Here we thought no more earmarks. Nope. Still 4.8 billion remain. Time to discuss this issue openly and cut them. See below:
“USA Today reported this week that billions in earmarks remain tucked into the funding measure that keeps the federal government running for the remainder of the fiscal year. Congress is debating right now how much to cut from the measure, yet these secret earmarks are not being openly discussed by members of Congress.
“Thatâ€
The USA Today story indicates that the House-passed short term funding measure fully funds $5 billion in existing earmarks. Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) has submitted legislation, in the form of an amendment to a “small business jobs bill,†to remove these projects.
According to USA Today, (Half of ‘earmarkâ€
House Republicans who crafted two short-term spending bills made $5.3 billion in cuts by going after some of Washingtonâ€
Much of the information comes from a March 17 report from the Congressional Research Service (CRS). According to that report, “funding that was made available to accounts for earmarks in FY2010 would still be available to the agency for obligations in FY 2011.†Uh-oh. The CR that states that “all of the earmark disclosure lists from the FY 2010 appropriations ‘shall have no legal effectâ€
If the Congress were to delete the approximately $10 billion in earmarks from the FY2010 process, one could make an argument that those funds never would have been expended (because of the “no legal effect†language) and that the American people should not believe that $10 billion in the final number of cuts are real cuts to spending for this fiscal year.
Sen. Coburnâ€
Another Coburn legislative item would bar federal unemployment benefits to those earning over $1 million a year. The senatorâ€
According to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service, as many as 2,840 households who have reported an income of $1 million or more on their tax returns were paid a total of $18.6 million in unemployment benefits in 2008. This included more than 800 earning over $2 million and 17 with incomes exceeding $10 million.
Coburn also defunds earmarks in the FY 2010 defense appropriations bill. One example: a $20 million earmark for the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate in Massachusetts. Elsewhere, highway and mass transit earmarks call for nearly $700 million in extra spending.
A major obstruction to Coburnâ€