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Posted by Erick Erickson to Redstate.com
Tuesday, November 9th at 1:18PM EST
As I write this, Mitch McConnell is privately trying to get enough votes to kill an earmarks moratorium among Senate Republicans. The measure is sponsored by Senators Coburn, Cornyn, DeMint, Ensign, and Enzi, along with Senators-Elect Ayotte, Johnson, Paul, Rubio, and Toomey...
Senators McConnell, Inhofe, and others say earmarks make up a very small part of the budget and to get rid of them would put all the power in the hands of the Obama administration...
Yes, Congress does have the power to spend money, but the vast majority of earmarks are spent on completely unconstitutional projects and activities. Lets take some of the earmarks requested by Senator Jim Inhofe (who we hear has been on quite the war path lately in defense of earmarks). Did the Founders really envision the federal government paying for developing curriculum in the Tulsa public schools for students at risk of dropping out ($195,000) or a river ferry boat program in Oklahoma City ($1.7 million) or an “engineering incubator” in Norman ($137,200)? What clause of the Constitution do those fall under exactly?...
Of course not. So let me say it. Earmarks are certainly not the only issue, but they are the most telling as to whether Republicans really have learned their lesson in the minority. Here is what I suggest:
•Do not accept the conservative bona fides of any politician who has failed to take the moratorium or who argues for them.
•Do not allow any politician to speak to a tea party rally unless they have taken such a pledge.
•Criticize any “agenda” or any “contract” from any Republican leader or Republican entity which doesn’t include an immediate, unilateral earmark moratorium.
It is time to purge the earmarxists from the conservative movement.
Originally posted by WTFover
www.redstate.com...
Posted by Erick Erickson to Redstate.com
Tuesday, November 9th at 1:18PM EST
As I write this, Mitch McConnell is privately trying to get enough votes to kill an earmarks moratorium among Senate Republicans. The measure is sponsored by Senators Coburn, Cornyn, DeMint, Ensign, and Enzi, along with Senators-Elect Ayotte, Johnson, Paul, Rubio, and Toomey...
First, what's with this "moratorium" malarkey. Washington has so bastardized the "earmark" process, a moratorium is not the answer. The backlog of pet projects, merely put on hold until it has expired, would be a catastrophic, death blow to the economy. The only viable solution is to completely eliminate earmarks. My personal opinion is, if a project is worthy of taxpayer funding, it is worthy of its own bill. If it has to be concealed in other legislation, it is pure and simple theft from the taxpayers.
Senators McConnell, Inhofe, and others say earmarks make up a very small part of the budget and to get rid of them would put all the power in the hands of the Obama administration...
I do not have words for how sick I am of hearing "That's just a small part of the budget" or "That's such a small part of the deficit". Let me go ahead and quash the notion that only some Republicans use these phrases. Just today, with the announcement of the deficit commission's recommendations, some Democrats are making the claim, regarding a freeze on government salaries.
So what if these things are a fraction of the budget? My satellite television bill is a fraction of my budget. Dining out is a fraction of my budget. Copenhagen snuff was a small part of my budget. Internet access on my cell phone was a small part of my budget. A land line phone as well. But, you know what, once I made cuts to some and eliminated others, I significantly affected my budget, allowing me to put more of my money toward decreasing my debt. Pretty simple, really.
So, why doesn't Washington get it? Oh, they do, don't kid yourself. They just don't want you to put 2 and 2 together. As with may other things, they figure that if they can cover the truth with enough BS, you won't want to get any on you and will just give up. Guess what? November 2, 2010 was proof they are wrong.
Yes, Congress does have the power to spend money, but the vast majority of earmarks are spent on completely unconstitutional projects and activities. Lets take some of the earmarks requested by Senator Jim Inhofe (who we hear has been on quite the war path lately in defense of earmarks). Did the Founders really envision the federal government paying for developing curriculum in the Tulsa public schools for students at risk of dropping out ($195,000) or a river ferry boat program in Oklahoma City ($1.7 million) or an “engineering incubator” in Norman ($137,200)? What clause of the Constitution do those fall under exactly?...
The list of maddeningly ludicrous pet projects is endless. What is the amount spent on them over, say, the last ten years? Twenty years?
The author ends with
Of course not. So let me say it. Earmarks are certainly not the only issue, but they are the most telling as to whether Republicans really have learned their lesson in the minority. Here is what I suggest:
•Do not accept the conservative bona fides of any politician who has failed to take the moratorium or who argues for them.
•Do not allow any politician to speak to a tea party rally unless they have taken such a pledge.
•Criticize any “agenda” or any “contract” from any Republican leader or Republican entity which doesn’t include an immediate, unilateral earmark moratorium.
It is time to purge the earmarxists from the conservative movement.
Purge them, indeed. However, I still prefer to take it a step further and call for their complete elimination, rather than a moratorium.
If they don't listen, prepare for The Replacements II, coming to a polling place near you in the fall 2012.