Jim Moran is one of the most notorious earmarkers around, earmarking hundreds of millions of dollars per year and using those earmarks to get campaign cash, as we’ve reported extensively. And he’s completely unashamed about it. President Obama says that earmarks are “a bad Washington habit that wastes billions of taxpayer dollars” and has vowed to veto any bill with earmarks in it, as the House has imposed a moratorium on earmarks. But Moran told C-SPAN that he is finding ways around the moratorium, openly defying the president and the House. Check out this article from The Hill:
House appropriator: We know how to get around earmark ban
By Daniel Strauss - 03/03/11 02:31 PM ETA House Democrat indicated Thursday that lawmakers are getting around the new ban on earmarks by convincing Obama administration officials to fund their pet projects.
Rep. Jim Moran (D-Va.), an appropriator, made the remarks during an appearance on C-SPAN’s “Washington Journal” program.
In response to a question about whether earmark bans have “curtailed” the Appropriations Committee’s power, Moran responded, “No, and I have to say — and I’m going to be as candid as possible — the appropriators are going to be okay because we know people in agencies and so on. We will continue to do the best job we can for the country and to some extent for our congressional districts because that’s our job as well.”
“But I feel quite strongly that the writers of the Constitution knew what they were doing when they gave the power of the purse to the Congress,” Moran said.
The new House GOP majority has embraced a moratorium on earmarks, as has the Senate Appropriations Committee.
In his State of the Union address earlier this year, President Obama vowed to veto any bill that included earmarks.
Moran said that despite the moratoriums, earmarking has not vanished.
“I was a budget officer in the Nixon administration, back in the late 60s, early 70s. Every dollar was earmarked. It’s just a question of who does the earmarking,” Moran said. “It seems to me that everyone would be far better off if Congress took back its appropriate role and distributed funds… that is in the best interest of the country and then let the executive branch weigh in so you have some balance.”
Unbelievable.

Pingback: Year in Review: Moran Edition | Retire Jim Moran