|
Of all the
messages that
voters sent this
November 7,
among the
clearest was
their demand for
a change in the
way Washington
spends their tax
dollars.
Highly
publicized
boondoggles –
from the “Bridge
to Nowhere” to
an indoor
rainforest
museum in Iowa –
have sparked
public outrage
in recent years
and raised
awareness of
earmarks as a
tool of
influence and a
conduit for
overspending.
According to
Citizens Against
Government
Waste, the
federal
government spent
$29 billion on
9,963 pork
barrel projects
in fiscal year
2006, an
increase of 6.3%
from 2005, and
an increase of
over 900% since
1991. At the
same time, a
series of
scandals have
demonstrated how
corrupt
individuals,
regardless of
party, can abuse
their power and
manipulate the
system in
pursuit of
personal gain.
The sole silver
lining has been
that, by
demonstrating
the extent to
which our
present spending
process is
broken, such
waste and abuse
have given real
momentum to the
drive for
reform.
The effort to
reform the
federal budget
process,
including
earmarks, has
been a long-term
project of
fiscal hawks who
take seriously
Congress’
obligation to
the taxpayers.
When lawmakers
enter Congress,
they experience
firsthand the
frustration of
trying to combat
unnecessary
spending within
a system that is
institutionally
biased towards
allocating money
rather than
saving it.
For example,
under the
existing
congressional
budget and
spending
process, if a
congressman
wishes to cut a
wasteful pork
barrel project
from an
appropriations
bill and
succeeds in
amending the
measure to do
this, the
savings must be
channeled toward
other government
expenditures
rather than debt
or tax
reduction. This
and other
incomprehensible
policies that
create a
predisposition
to spend tax
dollars are the
unfortunate
legacy of the
1974 Budget Act,
and this is what
we must change
if we are to
bring lasting
fiscal
responsibility
and
accountability
to Congress.
Among those with
whom I have
worked closely
over the years
to bring about
this kind of
reform are
Representatives
Jeb Hensarling,
Chris Chocola,
Jeff Flake, Mike
Pence, and
former
Representative
Chris Cox.
Between 2002 and
2005, my
colleagues and I
introduced
several
comprehensive
budget process
reform bills to
rein in
spending,
require greater
oversight and
accountability,
and improve
government
accounting
practices. Among
the improvements
we fought for
were reforms to
give Members of
Congress and the
President more
effective tools
to challenge
wasteful
earmarks and
other frivolous
spending items.
Specifically,
our proposals
enabling
representatives
to use points of
order to enforce
budget
discipline and
prevent
unrelated
spending from
being tucked
into omnibus
appropriation
bills, would
have helped pare
pork. Similarly,
creating special
budget
protection
accounts, as we
urged, would
have allowed
Members of
Congress to
achieve true
savings when
they target
unnecessary
earmarks,
directing the
money saved
toward deficit
reduction or tax
relief. Finally,
our proposal to
give the
President
expedited
rescission
authority so
that he could
pinpoint
wasteful
spending items
in broad
legislation and
send these
individual
provisions back
to Congress for
a separate vote
on their own
merits, would
have served as
another key way
for us to
enforce fiscal
discipline and
discourage
unjustifiable
earmarks.
Despite the
common sense
nature of these
reforms,
enacting them
has been an
uphill struggle.
In 2004, the
House voted on
our
comprehensive
budget bill as
well as many of
its individual
elements, but
most Democrats
and some
Republicans
declined to
support the
needed changes.
Expedited
rescission, for
instance,
garnered 174 yes
votes – a
considerable
show of support
but insufficient
to pass the
measure.
The good news is
that over the
past two years,
the public’s
growing
awareness of
Washington’s
spending problem
has changed the
landscape and
improved our
ability to win
these reform
votes. Majority
Leader Boehner’s
commitment to
bringing these
initiatives up
for
consideration on
the House floor
has also been a
factor that has
helped us make
progress over
the past year on
earmark reform
and related
steps to
restrain
spending.
To prevent
earmark abuse,
we must shine
sunlight on the
budget and
spending process
in Congress from
its early stages
to the final
moment when
legislation
lands on the
President’s desk
for signature.
In other words,
we need
safeguards at
both the front
and back end of
spending bills
to ensure that
everyone can
find out what
earmarks are
included and who
requested them,
and give
Congress and the
President an
effective means
of working
together to
remove wasteful
spending items
before they
become law. In
fact, this is
what a majority
of the House
voted for
earlier this
year.
In May 2006, the
House passed
legislation to
bring greater
transparency to
earmarks as part
of a broader
lobbying
accountability
measure. When
the House and
Senate had
difficulty
resolving their
differences on
the lobbying
bill,
effectively
stalling its
progress, the
House moved
unilaterally to
pass an internal
rules change
that at least
makes House
representatives
more accountable
for earmarks
they request.
Under the new
rule, all
reported bills
and conference
reports –
whether they are
appropriations,
authorization or
tax bills – must
include a list
of earmarks,
along with the
names of the
representatives
who requested
them. If the
relevant
committee fails
to provide a
list of
earmarks, a
Member of
Congress can
raise a
procedural
objection
against
consideration of
the bill or
conference
report.
While this rule
change is not as
extensive as
many of us would
like, it’s still
a major step
toward bringing
earmarks out in
the open where
they can be
examined and
challenged.
Moreover,
pairing earmark
disclosure with
a legislative
line item veto,
such as the bill
I authored (H.R.
4890) which the
House passed in
June, creates a
backstop that
can be used to
catch
questionable
earmarks at the
end of the
process and
deter these
requests in the
first place.
My
constitutional
version of the
line item veto
enables the
President to
single out
individual
spending items
in bills that
reach him, put a
temporary hold
on this funding,
and propose that
Congress rescind
it. The House
and Senate would
then have up to
14 legislative
days to vote up
or down, without
amendment, on
the President’s
request. This
keeps the power
of the purse in
Congress, where
it belongs,
while ensuring
that rescission
requests receive
fast-track
consideration
and cannot be
ignored. This
measure closely
resembles the
expedited
rescission
provision that
failed to pass
the House in
2004, and the
fact that this
line item
legislation
passed easily by
a vote of
247-172 shows
how far we have
come.
I am hopeful
that the
Democratic
leadership of
the 110th
Congress will
work with us to
build on this
positive
momentum. House
Speaker-to-be
Nancy Pelosi has
reportedly said
the first agenda
item will be a
vote requiring
earmark sponsors
to be named. It
would certainly
be a welcome
development if
the incoming
House leadership
seeks to renew
the earmark
reforms we
passed this
fall.
Beyond this
initial step, I
believe there
are many areas
in which we can
cooperate to
prevent wasteful
spending and
live up to our
responsibility
to America’s
taxpayers.
RF
Paul Ryan
represents the
First District
of Wisconsin in
the U.S. House
of
Representatives. |