Defense Authorization gets ‘the Coburn Treatment’

Much of the discussion on Capitol Hill nowadays centers on earmarks: those discrete priorities that senators and representatives quietly insert into moving legislation. While House Republicans celebrate a commitment by Democrats to subject earmarks to scrutiny and challenge, word comes that one of the Senate’s committed earmark foes is casting his gaze in a new direction:

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., is taking his earmark crusade across the Capitol to the House fiscal 2008 defense authorization bill, mobilizing his aides and interns to blanket House Armed Services Committee member offices with calls and e-mails requesting more information on their individual add-ons. It is an unorthodox tactic — and one that has prompted criticism from House aides, who point out that the House committee’s report on the authorization bill complies with House rules. It includes 13 pages of charts providing details on 458 individual projects totaling $7.7 billion, they say… The earmark disclosures in the House-passed defense authorization bill include the budget account from which the funding will be drawn, a brief description of the project, the amount, the intended recipient and the requesting member. But Coburn is not satisfied with the disclosures.

Shocking indeed, that anyone would find this disclosure insufficient to warrant the expenditure of taxpayer dollars. How could anyone need to know more than is shown here (in a randomly-selected disclosure page from the relevant committee report). No reasonable person can find fault with Senator Coburn for not being entirely satisfied with the information disclosed in the report. To ask for additional scrutiny is not the same as recklessly opposing every specific spending provision. More Senators would do well to show the interest Coburn is in how the committees propose to spend taxpayer dollars. After all, aren’t they the ones who take the blame for $500 toilet seats and $800 hammers? If you’re going to vote for them, might as well know about it beforehand.

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