Kevin Hanley's Common Sense: The Earmark Addicts
Written by Kevin Hanley   

Benjamin Franklin used to joke about how great it is to be a “rational” human being. Franklin observed that we have, unlike the animals, a remarkable ability to construct rational arguments (that would make the philosopher Socrates proud) and flowery language (that would make the poet Milton proud) to, in the end, justify our greedy desires. In that way, any potential feelings of guilt for acting selfishly get marooned on a barren, windswept island – out of sight and out of mind. When it comes to earmarks, too many members of the U.S. Congress – even self-proclaimed “fiscal conservatives” – have made this kind of selfish rationalization an art form (that would make Picasso proud).

About ten days ago, I brought up the problem of rampant earmarks (9,000 in 2007) to one candidate running to replace the retiring Congressman Doolittle. Unlike citizen statesmen like Senator Tom Colburn and Representatives John Campbell and Jeff Flake, the candidate refused to take a “no earmarks pledge.” He told me that earmarks are justified because he knows the “needs of the district better than the Bush Administration.”

Of course he does. But that is not the point. He doesn’t understand the big picture and the consequences of his individual actions. If elected, he will perpetuate the current “hide the truth culture” and erode the strength of our representative democracy and the ability to govern ourselves.

As we review the fundamental purpose of why we have a collective body called the U.S. Congress and why we cherish the groundbreaking idea of “federalism” (an American invention), it is absurd to think and an affront to our history that voters are being asked to elect 535 kings, each with their own kingdom. Our 100 Senators and 435 U.S. Representatives are supposed to pass laws and collectively appropriate money in public to advance the national interest. All of the actions by our elected representatives, including the expenditure of our hard-earned money, should be taken in public and only after a thorough analysis of why the expenditure is in the national interest. A legislature is supposed to act as a collective body. Earmarks are not reviewed in public, yet an appropriations bill for projects that have a national significance are aired in public sessions with the opportunity for public scrutiny.  In contrast, earmarks are almost always “air-dropped” into bills at midnight and need the approval of only one “legislator-king.”

When a candidate refuses to take the “no earmarks pledge,” he essentially justifies a process that results in taxpayer money for a “Bridge to Nowhere,” the building of a rainforest in Iowa, a Woodstock museum, and congressmen selling earmarks for campaign contributions. A candidate who says that he’s only for “good” earmarks isn’t telling voters the whole truth.

Our elected officials are also charged with the responsibility of carefully scrutinizing a proposed $3 trillion federal budget that has a projected $400 billion deficit.  So far, the U.S. Congress has not taken any actions to finance Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security without a massive increase in taxes. Our federal debt rises and our elected representatives are borrowing from future generations to pay current bills. That is the height of irresponsibility.

And yet, we have Congressmen bragging back home on how they secured a $500,000 or $1 million earmark for a project to benefit the district. Congress is spending our nation’s inheritance and pretending that they are doing us a favor by bringing home the “bacon.” Once he gets his slice of bacon, he won’t care how the huge federal government is going to spend the other $3 trillion next year. The earmark addicts just want to get re-elected rather than do the job that we elected them to do.

We need a 12-Step Program for the U.S. Congress. The 12-Step Program is a set of principles for recovery from addictive and compulsive behavior, developed by the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). The key ideas involve first “admitting that one cannot control one’s addiction or compulsion,” “recognizing a greater power that can give strength,” and “learning to live a new life with a new code of behavior.” This country is facing serious financial difficulties that will only hurt hard-working Americans if the U.S. Congress continues to act irresponsibly. Candidates for the U.S. Congress need to get the big picture. They have a chance to be citizen statesmen rather than run-of-mill politicians. They need to take the “no earmark pledge” now.

Kevin Hanley serves on the Auburn City Council and as Chief Consultant on health and insurance legislation with the California Legislature.  Send your comments to Kevin at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

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