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To Grease Wheels of Congress, Trump Suggests Bringing Back Pork

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Trump Floats a Return to the Era of Earmarks

Earmarks were banned by Congress in 2011. But some in Washington — including President Trump — say it might be time to reintroduce the practice.

“I hear so much about earmarks— the old earmark system — how there was a great friendliness when you had earmarks. But of course, they had other problems with earmarks, but maybe all of you should start thinking about going back to a form of earmarks—” “The real name for this summer’s budget blockbuster from Washington, D.C., is— I introduce you to ‘Jurassic Pork.’” “There are 455 pet projects in this bill.” We fund things like Bridges to Nowhere” “and the Woodstock museum” “teapot museum in North Carolina” “A golf course was put in the defense authorization bill.” “$1 million for a parking garage in Ashland, Ky.” “$900,000 for an earmark for the City of Whitefish emergency operations center in Montana.” “—or $273,000 to combat Goth culture in Blue Springs, Mo.” “Grasshopper research in Alaska. Hell of a problem up there before the frost comes.” “The deciding vote that was necessary to pass Obamacare, for example, was secured with an earmark for Nebraska derided as the Cornhusker kickback—” “The ‘gator aid’ deal, the second Louisiana purchase.” “When did it become a national priority to study moth pheromones?” “Indoor tropical rainforests.” “$25 million to study the health benefits of peas, lentils and garbanzo beans.” “A sheep institute in Montana” $188,000 for the Lobster Institute. The Lobster Institute has been working on its ‘Lobster Cam’— That’s lobstercam.com.”

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Earmarks were banned by Congress in 2011. But some in Washington — including President Trump — say it might be time to reintroduce the practice.CreditCredit...Tom Brenner/The New York Times

WASHINGTON — Remember the infamous “Bridge to Nowhere”? The Montana Sheep Institute or the now-shuttered North Carolina teapot hall of fame?

Congress years ago eliminated funding for these types of pet projects, known as earmarks, after they became derided as government boondoggles, largess and a pathway to corruption.

President Trump now wants to bring them back.

In a freewheeling meeting about immigration with congressional Republicans and Democrats this week, Mr. Trump lamented the gridlock that has gripped the capital in recent years and suggested that earmarks, the practice of stealthily stuffing funding for pet projects into legislation, be exhumed from the legislative graveyard.

“Our system lends itself to not getting things done, and I hear so much about earmarks — the old earmark system — how there was a great friendliness when you had earmarks,” Mr. Trump said Tuesday. “Maybe all of you should start thinking about going back to a form of earmarks.”

Earmarks have a long and sometimes troubled history in Washington. Through the late 1990s and 2000s, they were used to persuade lawmakers to take tough votes in exchange for financial help back home. That spawned an entire industry of earmark lobbying and led to some enormous scandals, capped by the downfall of the lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

In 2011, on a bipartisan basis, earmarks were banned.

As they careen toward potentially perilous 2018 midterm elections, Republicans are now actively considering bringing them back. Lawmakers have complained for years that without earmarks, they have no reliable way of funding vital constituent interests, from roads to sewer systems. The House Rules Committee is planning to hold public hearings on the subject next week. Speaker Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin said this week that he supports his party having “conversations” about allowing earmarks to re-emerge.

But while earmarks were once Washington’s favorite fuel, the prospect of their return is already creating a backlash.

On Wednesday, both Republican senators from Arizona denounced the idea.

Senator John McCain said on Twitter that earmarks were “the gateway drug to corruption and overspending in Washington.”

“That’s why earmarks were banned and that’s why they shouldn’t be brought back from the dead,” said Mr. McCain, who made ending earmarks central to his platform when he ran for president.

Those sentiments were echoed by Senator Jeff Flake, who is not seeking re-election but warned that Republicans were putting themselves at serious political risk if they embraced earmarks.

“That’s crazy talk,” Mr. Flake said. “We got beaten like a borrowed mule in the 2006 elections largely because of the corruption that came with earmarks.”

In 2006, Mr. Flake led an early push to eliminate earmarks. At the time he fought unsuccessfully to strip from an agriculture bill $229,000 for dairy education in Iowa, $180,000 for hydroponic tomatoes in Ohio, $250,000 for the wine industry in California and $6.4 million for research on wood products in 10 states.

Earmarks have also created hives of corruption. That same year, former Representative Randy Cunningham, a California Republican, was sentenced to eight years in prison for taking bribes from military contractors to help facilitate government contracts. Two years later, in 2008, Mr. Abramoff, who showered members of Congress with gifts in return for favors, was sentenced to four years in prison for corruption.

At the peak of their excess, earmarks still represented only a sliver of the annual federal budget. However, failed or seemingly frivolous projects poisoned the concept and became symbols of fiscal irresponsibility run amok.

The most glaring examples of ugly earmarks have been for projects both big and small.

The most prominent is probably the infamous “bridge to nowhere” that would have connected the Alaskan town of Ketchikan to an airport on the nearby island of Gravina. After a $223 million earmark was secured in 2005, the failed project was scrapped 10 years later.

Others that have created dust-ups over the years included money allocated to cowboy poetry gatherings in Nevada, a coyote control program in West Virginia and the half million dollars allocated by Congress for the Sparta Teapot Museum in North Carolina.

Proponents of earmarks, which often include lobbyists, argue that the elimination of the practice has led to greater gridlock and polarization in Congress and that it is a legitimate part of the job to be appropriating funds to local programs and projects.

“It might help a return to regular order in appropriations if they can put earmarks in there,” said Diana Evans, a political science professor at Trinity College. “The problem is that the narrative, particularly among Republicans, has developed of earmarks being corrupt.”

That narrative started to shift last year after Mr. Trump was elected and some House Republicans expressed interest in a return to earmarks. At the time, Mr. Ryan delayed action on the idea because it appeared to be at odds with the “drain the swamp” platform that swept Mr. Trump to victory.

Mr. Trump appeared to recognize that an earmark revival would need to be regulated.

“We have to put better controls because it got a little bit out of hand, but maybe that brings people together,” he said. “Because our system right now, the way it’s set up, will never bring people together.”

The president’s sudden earmarks support drew cheers from some House Republicans such as Representative Tom Rooney of Florida. He has been pushing for an exception to the earmark ban to secure more money for modernizing the deteriorating water infrastructure in his state.

“I have received overwhelming support from people back home in Florida who expect me — not unelected bureaucrats — to make sure their tax dollars are invested in important programs and projects in their communities,” Mr. Rooney said.

Democrats have also expressed mixed views about earmarks. Representative Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the Democratic whip, said on Wednesday that he was in favor of them, while Senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri accused Mr. Trump of hypocrisy.

“Talk about the swampiest of swamp creatures,” Ms. McCaskill wrote in a post on Twitter. “You gotta be kidding me.”

Conservative groups are loudly urging Republicans to stand down.

“It’s a terrible idea,” said David McIntosh, president of the Club for Growth. “The bridge to nowhere is a perfect example, and we saw time and time and again why it leads to ridiculous results.”

Thomas Kaplan contributed reporting.

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump’s Idea For Unclogging Congress: Pork. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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