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Earmark
Victory May Be a Hollow One
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Last week's
big battle on the House floor over earmarks in the annual appropriations
bills was won by Republicans, who succeeded in getting the Democratic
leadership to agree to clearly identify each earmark in the future.
While this is certainly a victory for more transparency and openness
in the spending process, and as such should be applauded, I am concerned
that this may not necessarily be a victory for those of us who want
a smaller federal government.
Though much
attention is focused on the notorious abuses of earmarking, and
there are plenty of examples, in fact even if all earmarks were
eliminated we would not necessarily save a single penny in the federal
budget. Because earmarks are funded from spending levels that have
been determined before a single earmark is agreed to, with or without
earmarks the spending levels remain the same. Eliminating earmarks
designated by Members of Congress would simply transfer the funding
decision process to federal bureaucrats rather then elected representatives.
In an already flawed system, earmarks can at least allow residents
of Congressional districts to have a greater role in allocating
federal funds their tax dollars than if the money
is allocated behind locked doors by bureaucrats. So we can be critical
of the abuses in the current system but we shouldn't lose sight
of how some reforms may not actually make the system much better.
The real problem,
and one that was unfortunately not addressed in last week's earmark
dispute, is the size of the federal government and the amount of
money we are spending in these appropriations bills. Even cutting
a few thousand or even a million dollars from a multi-hundred-billion
dollar appropriation bill will not really shrink the size of government.
So
there is a danger that small-government conservatives will look
at this small victory for transparency and forget the much larger
and more difficult battle of returning the United States government
to spending levels more in line with its constitutional functions.
Without taking a serious look at the actual total spending in these
appropriations bills, we will miss the real threat to our economic
security. Failed
government agencies like FEMA will still get tens of billions of
dollars to mismanage when the next disaster strikes. Corrupt foreign
governments will still be lavishly funded with dollars taken from
working Americans to prop up their regimes. The United Nations will
still receive its generous annual tribute taken from the American
taxpayer. Americans will still be forced to pay for elaborate military
bases to protect borders overseas while our own borders remain porous
and unguarded. These are the real issues we must address when we
look at reforming our yearly spending extravaganza called the appropriations
season.
So we need
to focus on the longer-term and more difficult task of reducing
the total size of the federal budget and the federal government
and to return government to its constitutional functions. We should
not confuse this welcome victory for transparency in the earmarking
process with a victory in our long-term goal of this reduction in
government taxing and spending.
June
19, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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