A new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll reveals
that voters now consider banning pork projects - rather than
immigration reform, tax-cut extensions, and lobbying reform - their
number-one priority for Congress this year. In that case, Sen. Tom
Coburn (R., Ok.) is more accurately defending the people's will
than many of his more senior colleagues.
In a body that operates under unanimous consent, where lawmakers
rarely challenge each other's parochial spending priorities and
extreme deference is given to long-serving leaders, Coburn
shattered decorum by challenging seven-term Sen. Ted Stevens (R.,
Al.) "Bridge to Nowhere" in last year's highway bill. His challenge
was joined by only 14 Senate colleagues with the courage to vote to
strip this wasteful project.
Six months later, Coburn has once again declared war on his
colleagues' pork. This time, his amendment to strip Mississippi's
"Railroad to Nowhere" (a measure championed by the state's powerful
Republican Sens. Trent Lott and Thad Cochran) received a full 47
votes. And that was only the first of his 19 planned amendments to
the Senate's larded up supplemental spending bill.
There is no shortage of targets in this bill. After President Bush
proposed $92 billion to fund the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan as
well as Gulf Coast rebuilding, the House quickly passed this
legislation with few changes. The Senate Appropriations Committee
had no such restraint. The $14 billion they stacked on top of the
bill included: a $4 billion farm-subsidy package that, despite
near-record farm income, would further subsidize nearly everyone
who currently receives farm subsidies regardless of need; $594
million for new highway spending (some as far away as Hawaii, a
safe 4,085 miles away from Katrina's deadly path); $20 million more
AmeriCorps; and a $1.1 billion giveaway to the fisheries
industry.
Much of the backlash against this bill has rightly centered around
the aforementioned "Railroad to Nowhere." Senators Lott and Cochran
would spend $700 million of Gulf Coast relief funds to reroute a
rail line a few miles northward. Why? The Senate report claims it's
to fix damage from Hurricane Katrina. But the line has already been
repaired, at a cost of $300 million, and the trains are running
just fine.
The real reason to shift the tracks is purportedly to make way for
construction of a "centralized gaming district" of private,
Vegas-style casinos. Even though a state commission recently
declared that this long-standing proposal "is no longer seen as
practical," because of its steep cost, the appearance of federal
dollars appears to have changed the calculus.
Of course, this project's justifications shift on a seemingly
hourly basis. Sometimes proponents assert the rail should be moved
because of the high number of motorists and pedestrians struck by
its trains (The Washington Post reports that Mississippi's rail
accident rate from 2001 through 2005 reached a 30-year low). At
other times proponents fret that the new tracks remain a flooding
risk (yet the rail bed, which rises several feet off the ground,
may reduce flooding risk inland). Project proponents do not explain
why casino developments are any more suitable for such a
flood-prone region.
President Bush is not fooled. The White House has issued its most
specific and credible veto threat yet, stating in no uncertain
terms that "if the President is ultimately presented a bill that
provides more than $92.2 billion, exclusive of funding for the
President's plan to address pandemic influenza, he will veto the
bill." The next day, 35 senators signed a letter pledging to uphold
such a veto.
With this seemingly ironclad veto promise, the additional $14
billion (with the exception of avian-flu funding) may finally be
derailed. Why then, would the Senate reject Sen. Coburn's attempts
to remove this wasteful spending? This could lead to an ugly
conference committee battle between Senate appropriators attached
to their pork, and House lawmakers not eager to carry the Senate's
water in a spending showdown with the White House.
Since 2001, the federal government has expanded by 45 percent, as
Congress enacted the most expensive agriculture, education,
Medicare, and highway bills in American history. Additionally, the
number of pork projects more than doubled as the "Bridge to
Nowhere" came to symbolize Congress's isplaced priorities. By
leading the fight against this pork, and the excessive spending of
the Senate supplemental bill, Coburn is doing all taxpayers -
present and future - a favor.
Brian Riedl
is Grover M. Hermann Fellow in Federal Budgetary Affairs in the
Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in the National Review Online