The column was obviously tongue-in-cheek (or
maybe it’s not so obvious — Alanis Morrisette has killed
irony, damn her). I don’t seriously expect members of Congress to
give up on 98 percent of federal spending in exchange for more
Bridges to Nowhere. But I am serious that the disproportionate
focus on earmark reform is a waste of time and something that won’t
lead to smaller government.
The strongest argument against earmarks is the one John makes:
they contribute to the “culture of spending” by greasing the skids
for the passage of legislation that really bloats the federal
budget. (Though, pace John, there actually are some
examples of it being used by the limited-government side — in
today’s political climate, pork is essential to passing free-trade
agreements. CAFTA almost certainly wouldn’t have passed without
it.) But the very fact that this kind of logrolling is central to
the way our legislative process works is why it is naive to pretend
members of Congress won’t find a way to enage in it, even if
earmarks are banned.
Earmarks determine who disburses the spending — Congress — not
the level of spending. So getting rid of earmarks in and of
themselves won’t directly cut any spending. It is possible to spend
wastefully without earmarks (most of the extraneous spending in
last year’s peanuts for the troops bill wasn’t
earmarked). And, frankly, big government programs like the
prescription drug benefit and SCHIP have their own constituencies
and appeal. Without a serious conservative attack on the premises
behind these bills, even an earmark moratorium won’t hold them at
bay for long. Though some pork busters, like Tom Coburn and Jim
DeMint, take on entitlements and earmarks at the same time.
I won’t speak for Richard, but I would have no problem with the
anti-pork crusade if pork was being used as a metaphor for how
expensive and out of control the federal government has gotten in
general. But for the non-Coburns, earmarks can be a cheap and easy
cop-out to avoid tackling the real issues. Republican efforts to
rein in federal spending by focusing on “waste, fraud, and abuse”
have failed for almost thirty years, because the incentives for
waste are always there and the real money isn’t in pork. I don’t
see much evidence that the current campaign is going to end any
differently.