6 Examples of Woke Pork Projects in Omnibus Spending Bill

COMMENTARY Budget and Spending

6 Examples of Woke Pork Projects in Omnibus Spending Bill

Mar 11, 2022 4 min read
COMMENTARY BY

Former Director, Grover M. Hermann Center

Dickerson was Director of the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget at The Heritage Foundation.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi speaks during her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill March 9, 2022 in Washington, D.C. Drew Angerer / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Earmarks were banned by conservatives a decade ago after high-profile cases of corruption were exposed.

Unfortunately, earmarks are making a big return in President Joe Biden’s first appropriations package.

None of these earmarks have anything to do with carrying out the proper, limited roles of the federal government enumerated in the Constitution.

When congressional leaders rolled out the 2,700-page, $1.5 trillion omnibus spending bill this week, they made sure to lard it up with plenty of pork.

Such so-called earmarks were banned by conservatives a decade ago after high-profile cases of corruption were exposed, sending members of Congress and lobbyists to prison, and after clear examples of waste were uncovered, such as the infamous “bridge to nowhere.”

Unfortunately, earmarks are making a big return in President Joe Biden’s first appropriations package.

Tucked away in the explanatory statements accompanying the legislation are thousands of special-interest funding provisions inserted at the request of members of Congress. A list of all the earmarks attached to the bill spans 367 pages by itself.

Unsurprisingly, some of these earmarks advance leftist woke ideology.

Here are six examples of woke earmarks included in the omnibus spending bill:

Racist Energy Systems

Massachusetts Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey secured $995,000 for “Grid Resilience and Equity in the Energy Transition” research at the University of Massachusetts. Notice the word “equity” in the title. That means the left is going to redistribute taxpayer dollars to fix some perceived racist inequality in the energy system.

This taxpayer funding will be used to promote a “fast and fair transition to a decarbonized energy system in the United States” by the Energy Transition Institute and a local utility company. The faculty director of this institute stated, “The current energy system is inequitable, not just overseas but here in the U.S. The energy system is racist.”

Political Museums

Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown secured $500,000 for the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, a museum in Cincinnati dedicated to telling the stories of the Underground Railroad and the journey to freedom from the horrors of slavery.

This history is vital to understanding our past so that we can create a better future, striving toward realizing those self-evident truths described in our Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal.

Unfortunately, the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center continues to engage in modern left-wing politics. The center has lobbied in favor of the controversial HR 4, the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, which would give unelected federal bureaucrats the power to veto state election laws, overriding the choices of voters and legislators.

The center also lobbies against legislation that would ban the teaching of the racist and divisive tenets of critical race theory to grade schoolers in Ohio, calling systemic racism a “foundation of our nation since 1619.”

Diversity, Inclusion, and Social Equity Center

The Hockessin Colored School #107 played a historic role in the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case that ended segregation in schools. Now, more than 60 years after the school closed its doors, Friends of Hockessin Colored School #107 Inc. is receiving $750,000 in federal taxpayer funds at the request of Delaware Sens. Chris Coons and Tom Carper to transform the property into a center for “diversity, inclusion, and social equity.”

According to the group, the center would be used to host diversity, equity, and inclusion workshops on controversial topics such as “ethnicities,” “gender identity and genetics,” “public safety and social justice,” and “social determinants of health.”

Health Equity for Pool Improvements

New York Rep. Jamaal Bowman was able to get $496,000 in the name of “health equity” for “pool improvements” in his home district. According to Bowman, these are “essential capital improvements” to YMCA pools. He cited evidence showing that African Americans and Hispanic children have lower abilities to swim than other groups.

Bowman does not justify on his website why $496,000 is needed for just the YMCA of Yonkers but instead simply justifies this spending by saying, “This project is essential for minimizing disparities in access to swimming lessons and aerobics, promoting health equity.”

Climate Studies Diversity

Massachusetts’ Markey and Warren were also able to combine two left-wing priorities into their $500,000 earmark for Worcester State University to increase diversity and inclusion for STEM students to study climate change. According to Warren, “This project would increase access and success for under-represented incoming college students.”

Equitable Shellfish Aquaculture

Rhode Island Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse and Jack Reed requested $1.6 million of federal taxpayer funding for Roger Williams University for the “development of equitable growth of shellfish aquaculture in Rhode Island.”

It is unclear why shellfish aquaculture in Rhode Island needs to be woke. The amount provided in the final omnibus is actually more than three times the amount originally sponsored by Whitehouse.

All of these earmarks were airdropped into the final spending bill with little transparency and without thorough vetting.

Furthermore, none of these earmarks have anything to do with carrying out the proper, limited roles of the federal government enumerated in the Constitution. This is just further proof that special-interest spending on local projects is in no way a valid tool for promoting Congress’ important Article I power of the purse.

Instead of this costly spending bill loaded up with pork projects, Congress should reinstate the earmark ban and focus on using its spending power appropriately to fund the constitutional needs of the whole country while cutting wasteful and unnecessary spending and allowing Americans to keep more of what they earn.

The author thanks Joshua Loucks of the Young Leaders Program for research assistance on this article.  

This piece originally appeared in The Daily Signal