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The Pork Barrel
From In These Times, July, 11,2006,
the month liberal, pro labor news publication.
Legislating
Under the Influence
Up close and personal with the House Appropriations Committee By David Sirota
David
Sirota is the co-chairperson of the Progressive Legislative Action
Network (PLAN) and a Senior Editor at In These Times. He also writes for Working Assets, and is a twice-a-week guest
on "The Al Franken Show." His new book Hostile Takeover was published by Random House's Crown Publishers.
When I was hired to work on the U.S. House Appropriations Committee in 2001, I was told
by many in Washington that the panel was one of last remaining places in
Congress where things actually get done. By the time I left Capitol Hill some two and a half years later, I had learned what
all Americans are now realizing: The panel certainly does get things done, but not for the people who elected its members.
It gets things done almost exclusively for those lobbyists and corporate interests that buy influence through campaign contributions.
The committee has become, in short, the breeding ground of congressional corruption.
Over the last year, the public has learned exactly how lawmakers on the Appropriations Committee have abused the
incredible power granted to them as overseers of how the federal government spends tens of billions of dollars.
And the power is incredible. As chief spokesman for Democrats on this committee, I had a firsthand view of how
this panel has been abused by the Republicans. Tens of millions of dollars move from one district to another for purely political
reasons--all with the quick stroke of a pen behind closed doors. One line anonymously inserted in a thousand-page bill can
mean the difference between the creation or elimination of national consumer regulations bought and paid for by industry campaign
donors. The loudest protests from the most passionate members of both parties can be silenced
on the floor of the House with a mere scowl from one of the Appropriations subcommittee chairmen. At a moment’s notice
these “cardinals,” as they are known, will remove the protester’s pet projects unless they stop criticizing
whatever heinous provisions were attached to the spending bill being debated.
Such power was bound to be abused in the current Congress, where the concepts of restraint or law-abiding behavior are
treated as punchlines. First, in March, came the conviction of senior appropriator Duke Cunningham. The California Republican
steered millions of dollars of federal contracts to the same company that paid him more than $2 million in bribes.
When Cunningham was forced to resign, Congress replaced him with Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Texas). Already under indictment for
money laundering, DeLay is also at the center of the pay-to-play scandal surrounding Jack Abramoff—the convicted Republican
lobbyist who tried to buy off members of the Appropriations Committee on behalf of his clients. DeLay, who had previously
served on the Appropriations Committee before stepping down to become Majority Leader, was a close associate of Abramoff’s.
He took lavish trips paid for by lobbyists with interests before the committee and pocketed campaign cash from Abramoff and
his associates.
But DeLay is not alone. Rep. John Doolittle (R-Calif.), has received tens of thousands of dollars from Abramoff and his
clients, while using Abramoff’s D.C. restaurant as a venue for fundraising parties. Additionally, Doolittle is among
three members of the committee who accepted a combined $200,000 from the defense contractor, MZM, the corporation at the center
of the Cunningham bribery conviction.
And consider committee chairman Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.). The Washington Post reported in May that he is now
officially a target of a federal law enforcement investigation. He steered “hundreds of millions of dollars in federal
projects for clients of one of his closest friends, lobbyist and former state Congressman Bill Lowery,” according to
the San Diego Union Tribune. In exchange, “Lowery, the partners at his firm and their clients have donated 37
percent of the $1.3 million that Lewis’ political action committee received in the past six years.”
Lewis is not the only lawmaker whose behavior on the committee has caught the attention of federal investigators. Joining
the chairman is Democratic appropriator Alan Mollohan (W.V.). The Washington Post reports that he “used his seat
on the House Appropriations Committee to secure more than $150 million for five nonprofit groups”—groups associated
with the West Virginia congressman’s own business partners. During the very same time, Mollohan became a multi-millionaire.
This pay-to-play corruption on the appropriations committee extends to national security. Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), who
heads the homeland security appropriations subcommittee, has diverted funds for making tamper-proof identification cards to
“companies that are donors to his political causes,” according to the New York Times. Rogers has taken
11 trips paid for by an organization to which the congressman helped steer a no-bid contract, and even moved funds to a company
that employs his son. The result of Rogers’ shenanigans has been a more than two-year delay in the production of the
ID cards.
