joe Biden.
Let's Go, Brandon!
Brandon fuck Biden!
Fuck Joe Biden.
So you'd prefer that legislators enacted spending bills with less specificity, leaving the details to appointed administrators? More scientific to use experts that way, right?
If Congress isn't putting any restrictions on how to allocate those hundreds of billions, the Deep State will be happy to help.
Democrats are doing all these awful things, but it's totally the Republicans that are the problem.
They're both the problem.
Take a look at the list for yourself. There's not exactly an absence of Republicans taking advantage of the earmarks.
Republicans literally stopped earmarks when they were in charge, but sure, BOATH SIDES!
Which explains why there are so many Republicans grasping for earmarks this time around, right?
It does. Democrats control every lever of power, and one of the levers they pulled ended the Republicans' earmark moratorium.
No one forced the Republicans to grab their own earmarks. They did so on their own.
I'd bet $100 that if/when Republicans do retake the House next session, that they will not ban earmarks again.
But most importantly, don't look at the Democrats.
Democrats legislating normally might be a bad and frightening thing to a libertarian, but Republicans seizing power and never giving it back, which is their current national project, should also give you pause as advocates for limited government power.
What power do Republicans have now?
Which party is attempting to fundamentally alter elections?
Which party has enacted stringent controls on what I can say through puppeteered companies?
Fucking A, Tony. What goes through your head?
Democrats are trying to seize power and never giving it back: Democrats are trying to pass national voting legislation that would permanently corrupt our elections.
Oh who tried to stop the spending again???
On Thursday night, Braun (R) tried to amend the omnibus bill on the Senate floor to strip out some 367 pages of pork projects....
EVERY-TIME - It's a Republican that stands up to massive spending. But don't let facts get in your way...
You mean every time they are not in charge...
And when they are in charge the 'not in charge' Democrats demand MORE, MORE, MORE spending... As-if that wasn't old news.
Correct: if earmarks are the law of the land, it is necessary for Republicans to take advantage of them even if they disapprove of them.
>>"We laid out a framework that we thought could avoid some of the abuse of the past," Rep. Derek Kilmer (D–Wash.)
lying liars and the lies they lie.
Evasive words:
"framework, think ( the liars favorite) , avoid, some..."
Weasel words.
FJB
When I see these budget shenanigans, I think about ALL healthcare spending being handled in the same slapdash corrupt fashion, and wonder why anyone would think that's a good idea.
On the other hand, to be sure, those who get to slap the dash think it a fine plan.
Only $8 billion?
That's less than the $14+ billion we're giving Ukraine for no justifiable reason.
Uh oh, Nardz is posting pro-Kremlin propaganda again.
But seriously, we have crippling inflation, runaway gas prices and 60% of the country lives paycheck to paycheck. The best use of that $14 billion is to give it back to the Americans that generated it in the first place. If they feel they need to support Ukraine, well it's still allegedly a free country and they can send the money themselves.
Foreign aid via government force is immoral.
It’s perpetual TARP. U.S. Banks making risky loans to billionaire Ukrainian mobsters (see the Panama Papers) are being made whole AGAIN. The U.S. gets stagflation and recession . It’s pretty damn scary.
I'm not sure what's "pro-Kremlin" about pointing out that the $14 billion we give to Ukraine serve no purpose for the American people.
Care to explain to me how my life gets better because the US government spends that money?
"Is there no other way to raise $3 million for a museum dedicated to Mahatma Gandhi in Texas"
Before we talk about how to raise the money, can we talk about why we need a museum dedicated to Mahatma Gandhi in Texas?
reminds us to never again allow the King of England to push us around.
The King of England never, ever, pushed Texas around.
Mexicans did.
Nothing left to cut.
The administration hired 288,000 government employees throughout blue states. Guess the employees work in museums and art.
Every dollar Congress spends should be earmarked, per the Constitution. Spending bills should cover particular subjects and be readable in less than an hour, too.
Earmarks aren't the problem, the problem is the total amount being spent.
+
Look on the bright side...theyre giving us more than were paying in taxes!
...or something like that.
FJB
Giving us what? Useless paper monopoly money?
Some of us WORKED/CREATED/BLED for that money.. The only thing they 'gave' us for that was a big fat sh*t burger and a subscription to the Nazi-SLAVE state.
