"Next, there is the matter of earmarks. These special
interest items are often slipped into bills at the last hour-when
not even C-SPAN is watching. In 2005 alone, the number of earmarks
grew to over 13,000 and totaled nearly $18 billion. Even worse,
over 90 percent of earmarks never make it to the floor of the House
and Senate-they are dropped into committee reports that are not
even part of the bill that arrives on my desk. You didn't vote them
into law. I didn't sign them into law. Yet, they're treated as if
they have the force of law. The time has come to end this practice.
So let us work together to reform the budget process, expose every
earmark to the light of day and to a vote in Congress, and cut the
number and cost of earmarks at least in half by the end of this
session." (Applause.)
-President Bush, State of the Union speech, January 23, 2007[1]
"Another thing that's not responsible is the number of
earmarks that Congress included in a massive spending bill….
Congressional leaders ran in the last election on a promise that
they would curb earmarks. And they made some progress and there's
more transparency in the process, but they have not made enough
progress. The bill they just passed includes about 9,800 earmarks.
Together with the previously passed defense spending bill, that
means Congress has approved about 11,900 earmarks this year. And so
I'm instructing Budget Director Jim Nussle to review options for
dealing with the wasteful spending in the omnibus bill."
-President Bush, December 20, 2007[2]
In last year's State of the Union address, President Bush
pledged to cut the number of pork projects in half, from the 2005
peak of 13,492 down to 6,746.[3] House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
made the same pledge on behalf of her party's Members.
Congressional Democrats, however, brazenly violated that pledge to
the American people by including 11,738 earmarks in their
appropriations bills. And instead of halving the cost of earmarks,
they actually increased it from $18 billion in 2005 to $21
billion.[4] Before the next State of the Union address
turns the page to another year, President Bush has the power to
keep last year's pledge to the American people. He has the power to
sign an executive order cancelling the vast majority of earmarks.
Anything less would be a failure to keep his promise.
The American people clearly want strong earmark reform, but
Congress and the Washington establishment are bitterly opposing
this loss of their perks. Like President Reagan firing the striking
air traffic controllers, President Bush must decide whether to take
a stand for the American people or to cave in to Washington
interests.[5] The President's role is to defend the
national interest, sometimes against lawmakers focused only on
bringing tax dollars back to their districts. Cancelling earmarks
would not make the President many friends in Congress, but grateful
taxpayers would remember it.
The Earmark Problem
Originally, lawmakers would fund government grant programs and
then let federal agencies distribute the funds: (A) to state or
local governments through statutory formulas; or (B) to specific
groups though competitive application processes. Now, Congress
actually determines, within legislation, who will receive
government grants by "earmarking" grant money to specific
recipients. Earmarks are also known as "pork projects." Since 1996,
the number of annual earmarks has leapt from 958 to 11,738.[6]
Earmarking is a corrupting process. It effectively gives
individual lawmakers their own pot of tax dollars to distribute to
organizations of their choosing. Consequently, politics and
campaign contributions now play a larger role in government grant
distributions, at the expense of statutory formulas and competitive
application processes. Lobbyists promote their matchmaker role,
effectively auctioning government grants to the highest bidder. As
a result, the FBI has launched several corruption investigations to
determine whether lawmakers based earmark decisions on personal
profit.
The Executive Order Option
Most earmarks are not written into the actual appropriations bills
that are signed into law. Rather, they are included in conference
reports, which are explanatory statements that accompany the
legislation to the President's desk. Because they are not
technically part of the bill, the executive branch is not legally
bound to implement conference reports. The President could simply
direct agencies to ignore the earmarks listed in the conference
reports. The funds would still be spent, but the agencies would
have the discretion to distribute the funds by merit rather than
congressional diktat.
Some earmarks in the conference reports may have been given the
force of law by appropriations bill language stating that a certain
amount of a program's budget "shall be available for projects and
in the amounts specified in the explanatory statement described in
section…." Yet the majority of earmarks are likely not
protected by such language. President Bush could require
that all government grants, save for the fraction of them
earmarked in the legislative text, be distributed by merit or
statutory formulas.