These examples are disturbing. But as I also learned in my time working for the Appropriations Committee, the most corrupt
behaviors are often perfectly legal. As the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics notes, “The committee does not
just provide funding for lucrative government contracts, but is also famous for inserting last-minute industry-backed provisions
blocking regulatory actions.”
Appropriators, knowing the spending bills they write must pass in order to keep the government operating, slip provisions
into these bills that prevent the government from enforcing already-passed laws. This corrupt practice is so well-honed, industry-funded
think tanks like the Heritage Foundation have issued detailed reports instructing lawmakers on where they can most effectively
use riders to do corporate favors. These riders are perfectly legal and profoundly damaging.
Consider what happened in the wake of Mad Cow scares, when Congress passed a law mandating country-of-origin labeling
of meat. When it came time to implement the law, Rep. Henry Bonilla (R-Texas) used his chairmanship of the agriculture appropriations
subcommittee to insert language into a spending bill to postpone the law indefinitely. He was rewarded for his efforts by
tens of thousands of dollars of campaign cash from the food processing industry. Especially grateful was Tyson Foods, which
in 2004 gave Bonilla its private jet so that he could fly to fundraisers all over the country.
Stemming the corruption emanating from the Appropriations Committee is no small task. Some have suggested prohibiting
appropriators from earmarking federal money for specific projects. But that would merely move spending decisions out of Congress
and into the executive branch, and not solve the problem. Unelected bureaucrats, not elected officials, would get to decide
how money is spent—a clear affront to Congress’s constitutional power of the purse, and no guarantee that corporate
interests would not simply shift their influence-buying operations to the White House.
Sunlight laws are a better first step. The root of the problem lies not in appropriators’ power, but in the use
of secrecy to exercise that power. Right now, appropriators can slip earmarks or destructive regulatory riders into giant
spending bills anonymously, meaning no threat of public embarrassment for those trying to abuse their power. Worse, the bills
carrying these provisions—often thousands of pages long—can be brought to vote just hours after they are written,
ensuring there is no time for scrutiny.
I remember late nights gulping down coffee, frantically leafing through finalized spending bills trying to answer lawmakers’
questions about what they would be voting on. The appropriations process, I learned, is purposely rigged. To remedy the situation,
Congress must pass a new law that forces appropriators to put their names next to the provisions they sponsor and forces the
Appropriations Committee to provide ample time for their bills to be scrutinized before they are passed into law.
The next logical step is for Congress to embrace a public financing system of elections—a concept being aggressively
pushed by Rep. David Obey (D-Wisc.), the House Democrats’ senior appropriator. America currently relies on a system
of legalized bribery to elect our Congress. Lawmakers’ campaigns are funded by the corporate contributors, who then
demand favors such as wasteful federal contracts in return. A public financing system
of elections, such as the ones adopted by Arizona or Connecticut, would allow candidates to run for office without having
to participate in this corrupt cycle, and without feeling the need to use their positions to reward campaign donors. {Given the resistance to election reform, only a grass-roots movement for a Constitutional
amendment will produce this result on a national level—jk}.
The House Appropriations Committee may seem like just another congressional panel, but it is not. It is the place that
distinguishes America’s system of government from most others, because it is where democracy—not a sole executive
or dictator—exerts control over the nation’s treasury. But like a disease afflicting a vital organ, corruption
is eating away at this committee. Already, that corruption has destroyed the bipartisanship that used to ensure that the panel’s
important work was handled seriously. And now, as that corruption spreads from the committee into the Congress as a whole,
our entire system of democracy is under threat from a money-dominated political process gone mad. Unless Congress reforms
the way this committee works, America can never hope to take back our government from the corporate interests that own our
political process.
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Another Pork Barrel, Private
Contractors.
Los Angeles Times
Report
blasts Bush administration on private contracts. He promised while electioneering
that there would be smaller government and reduced spending through the use of private companies. Instead there has been an 86% increase in payments to private companies and at the same time an increase
in the number of people working for the federal government--jk.