If I was in Congress, I would add an earmark giving me $100 million or so to retire on an island in the Med. They probably wouldn't catch until after I got the money.
Senates final vote on the omnibus bill - Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022.....
Against the MASSIVE SPENDING....
Democrats - 0
Republicans - 31
Democrats are NEVER EVER EVER against spending.
The fact Democrat voters even pretend they are is just baffling.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) appears to be one of the big winners in the latest earmark sweepstakes. Schumer's name is attached to 142 different projects..
As the Democratic sheeple follow the corruption of their leaders... "So long as 'we' get personal perks from the armed theft....."
100% Criminals... Armed Criminals is what the left is made of.
A possible approach to this “earmarks” problem. The Congress can have it’s salaries, or it can have
“earmarks” to play with. It cannot have both. Which might The Congress pick poses an interesting question. Think the answer would be equally interesting.
"That includes items like $3 million for a Palo Alto History Museum in California, according to a partial list of earmarks in the new legislation being compiled by Americans for Tax Reform, a conservative nonprofit. "The city is highly affluent and home to nine Forbes 400 billionaires," the group asks. "Why can't this be paid for with local or private dollars?""
To be fair, you could say that Alabama who consistently sends Republicans to Congress that consistently vote to defund the government shouldn't feel entitled to tax dollars, a large portion that are financed by California, going to their state so they can take, take, take.
That said, earmarks could be good or bad. They actually allow our federal government to somewhat function. That is at least better than not. Better yet would be fuller devolution to states. Let the states that are making the money keep more of it (and the taker states receive far, far less.) The money would at least be spent according better to the wishes of the people who put it in.
"When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.“ — Benjamin Franklin
Yes, people take this away from Franklin, but it is just as right as most of what Cosby says.
I don't see the downside. Pork projects that got headlines were dumb, but how else are you going to get a lot of this stuff done? And congresspeople being able to bribe each other with free money is a heck of a negotiating tool.
Killing earmarks was a dumb PR move based on silly provincial notions of how legislating works, as if we never left the Will Rogers times. Plenty more are on the table, like Rick Scott's term limits (barf) to go alongside his near-immediate dismantling of Social Security and Medicare and raising taxes on the bottom 47%.
I urge you libertarians to recognize the grand libertarian project made manifest in one bill. Call Mitch McConnell and insist that he tie all 2022 campaigns to it.
Of course you don't see a problem, you amoral totalitarian noodlewristed shitweasel.
There needs to be a LAW that every earmark is officially registered by the state, who requested it, who voted for it and make it available online and easily accessible to the public.
The data should be accessible via an API that software developers can access and develop apps that can track sort and expose the offenders and disgusting public officials.
For years the Democrats and Republicans have been hoisting hundred and now thousand page bills on the American Public. Their interests are not for the benefit and welfare of the public that sent them to Washington. Instead we have special interest elected officials interested only in bettering their large donors and lobbyists.
Term limits might be part of the solution but it also may have gone so far as to not be able to be fixed.
I agree mostly with the diagnosis, but not your prescription, GG. A little too extreme. Vote the bastards out until you get people who know WTF they're doing.
How, when they have the entire Federal Budget of the United States of America to buy votes with?
That sounds real good, but do you know of super honest selfless undiscovered human species? It has not been the same legislators for 200+ years. They are simply a reflection of who we are as a species.
There is a saying that goes something like the smartest, best people would never be dumb enough to run for office.
Budget?
They keep using that word. I do not think it means what they think it means.
In the meanwhile, vote them out.
And "vote them out" doesn't really address 90% of the problem, the career bureaucrats and "N"GOs
We select juries randomly. Those juries can have the power to decide whether someone lives or dies, that's some pretty heavy shit to trust to a group of randoms.
Why can't we select Congress randomly? You get 1 term of 2 years, do what you think is right with your time. I'm sure this system has flaws, but our existing one doesn't fucking work either.
You could even combine this with Mencken's idea of having a 3rd house devoted entirely to repealing legislation. Only 1/3rd of this house needs to agree in order for a law to be repealed. If 1/3rd of your randomly selected body thinks a law is bad, it's probably bad. Leave the other 2 houses alone, they can spend years bickering among themselves to pass a law only to have it repealed 2 days later by a group of plebeians.