[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 580 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
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118th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. RES. 580
Expressing opposition to congressional spending on earmarks.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
March 7, 2024
Mr. Scott of Florida (for himself, Mr. Barrasso, Mr. Braun, Mrs.
Blackburn, Mr. Johnson, Mr. Lee, Mr. Hawley, Mr. Paul, and Mr. Daines)
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on Appropriations
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing opposition to congressional spending on earmarks.
Whereas fiscal year 2022 marked the return of ``congressionally directed
spending'' and ``community project funding'', also known as
``earmarks'', after a 12-year hiatus;
Whereas the return of earmarks marked the return of lawmakers using their powers
to circumvent the rules of the Senate in order to direct taxpayer
dollars to wasteful projects;
Whereas, while Congress has the power of the purse, it must be prescriptive and
effective in funding programs, projects, and activities of the Federal
Government, which is now more than $34,000,000,0000,0000 in debt, rather
than focus on funding earmarks that are wasteful in nature;
Whereas the 118th Congress has reinstituted and embraced the wasteful practice
of earmarking, as shown by the more than 5,000 requests for earmarks in
the House of Representatives and the more than 19,000 requests for
earmarks in the Senate for fiscal year 2024;
Whereas Congress has already dramatically increased earmarking since its return,
increasing from $9,000,000,000 for 4,970 earmarks passed in fiscal year
2022 to $15,300,000,000 for 7,234 earmarks passed in fiscal year 2023;
Whereas the reckless, 1,653 page, $1,700,000,000,000 Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2023 (Public Law 117-328) enacted in December 2022, appropriated
billions of dollars to earmarks even though the United States is more
than $34,000,000,000,000 in debt and experiencing the highest level of
inflation seen in 40 years;
Whereas the massive, fiscal year 2023 omnibus spending bill included funding for
earmarks, including $3,600,000 for the Michelle Obama Trail in Georgia,
$2,500,000 for a Chinatown arts building in San Francisco, $7,000,000 to
fix staircases in the city of Pittsburgh, $12,000,000 for a pedestrian
walkway in Vermont, and $3,000,000 for a theater and event space in
Pennsylvania, in addition to other earmark projects such as botanical
gardens in California, bike parking in Maryland, streetscaping in
Connecticut, and a dance festival in Massachusetts;
Whereas the fiscal year 2024 minibus spending bill released on March 3, 2024,
includes 605 pages of earmarks with 6,630 individual projects totaling
$12,700,000,000, including $3,500,000 for Michigan's Thanksgiving Parade
Foundation, $1,000,000 for an environmental justice center in New York
City, $500,000 for gardens in San Francisco, $4,000,000 for a waterfront
walkway in New Jersey, theater and opera house renovations in Georgia
and Pennsylvania, and city hall renovations in Washington and Rhode
Island;
Whereas former Senator Tom Coburn condemned the use of earmarks as a ``gateway
drug to overspending'' and former Senator John McCain called earmarks
``the gateway drug to corruption and overspending in Washington'';
Whereas several former Members of Congress and lobbyists have been convicted of
crimes related to earmarking;
Whereas it is crucial that Congress spend taxpayer dollars wisely and with the
best return on investment, especially during times of historic inflation
and Federal debt levels; and
Whereas Congress must stop this reckless Federal spending and corrupt political
dealing, start paying down the debt of the United States, and get the
United States back on track: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Senate--
(1) condemns the use of ``congressionally directed
spending'' and ``community project funding'', known as
``earmarks'', to direct and appropriate taxpayer dollars in any
form;
(2) reaffirms the previous ban on the use of earmarks and
affirms to restore the ban permanently and immediately; and
(3) affirms the need for Congress to reign in overspending
to help curb the inflation crisis that is crippling the
families of the United States.
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