The most recent edition of the Congressional Pig Book, released by Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW), has exposed a significant increase in earmark spending by U.S. lawmakers. This year’s report highlights $26.1 billion in pork-barrel projects for fiscal year 2024, showing a considerable rise from the previous year.
Earmarks, often known as “pork,” are funds set aside by Congress for specific projects, typically benefiting a legislator’s local constituents.
Current Event: 2024 Pig Book Press Conference! pic.com/rGXS1l3SNh
— Citizens Against Government Waste (@GovWaste) June 12, 2024
This practice has faced criticism for encouraging wasteful spending and being a tool for political favoritism. The report highlights a 43.9% increase in the number of earmarks compared to the previous fiscal year, reflecting a broader trend of rising earmark allocations.
The 2024 Pig Book points out that a small group of influential legislators on the House and Senate Appropriations Committees are responsible for a disproportionate amount of these earmarks.
The 2024 Congressional Pig Book reveals 8,222 earmarks totaling $22.7 billion.
Earmarks are considered the most expensive, corrupt, and unfair practice in Congress’s history.https://t.co/fpDlLhjoqR
— Citizens Against Government Waste (@GovWaste) June 12, 2024
For example, Senate Appropriations Committee Ranking Member Susan Collins (R-Maine) leads the list with 231 earmarks totaling $575.6 million. Other major recipients include Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Angus King (I-Maine), Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who collectively received over $2.3 billion in earmarks.
This year’s Pig Book also highlights the lack of transparency in the earmark process. Over one-third of the earmark spending, totaling $8.2 billion, was approved without attribution, meaning no specific lawmakers were named as sponsors of these projects. This lack of transparency complicates efforts to hold legislators accountable for their spending decisions.
Critics argue that earmarks contribute to government waste and corruption, citing past scandals that led to a moratorium on earmarks from 2011 to 2021. Despite the moratorium, earmark spending has returned strongly, with the current total being the highest since fiscal year 2010.
CAGW President Tom Schatz stressed that the continued growth in earmark spending underscores the need for a permanent ban to prevent the recurrence of wasteful and corrupt practices in Congress. The report acts as a call to promote fiscal responsibility and transparency in government spending.
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