Wednesday, June 21, 2006
WASHINGTON —
The Bush administration has greatly expanded the use of contracts with private companies to provide public goods and services
even as the number of government employees has increased, a congressional report has found.
But the administration's tilt toward doing business with private companies has failed to bring promised savings and
has been characterized by "waste, fraud, abuse and mismanagement," according to the report released
this week by Rep. Henry Waxman of California, the top Democrat on the House Government Reform Committee. Of
particular concern, the report said, were contracts related to homeland security, the Iraq war and Hurricane Katrina recovery.
Waxman's report is described as the first comprehensive assessment
of contracting under the Bush administration, which had vowed upon taking office in January 2001 to provide services more
efficiently while reducing the size of government. It reveals an 86 percent increase in contracts with private businesses,
from $203 billion in 2000 to $377.5 billion a year in 2005 — nearly double the growth of federal spending as a whole. At the same time, federal payrolls also have grown: The government now has about 1,874,000
civilian employees, up from 1,738,000 five years ago.
'"Nearly 40 cents of every dollar appropriated goes to private contractors, which is a record level," Waxman said. Yet, Waxman
said, his biggest concern is not the growth in contracts, but the abuse of them. Poor
planning and weak oversight, the report said, have led to government overspending and corruption by companies that have padded
their invoices, charged for services not provided and received award fees for jobs that were completed late.
In June of 06, the Republicans voted not to investigate or oversee
the federal contractors in Iraq or Afghanistan—jk.
Enter supporting content here
#211 Section on stolen elections
Dishonorable
Mention
Chester Trent Lott
Sr. (born October 9, 1941) is a United States Senator from Mississippi and a member of the Republican Party. He served as Senate Majority Leader from 1996 to June 6, 2001, interrupted only by a brief period in January 2001, during which he held
the position of Senate Minority Leader. After Sen. Jim Jeffords of Vermont left the Republican Party to become an independent in June 2001, giving
the Democrats control of the Senate, Lott served as Minority Leader until his resignation from that position in December 2002 due to controversial
remarks. The remark in praise of Senator Strom Thurmond, an open racist, highlighted Lott’s own racist voting record. From 1981 to 1989 he was also a House Minority Whip. As Majority Leader
he played a prominate role in the impeachment trial of Bill Clinton.
David Bruce Vitter
(born May 3, 1961) is an American Republican politician, currently serving as the junior U.S. Senator from Louisiana. He is known for his opposition
to same-sex marriage and his support of abstenance sex education. . Vitter won a special election to Louisiana's 1st Congressional District in 1999, succeeding Republican
Congressman Bob Livingston, who resigned after an adultery scandal. Vitter in July of 2007 was
identified as a client of "D.C. Madam" Deborah Jeane Palfrey's escort service in Washington, D.C. Vitter appeared
with his wife on television following this revelation. She stated that she forgave him.
New inductees into the Ethics Hall
of Shame:
Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa
Rep. Alan Mollohan (D-W-Va)
Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Ca)
Updated June of 08
http://www.cleanupwashington.org/hos/ is a site dedicated
to the corruption and malfeasance of our congressional leaders.
Listed there with details
are Tom DeLay, Randal Duke Cunningham, Bob Ney, Richard Pombo, Conrad Burns, William Jefferson, and Jack Abramoff.
http://www.multiline.com.au/~johnm/religion/spurious.htm, about various bible sources, their lack of agreement
http://nofreelunch.org/reqreading.htm about drug companies influencing medical decisions.
Senator Ted Stevens (born November 18, 1923) who has served since 1968 was convicted on 7 counts
contected to handling of public funds.
From wikipedia.org:
On July 29, 2008 Stevens was indicted
by a federal grand jury on seven counts of failing to properly report gifts and found guilty at trial three months later (October
27, 2008). The charges relate to renovations to his home and alleged gifts from
VECO Corporation, claimed to be worth more than $250,000. The indictment followed a lengthy investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for possible corruption into Alaskan politicians and was based on his relationship
with Bill Allen. Allen, then an oil service company executive, had earlier pled guilty, with sentencing suspended pending
his cooperation in gathering evidence and giving testimony in other trials, to bribing several Alaskan state legislators,
including a disputed claim about Stevens' son, former State Senator Ben Stevens. Stevens declared, "I'm innocent," and pled
not guilty to the charges in a federal district court on July 31, 2008. Stevens asserted his right to a speedy trial so that
he could have the opportunity to promptly clear his name and requested that the trial be held before the 2008 election.