In addition, this executive order should include a ban on
"phone-marking," whereby lawmakers simply call an agency and demand
funding for their pet projects, which are not even included in
conference reports. Phone-marking is effective, because most
agencies do not want to anger the lawmakers who vote on their
budgets. Yet because phone-marks never appear in legislation, they
are kept secret from the American people, undermining
accountability more than regular earmarks. Phone-marking is also
against the law; lawmakers are effectively asking agencies to set
aside the statutory laws for distributing government grants in
favor of their own personal whims.
In addition to banning federal agencies from implementing
phone-marks, the President can ensure that no earmarks slip through
the cracks by mandating that every agency keep a list of all grants
not distributed by the merit- or formula-based standards written in
the program's underlying statutes. The grants on such a list, which
should be made available to the public, could be further
investigated.
New Earmark Guidelines Are Not Enough
The White House is reportedly considering a watered-down proposal
that would only ask lawmakers to provide more detailed information
on, and justifications for, future earmarks, with the possibility
that some unjustified earmarks could eventually be cancelled.[7] This
would replace real reform with mere symbolism. Lawmakers would
continue spending a disproportionate amount of legislative energy
seeking and advancing earmarks. Many would continue to see their
job as primarily bringing home federal tax dollars and would
continue to feel pressure to vote for bloated spending bills simply
to secure their pork. Lobbyists would continue to assert more
control over the appropriations process. Government grants would
continue to be distributed on the basis of congressional politics
rather than by merit. Little would change.
Furthermore, President Bush did not pledge to create a few new
procedural guidelines; he pledged to cut the number of earmarks in
half. Guidelines can be too vague to apply to each earmark. In that
case, having the White House judge each earmark individually would
likely become a subjective practice and, therefore, susceptible to
political calculation-the very thing earmark reform is trying to
reduce.
Finally, it is very late in the Bush Administration to implement
new guidelines and see them through. At most, they would be in
effect for one year, which is not enough time to set a real
precedent for the next president to follow. And with the campaigns
dominating the fall schedule, even this year's appropriations bills
may not pass before President Bush leaves office. Thus, the
guidelines would not have the opportunity to change the culture of
earmarks. The better option is for the President to fulfill his
pledge and use his authority to cancel earmarks during his
remaining time in office.
Conclusion
In the November 2006 elections, the American people sent a clear
message that they are tired of runaway spending, pork, and
corruption.[8] Despite promising reform, the Democratic
majority in Congress produced an omnibus spending bill that
includes the second-most pork projects of any bill in American
history.The $21 billion of FY 2008 pork is not trivial:
It is equal to the entire federal personal income tax liability for
the states of Iowa, New Hampshire, New Mexico, West Virginia, and
Delaware combined.[10] President Bush pledged to rein in
earmarks and has the power to keep his promise by issuing an
executive order cancelling them.
Brian M. Riedl is
Grover M. Hermann Fellow in Federal Budgetary Affairs in the Thomas
A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.
[3] The
Web site of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) states: "The second
[transparency and accountability commitment] is cutting the amount
of earmarks in half-the total FY 2008 earmarks will be half of the
earmark total included in the FY 2006 bill under the
Republican-controlled Congress," at www.speaker.gov/legislation?id=0045. The
Office of Management and Budget's Web site states: "On January 3,
2007 President Bush called on Congress to cut the number and cost
of earmarks by at least half," at www.earmarks.omb.gov.
[6]
Earmark data from 1996 is calculated by Citizens Against Government
Waste, at www.cagw.org.
[7]
Robert Pear, "Earmarks Likely to Continue, but With Details,"
New York Times, January 22, 2008.
[9] The
FY 2005 omnibus appropriations bill (P.L. 108-447) contained 11,108
earmarks, according to Heritage Foundation calculations based on
earmark data from Citizens Against Government Waste, www.cagw.org.
The new FY 2008 omnibus bill contains an estimated 9,170
earmarks.
[10]
Individual Income Tax Returns: Selected Income and Tax Items by
State, ZIP Code and Size of Adjusted Gross Income, Tax Year
2005.