| Porker
of the Month: Sen. Kay Bailey
Hutchison |
Citizens Against
Government Waste (CAGW) has named Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison
(R-Texas) Porker of the Month for loading up her goodie bag
just before Halloween as she prepares to leave the Senate to
run for governor of Texas. While claiming to be a fiscal
conservative, the four-term senator requested 149 pork-barrel
projects costing $1.6 billion in authorization and
appropriations bills for fiscal year 2010. On September
28, 2009, she told the Austin American-Statesman,
“I’m proud of being able to garner Texans’ fair share of their
tax dollars.” “Sen. Hutchison is repeating the same old
insidious quackery about the earmarking process: that it
can be made accountable and that it somehow levels the
spending playing field,” said CAGW President Tom Schatz.
“The only fair way to distribute the taxpayers’ money is to
eliminate the practice altogether and instead work to ensure
that every dime of taxpayer money is spent using the budget
laws and rules that [members of Congress] themselves
established.” For personifying the tiresome hypocrisy of
some members of Congress who want to claim the badge of fiscal
conservatism while continuing to abscond with billions of
dollars in wasteful pork projects, CAGW names
Sen. Hutchison the October Porker of the Month.
Read
more about the Porker of the
Month.

|
CCAGW
Releases 2008 Congressional
Ratings |
The Council for
Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) has released its
2008
Congressional Ratings, drawing attention to the
outstanding voting records of dozens of members of Congress
who consistently work to protect tax dollars, as well as to
the congressional bottom-dwellers whose votes were hostile to
the interests of taxpayers and contributed to a tsunami of
new, wasteful spending and an increasingly bloated
bureaucracy. The average vote rating for the entire
House of Representatives during 2008, the second session of
the 110th Congress, was 35 percent, while the average for the
Senate was 38 percent. In the House, Rep. Paul Broun
(R-Ga.) was the sole “Taxpayer Super Hero” with a rating of
100 percent, while 59 House members (the same as in 2007)
earned the moniker “Taxpayer Hero” with a rating of 80 percent
or above. However, the number of representatives with a
perfectly abysmal score of zero skyrocketed to 34 last year,
up from only two in 2007. In the Senate, there were no
“Taxpayer Super Heroes,” but 14 senators did earn “Taxpayer
Hero” status. Sens. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) and Jon Kyl
(R-Ariz.) posted the highest rating of 98 percent.
Seventeen senators scored zero, compared to 13 in 2007.
Read
more about the 2008 Congressional
Ratings.

| CAGW
to FCC: Net Neutrality is a Bad Solution in Search
of a Non-Existent
Problem |
CAGW once again this month reiterated its strong opposition
to the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) intention to
embark on a regulatory goose chase. On October 22, the
FCC began its ill-conceived venture into drafting new rules
and regulations to dictate how broadband companies must manage
access to the Internet. “Contrary to the lingo, ‘net
neutrality’ is anything but neutral,” stated CAGW President
Tom Schatz. “The Internet has flourished with a minimum
of political intervention. There is no pressing need for
government involvement and no good will come from the
government’s creating a phony role for itself. The
Internet has been a wide-open playing field for a whole host
of fierce competitors and has flourished because of
government’s benign indifference. However, the new
culture in Washington dictates that there is nothing anymore
that is off-limits to the long arm of the feds…Taxpayers will
rue the day that government regulation choked off innovation
on the Internet…Any new federal regulatory role will
necessitate a giant and expensive bureaucracy, whose employees
will serve as the Internet police.” Read
more about the FCC’s planned net neutrality
rules.

| CAGW
Seeks Strict Scrutiny of Broadband Stimulus
Grants |
CAGW this
month filed letters
with the National Telecommunications Information
Administration (NTIA) objecting to 23 applications for
broadband grants totaling $550 million under the “economic
stimulus” bill. “There have been numerous reports of
waste and mismanagement of stimulus funds, such as hundreds of
underage ‘first-time homebuyers,’ including a four-year-old,
seeking the $8,000 tax credit,” remarked CAGW President Tom
Schatz. “There is a total of $4.7 billion at stake in
the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP), which
should not become another opportunity to waste the taxpayers’
money.” CAGW’s letters note that the entire NTIA budget
in fiscal year 2009 was $658 million. The $4.7 billion
provided in the stimulus bill for the BTOP is 624.5 percent
greater than that amount. NTIA’s prior experience in
issuing broadband grants was limited to the discontinued
Technology Opportunities Program, which provided $233 million
in grants from 1994-2004, or 5 percent of the BTOP
total. “In order for NTIA to spend $4.7 billion
expeditiously without waste or mismanagement, the agency will
have to thoroughly review each application. There is a
September 30, 2010 deadline to spend the stimulus money, so
there may be a temptation to just say ‘yes’ to every
applicant,” added Schatz. Read
more about the applications for broadband stimulus grants that
CAGW has called into
question.
 |
 |
| Taxpayers
Go
Trick-or-Treating |
 CAGW
provides a list of who deserves tricks and who deserves treats
from taxpayers.

| CAGW
President on FOX
News |
CAGW President Tom
Schatz will be on "FOX
& Friends" on Saturday, October 31, at 9:45
a.m. to discuss wasteful spending in the stimulus
package. Please tune
in!

Tell
Congress: Vote NO on Any Funding for the JSF Alternate
Engine!
Help
Stop ObamaCare NOW!

Give us your opinions and tips about government waste in
your area on "The
Swine Line"!

| Pork
Advisory Level:
SEVERE |

Read
more about the Pork Advisory
System.
Read
the monthly newsletter online. This month’s issue
includes the
articles:
Broadband
Boondoggles
The
72-Hour Bill: A Struggle to Read over the Shoulder of
Congress
Medicare
is Afflicted with Chronic Wasting Disease, and it’s
Catching

Boston Herald (October 29, 2009): "Web
Posts by City Workers are Taxing"
CBS News (October 22, 2009): "Unplugged
under 40: The Battle to Change the BCS"
The Dallas Morning News (October 20, 2009):
"Watchdog
Group Labels Hutchison a 'Porker'"

|