The Budget Deal Is Overflowing With $12 Billion of Earmarks
Why are federal taxpayers paying for upgrades at tiny rural airports, Thanksgiving Day parades, and enhancements for Alaskan king crabs?

Voters in California went to the polls this week for a primary election that's the first step towards picking a permanent replacement for the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who died nearly six months ago.
In Washington, meanwhile, Feinstein is still wielding influence from beyond the grave. Her name is attached to 256 different earmarks included in the budget bill working its way through Congress this week. Those pork projects will cost taxpayers about $1.1 billion if the bill passes in its current form, the Washington Examiner reported Tuesday.
And that only scratches the surface. The partial budget deal—which contains six of the 12 appropriations bills that make up the discretionary portion of the annual federal budget—is overflowing with earmarks to fund lawmakers' pet projects. All told, there are more than 6,000 earmarks in the bill, costing taxpayers more than $12.7 billion, according to Sen. Mike Lee (R–Utah), who has urged Republicans to vote against the package.
Many of the earmarks in the package seem like things that would be better funded by local or state taxpayers, who at least might stand to benefit from projects like new sewer systems, new runways and other upgrades for tiny rural airports, and a plethora of highway projects. Some are truly head-scratching, like Sen. Tammy Baldwin's (D–Wis.) $1.4 million earmark for a solar energy project in Wisconsin, one of the places in America least well suited for a solar farm.
Plenty of others make no sense for the public to be funding at all. Like a $3.5 million earmark secured by Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D–Mich.) for The Parade Company, which runs Detroit's annual Thanksgiving Day parade. Or the $2.5 million earmark that will help build a new kayaking facility in Franklin, New Hampshire, curtsey of Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D–N.H.), as well as $2.7 million line item to help build a bike park in White Sulfur Springs, West Virginia, a town with a population of less than 2,300 people.
For that amount of money, "you could buy EVERY resident a $1,200+ bike" Sen. Rick Scott (R–Fla.), who has become a vocal critic of the earmarks in the bill, posted on X (formerly Twitter). "There's no way they need this much of YOUR money for this."
The same could be said for several Republican-based earmarks too. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R–S.C.) has inserted at least eight earmarks into the bill, forcing federal taxpayers to put up more than $33 million for things most will never use, like a new trail at Coastal Carolina University and an ROTC facility at the University of South Carolina. Among the dozens of earmarks inserted by Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R–Alaska), perhaps the strangest is the $4 million grant for the "Alaska King Crab Enhancement Project."
Wait, you might be thinking, didn't Congress ban the use of earmarks when tea party-era Republicans controlled the government? Yep, they did. But like fiscal responsibility and concern about America's ballooning entitlement costs, those efforts to limit pork barrel spending are now distant memories. Democrats voted to reinstate earmarks in 2021, and Republicans soon followed suit.
To Congress' credit, earmarks are now handled more transparently than they used to be—which is why you can view the full list of earmarks included in the budget bills here.
Still, some things never change. Earmarks remain expensive, wasteful exercises in cronyism—and with the country $34 trillion in debt, Congress should not be putting taxpayers on the hook for frivolous handouts to politically connected friends.
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The earmarks are strategic, Eric. Don't be so reluctant to admit it.
And reluctant. Congress was forced to do it because of mean Tweets.
Because petty corruption is how government gets stuff done.
What's the new cut-off for "petty"? A billion?
How many orders of magnitude is a billion less than the total budget?
"you could buy EVERY resident a $1,200+ bike"
You could get a Marlin or a Roscoe but nothing with dual suspension. Go up another grand and you could get more bang for your buck.
>>Sen. Rick Scott (R–Fla.)
dude only knows $200 beach bikes
lol "I'm shocked, shocked to find that there is gambling happening in this establishment"
Also, "overflowing" hardly seems the right word for $12B out of $6T. It's 0.2%.
Ignore the burning forest and gaze upon this poor tree with a broken branch.
It’s not that I don’t care about the individual tree or what ails it, but it’s a myopic concern overshadowed by a reality that’s more concerning in every way possible. Shouldn’t Reason be crossing their fingers and hoping Massie succeds in giving the federal government a 1% year over year cut? Instead we get bullshit about how horrible it would be to default on the debt or fail to pass another 1000 page omnibus bill that increases spending and infringes on more of our freedoms
did Cocaine Mitch get one of his inlaws whacked?
Yeah this pretty fucked up but at least the adults are back in the room. Thanks Eric!
While every penny counts, 12 billion is a win based on the budget spending.
Which percent value do you want? Actually budget,wait who am I kidding, there isn't one. Or the 6.13 trillion US spent in 2023.
12/6130 (All in billions) *100 = .2% of the budget.
Like I said - win.
I mean, this is what you asked for. Because you don't take your civic duty seriously.
'Why are federal taxpayers paying for upgrades at tiny rural airports, Thanksgiving Day parades, and enhancements for Alaskan king crabs?'
What kind of enhancements are we providing for crabs? Bigger claws? Is this one of them gender surgery things?
Really.
I understand the rural airports thing. The logic is that a network of airports is required for airports to be of any use, and the Federal government first wanted them for airmail, later for the war effort, then for connectivity, emergency transport, etc. So they've had a long history of providing grants to local airport operators to maintain and upgrade based on certain contingencies, like a minimum level of service or promises to keep the airport that was upgraded open for a number of years.
So, there's the reason "Why are federal taxpayers paying for upgrades at tiny rural airports..." Whether that reason is valid and compelling today is a different debate.
The "rural airport thing" is simpler than you think. There used to be a fund called the Airport Improvement Program (AIP). It was funded by a tax on aviation fuel, airline tickets, gate fees, landing fees and others. In other words the people who used the airports provided the funds.
In steps Bill Clinton. Remember the so called "budget surplus"? Well old Slick Willie merged all of the designated funds money into the General Fund, including the AIP, creating the illusion of surplus.
Now the funds for the AIP have to be taken from the General Fund giving the illusion of it being "pork".
Funny thing, the taxes designated for the AIP are still being paid. They go into the General Fund.
Typical Boehm article. Long on sensationalism, short on research and facts.
Why are federal taxpayers paying for upgrades at tiny rural airports, Thanksgiving Day parades, and enhancements for Alaskan king crabs?
Because ... Too many voters decided to elect Al'Capone gangs to do Gov-Gun THEFT in their favor instead of voting for politicians who actually showed a speckle of honor for the US Constitution.
Because Ol’ Hickory bad.
https://millercenter.org/the-presidency/presidential-speeches/may-27-1830-veto-message-regarding-funding-infrastructure
After the extinction of the public debt it is not probable that any adjustment of the tariff upon principles satisfactory to the people of the Union will until a remote period, if ever, leave the Government without a considerable surplus in the Treasury beyond what may be required for its current service.
As far as the airports go, it is because Clinton took the money set aside for them and put it in the General Fund to generate a false surplus.
Every dollar in every spending bill should be earmarked by Congress. Spending bills are supposed to originate in the House of Representatives, per the Constitution.
Unelected bureaucrats in federal and state agencies should not be granted wide latitude on how to spend the loot.
If some of the line items seem like wasted money, all the more reason to highlight them.
Because it's a free-for-all and everything's up for grabs.
Nice to have power over other people's money.
No doubt. Other People's Money. The OPM of the masses.
I still don't see how giving bureaucrats discretion in how and where to spend money is better than specifying it in legislation.
How else are you going to get anything done? The REpresentatives ask "what's in it for my district?" and have to be satisfied.
"... curtsey of Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D–N.H.) ..."
I assume you meant "courtesy" here. But I appreciate the imagery.