Pelican Parts Forums

Pelican Parts Forums (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/)
-   Off Topic Discussions (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/)
-   -   Another taxpayer hero (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/361790-another-taxpayer-hero.html)

Rick Lee 08-13-2007 08:18 AM

Another taxpayer hero
 
Alongside Sen. Tom Coburn, Jeff Flake is the only other true taxpayer hero on the Hill. I wish those two would run for Pres. and VP. Get ready to puke.

House of Corruption?

By Robert D. Novak
Monday, August 13, 2007; A11


With the midnight hour approaching on Saturday, Aug. 4, near the end of a marathon session, Democratic and Republican leaders alike wanted to pass the defense appropriations bill quickly and start their summer recess. But Republican Rep. Jeff Flake's stubborn adherence to principle forced an hour-long delay that revealed unpleasant realities about Congress.

Flake insisted on debating the most egregious of the 1,300 earmarks placed in the defense money bill by individual House members that authorize spending in their districts. Defending every such earmark was the chairman of the Appropriations defense subcommittee: Democratic Rep. John Murtha, unsmiling and unresponsive to questions posed on the House floor by Flake. Murtha is called "King Corruption" by Republican reformers, but what happened after midnight on Aug. 5 is not a party matter. Democrats and Republicans, as always, locked arms to support every earmark. It makes no difference that at least seven House members are under investigation by the Justice Department. A bipartisan majority insists on sending taxpayers' money to companies in their districts without competitive bidding or public review.

Claims of newly established transparency were undermined by the late-night follies. Flake, who ran a Phoenix think tank, the Goldwater Institute, before coming to Congress in 2001, is immensely unpopular on both sides of the aisle for forcing votes on his colleagues' pork. He burnished that reputation by prolonging the marathon Saturday session and challenging selected earmarks.

What ensued showed the sham of earmark "reform." With debate on each earmark limited to five minutes per pro and con, and roll calls also pressed into five minutes, the House was mainly interested in finishing up and defeating Flake with huge bipartisan majorities. The mood of annoyance with Flake was personified by the 17-term Murtha, who as subcommittee chairman defended and retained every earmark (including notorious infusions of cash to his Johnstown, Pa., district).

Republican Rep. John Campbell, an Orange County, Calif., auto dealer and five-year state legislator who is serving his first full year in Congress, is a rare ally of Flake. Campbell began the debate by challenging a $2 million no-bid award to the Sherwin-Williams paint company for a "paint shield" against "microbial threats." The Pentagon did not want this, but Murtha delivered his usual contemptuous retort on earmarks: "We don't apologize for them because we think the members know as much about what goes on their district . . . as [do] the bureaucrats in the Defense Department."

Flake then forced votes on Murtha pet projects -- starting with "something called the Concurrent Technologies Corp." in Johnstown. In the brief time at his disposal, Flake tried to explain to an inattentive House how the company survives as an "incubator" for earmarks "just by getting more earmarks." He next challenged a $39 million earmark for the National Drug Intelligence Center in Johnstown, which the Pentagon does not need or want. Murtha was coldly dismissive, denying the reality that these no-bid awards do not allow taxpayers to recapture any benefits that the corporations derive from federal expenditures.

Other Democrats were silent during the sham debate. Nearly every one voted with Murtha, Speaker Nancy Pelosi's powerful lieutenant -- fearful of reprisal against their own spending schemes. Rep. Jim Cooper, a moderate from Tennessee, was the only Democrat consistently voting against the earmarks.

Republicans split so that motions by Flake and Campbell lost overwhelmingly. House Minority Leader John Boehner voted against most earmarks but did not make it a party issue as the rest of the GOP leadership backed Murtha. Two former Republican chairmen of the Appropriations Committee -- Jerry Lewis of California and Bill Young of Florida -- eagerly joined the debate on Murtha's side. Lewis, one of the House members under investigation by the Justice Department, defended one of his own earmarks and treated Flake with sneering contempt for wasting the House's time.

Flake lacked the time he needed on the House floor to explain complicated interlocking relationships with contributors who benefit from Murtha's earmarks. Claims of transparency are meaningless when all earmarks survive amid inattention from the media. But a few Republican House members are frustrated by GOP complicity as the House of Representatives fast becomes the House of Corruption. Joined by a few like-minded senators, they contemplate publicly repudiating their party leaders.

onewhippedpuppy 08-13-2007 08:24 AM

Again, I repeat: can't we just fire them all?

Mule 08-13-2007 08:27 AM

When you see both parties on the same side of an issue put your hand on your wallet & back up against the wall.

Porsche-O-Phile 08-13-2007 08:53 AM

How long until I can get a hunting license for politicians? What's the bag limit?

MRM 08-13-2007 10:56 AM

Who keeps re-electing them? We do. About a third of eligible voters vote in Congressional elections. The average citizen, to say nothing of voter, gives Congress poor marks but loves his individual member of congress. That's because we keep re-electing people who bring home the bacon. Why do we act surprised when politicians act the way the voters condition them to act?

We need serious earmark and campaign contribution reform. It won't happen because the folks in Washington think it's a good idea.

Hawktel 08-13-2007 11:06 AM

I've never foted for a incumbent that wasn't president yet. Not going to start now. Vote this pack of Yahoos out, and lets get some new ones in.

Rick Lee 08-13-2007 11:15 AM

One of my best friends is from Murtha's district and although my friend rails against Congress and pork, etc., Murtha is his hero. My friend's dad told me he paid his lobbyist $250k one year and got $20 million in pork for it thanks to Murtha. That's what I call a good ROI and bringing home the bacon.

bell 08-13-2007 11:25 AM

wasn't it a similar kind of corruption which brought the fall of rome?
maybe the myan calender is correct :D

David 08-13-2007 12:16 PM

Who was it that said something like, "A democracy will fail when the people realize that can vote for the government to give them money"?

Moneyguy1 08-13-2007 12:39 PM

All members of Congress are crooks except the one from your area.

Moneyguy1 08-13-2007 12:40 PM

All members of Congress are crooks except the one from your area.

Mule 08-13-2007 01:17 PM

Let's see, I'm currently in Louisiana. Have you heard of Bill (I don't know how the $80k in marked money got in my freezer) Jefferson?

RoninLB 08-13-2007 05:33 PM

eliminate earmarks 100% and the congressional game will change.

Rick Lee 08-13-2007 06:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RoninLB (Post 3425209)
eliminate earmarks 100% and the congressional game will change.

And if my aunt had balls, she'd be my uncle.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:26 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website


DTO Garage Plus vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.