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But lawmakers get greedy and pushy, and some earmarks are just plain dumb: the $50 million earmark approved years ago to build an indoor rain forest in the middle of Iowa.
In recent years, under GOP control of Congress, earmarking practices have gotten out of control. In 2005, according to the White House budget office, there were 13,492 earmarks in appropriations bills totaling almost $19 billion.
Q: What is being done about them?
A: Democrats imposed a one-year ban on earmarks when finishing up last year's spending bills, and they pledge to cut earmarks in half from prior levels. President Bush is demanding that the number and total cost of earmarks be cut in half.
Democrats largely have adopted GOP changes put in place last year requiring that earmarks placed in bills be identified, along with their sponsors. The idea is that greater disclosure will serve to keep wasteful projects out of the bills.
But the House Appropriations Committee chairman, Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., has sidestepped the reforms by keeping bills free of earmarks during initial House debate, depriving rank-and-file lawmakers of the chance to force votes to knock them out of bills.
Q: Does more openness work?
A: Are you kidding? Virtually every time anti-earmark lawmakers try to kill stuff they say is pork, they lose by overwhelming votes. But the "bridge to nowhere," a $223 million project connecting Alaska's lightly populated Gravina Island to Ketchikan, was shelved after it drew scorn from the media and the public.
Q: Does the president propose earmarks?
A: All the time. Bush's agencies propose the vast majority of projects and award the vast majority of grants and federal contracts. They sometimes appear to favor Republicans; for example, the Homeland Security Department's fire grants program has rewarded GOP districts with three-fifths of all grants.
At the same time, the Education Department bureaucrats has pressed school districts that want reading improvement grants to buy materials from contractors favored by GOP officials.
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