WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 /PRNewswire/ -- Citizens Against Government Waste
(CAGW) today announced the final results of its online poll for the 2005
Porker of the Year. Sens. Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer (both D-N.Y.)
received 45.5 percent of the vote, with Reps. Tom DeLay (R-Texas) and Don
Young (R-Alaska) coming in a close second with 40.5 percent. The six
finalists were chosen by CAGW staff from among the 12 Porker of the Month
winners for 2005.
Sens. Clinton and Schumer were selected as February Co-Porkers of the
Month for pledging to fight President Bush's reforms of the Community
Development Block Grant (CDBG) program. The President's budget request for
fiscal 2006 proposed merging the $4.7 billion program with 17 other economic
development programs with total funding of $3.7 billion. The Bush plan would
have required cities to submit their proposals in advance and compete for
funds. Sen. Schumer called the plan a "meat axe approach" to reducing the
deficit and Sen. Clinton called the program a "lifeline" for New York.
The administration's Program Assessment Rating Tool categorized the CDBG
program as "ineffective," citing an "unclear purpose, loose targeting
requirements, and lack of results." Localities have wide latitude in using
the grants and Congress does a poor job of tracking where the money is spent.
Beneficiaries of CDBGs are often served by other state, local, for profit, and
nonprofit programs. CDBGs can also drive local stores and real estate
investors out of business. Past grants in New York have included $25,000 for
construction of the Music Conservatory of Westchester (one of the wealthiest
counties in the nation) and $500,000 for "streetscape improvements," also in
Westchester. In the fall of 2004, the Buffalo News reported that Buffalo
squandered much of the block grant money it had received over the past 30
years.
Sen. Schumer even made the absurd contention that federal handouts are the
engine of New York's economy. The real issues in New York are the negative
economic impact of the highest tax burden of any state and the rent control
laws that cause landlords to neglect capital improvements and abandon
property. Unfortunately for taxpayers, Congress failed to enact the
President's CDBG reforms for fiscal 2006.
The runners-up, Reps. DeLay and Young, were named October Co-Porkers of
the Month for resisting efforts to cut pork and wasteful spending after
Hurricane Katrina. When asked about the possibility of offsets for emergency
spending, Rep. DeLay was quoted in the Washington Times as saying that the
Republicans had "pared [the government] down pretty good." Since fiscal 1995,
the total federal budget has swelled by 67 percent and the number of pork-
barrel projects has increased by 873 percent, as measured by CAGW's annual
Congressional Pig Book. When the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner asked Rep. Young
about redirecting the combined $450 million in federal transportation funds
from the infamous "Bridges to Nowhere" in Alaska to hurricane victims, he told
the reporter, "They can kiss my ear."
More information on the finalists can be found in the Porker of the Month
Hall of Shame at http://www.cagw.org. The other finalists, in order of votes
received, were: Rep. John Spratt (D-S.C.), 4.2 percent; Rep. Ray LaHood
(R-Ill.), 3.2 percent; Rep. Charles Melancon (D-La.), 2.9 percent; and
Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), 1.9 percent.
Citizens Against Government Waste is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization
dedicated to eliminating waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government.
Porker of the Month and Porker of the Year are dubious honors given to
lawmakers, government officials, and political candidates who have shown a
blatant disregard for the interests of taxpayers.