Senate Democrats reject Republican’s bill to ban earmarks

From The Hill. (H/T ECM, Marathon Pundit)

Excerpt:

The Senate on Tuesday morning defeated a proposal from Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) to ban congressional earmarks.

In a 39-56 vote, members defeated a temporary ban on the appropriations procedure. The moratorium was offered as an amendment to a food-safety bill that is scheduled for a final vote Tuesday morning.

Senate Republicans have already passed a voluntary ban on earmarks in their caucus, but several GOP senators have objected to it. Democrats have so far declined to ban earmarks from their members.

The legislation would have established an earmark moratorium for fiscal years 2012 and 2013, and also would have covered the fiscal year that began on Oct. 1. Congress has yet to pass an appropriations bill for the current fiscal year, and in the lame-duck session lawmakers are likely to approve either an omnibus spending bill or a continuing resolution to keep the government operating.

In speeches on Monday, Coburn said the ban was the only way to rein in out-of-control spending. He did not speak on Tuesday morning, but Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who supports the ban, alluded to the issue in remarks about the current debate over tax cuts.

“Republicans have heard the voters loud and clear,” McConnell said. “They want us to focus on preventing a tax hike on every taxpayer, on reining in Washington spending and on making it easier for employers to start hiring again.”

But Democrats repeated the argument they laid out in floor speeches on Monday, asserting that the earmark process has already been made transparent.

“We have put in place the most dramatic reform of this appropriations process since I’ve served in Congress,” said Majority Whip and Appropriations Committee member Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). “There is full disclosure in my office of every single request for an appropriation. We then ask those who have made the requests to have a full disclaimer of their involvement in the appropriation, so it’s there for the public record. This kind of transparency is virtually unprecedented.”

It’s going to be business as usual until we take the Senate in 2012.

One thought on “Senate Democrats reject Republican’s bill to ban earmarks”

  1. One of the signining reds has already broken it – so I think that’s a much bigger story:

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40344219/ns/politics-capitol_hill/

    While I agree that we should ban earmarks, doing so will only cut .5% of the budget, not nearly enough…one of the main reasons many of the ranking republicans have opposed it – you create a divisive batter over an issue that is barely a drop in an ocean of spending.

    though I do like your last sentence, it makes it sound like the reds have taken the high road when indeed they have not.

    Like

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