The Antle/Spencer "Give them their earmarks in exchange for
slashing everything else" argument seems premised on a
surprisingly naive understanding of the workings of Congress.
Consider the defense of pork that Daniel Patrick
Moynihan used to make. The idea is that the earmarked goodies are
okay because they buy political support for more important
legislation.
Pointing out that pork is only a small part of the budget misses
the point. The best conservative/libertarian case against pork is
embedded right in Moynihan's moderate/liberal case for it: It's the
pork that greases the skids to pass those big, expensive bills.
Theoretically, pork could also also be used to build a majority for
budget-cutting legislation, but that's usually not the way it
works.
Earmark reform throws up a roadblock to passing major
legislation, and as Phil reminds us below,
legislative roadblocks that make it harder to cut entitlement
spending also make it harder to massively increase it. Given the
tendencies of our political class, that's a trade-off that
Leviathan-wranglers should be pretty happy with.
topics:
Trade, Earmarks