Home Remodeling and VECO
May 29, 2007, the Anchorage
Daily News reported that the FBI and a federal grand jury were investigating an "extensive" remodeling project at Stevens'
home in Girdwood. Stevens' Alaska home was raided by the FBI and IRS on July 30, 2007.
The remodeling work doubled the size of the modest home. Public records show that the house was 2,471 square feet
(230 m2) after the remodeling and that the property was valued at $271,300 in 2003, including a $5,000 increase
in land value. The remodel in 2000 was organized by Bill Allen, a founder of
the VECO Corporation, an oil-field service company and has been estimated to have cost VECO and the various contractors $250,000 or more. However, the residential contractor who finished the renovation for VECO, Augie Paone,
"believes the [Stevens'] remodeling could have cost ― if all the work was done efficiently ― around $130,000 to
$150,000, close to the figure Stevens cited last year.” In June, the Anchorage
Daily News reported that a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., heard evidence in May about the expansion of Stevens'
Girdwood home and other matters connecting Stevens to VECO. In mid-June, FBI agents questioned several
aides who work for Stevens as part of the investigation.[64] In July, Washingtonian magazine reported that Stevens had hired "Washington’s most powerful and expensive lawyer", Brendan Sullivan Jr., in
response to the investigation. In 2006, during wiretapped conversations with
Bill Allen, Stevens expressed worries over potential misunderstandings and legal complications arising from the sweeping federal
investigations into Alaskan politics. On the witness stand, "Allen testified
that VECO staff who had worked on his own house had charged 'way too much,' leaving him uncertain how much to invoice Stevens for
when he had his staff work on the senator's house ... that he would be embarrassed to bill Stevens for overpriced labor on
the house, and said he concealed some of the expense."
Bob Penney
In September, The Hill reported that Stevens had "steered millions of
federal dollars to a sportfishing industry group founded by Bob Penney, a longtime friend". In 1998, Stevens invested 15,000
in a Utah land deal managed by Penney; in 2004, Stevens sold his share of the property for $150,000.
Guilty verdict
On October 27, 2008, Stevens was
found guilty of all seven charges against him. He is the fifth sitting senator ever to be convicted by a jury in U.S. history,
and the first since Senator Harrison A William. (D-NJ) in 1981. His sentingcing
hearing is scheduled for Feb. 25. However, FBI Agent Chad in February 2009 filed a whistleblower
affidavit concerning gross government misconduct (FBI sending back to Alaska a witness who would have undercut their
case and other exculpatory materials were withheld), This was addressed in a hearing on Feb. 13. At
the hearing the Judge Sullivan held the prosecutors in contempt for failing to deliver documents to Steven's legal counsel.
If there lips are moving they are lying (said of politician)
To understand developments in our political system
(both parties) one must understand the role of neoliberalism. Any analysis which
misses this connection is grossly inadequate. (Neocons follow neoliberalism economic
policies).
We have an evil, evil system. Words such as imperialism, greed, corporate greed, neoliberalism, neoconservate, globalism, bought politicians,
control of media are descriptive. There are reasons why the labor movement
has collapsed. It is the politics of neoliberalism, an out growth of corporate
greed. Given how it opposes the public weal, we have devoted a section to expose
just what neoliberalism is—a thing that the five corporations which own broadcasting will not do.
THE BRINK OF ECONOMIC COLLAPSE
Things have gotten worse, the hole the neocons has dug
is much deeper. The economic stats are worse than bad: the trend is toward greater disparity of wealth and on top of that the U.S. is loaded with debt and imbalance of trade. The debt can through fiscal austerity can be paid off (as some of it was under Clinton), but the
trade imbalance will only grow due to the dismantling of are industrial base and the setting up of free trade agreements such
as NAFTA. The current foreign debt
is equaled to over 70% of GDP, a ratio unmatched by far among industrialized nations.
To find out what economics is called the dismal science and the role of neoliberalism.
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