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How tea party senators stared down Mitch McConnell on earmark ban

Pressure from tea party-backed Republican freshmen senators led Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell to reverse course: He said Monday he would back an earmark ban.

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Harry Hamburg/AP
Sen.-elect Rand Paul (R) of Kentucky walks down a Senate corridor on Capitol Hill in Washington after a meeting with Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell Monday. Paul has called for a end to the earmark process.

In a surprise reversal, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell (R) of Kentucky announced today that he will join House GOP leaders in voting to ban 鈥渆armarks鈥 鈥 member projects often criticized as pork barrel spending 鈥 thus avoiding an early clash with tea party freshmen committed to ending the practice.

The issue was seen as a litmus test of how far the Republican leadership would go to satisfy freshmen lawmakers and the tea party movement that propelled some of them to victory. In the past, Senate Republicans have defended their right to use earmarks, but the process has been a primary tea party complaint.

Senator McConnell's decision suggests that, in Round 1 at least, the GOP establishment blinked first.

鈥淚 know the good that has come from the projects I have helped support throughout my state. I don鈥檛 apologize for them,鈥 McConnell said at the opening of a lame duck session of Congress on Monday. 鈥淏ut there is simply no doubt that the abuse of this practice has caused Americans to view it as a symbol of the waste and the out-of-control spending that every Republican in Washington is determined to fight.鈥

鈥淎nd unless people like me show the American people that we鈥檙e willing to follow through on small or even symbolic things, we risk losing them on our broader efforts to cut spending and rein in government,鈥 he added.

Freshmen flex muscles

The move came on the eve of a Senate Republican caucus vote on Tuesday that was shaping up as an early test of the clout the 16-member GOP freshmen class 鈥 the largest class for Republicans since 1980.

Republican freshmen Sens.-elect Marco Rubio of Florida, Rand Paul of Kentucky, Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvania, and Mike Lee of Utah took the lead organizing GOP freshmen to push for an earmark ban, despite the expected opposition of current Senate GOP leaders. On Friday, Mr. Lee, in an e-mail, called on the GOP caucus to hold a public, recorded vote on this issue, rather than the scheduled vote by secret ballot.

鈥淭he public has decided that both [parties] are untrustworthy,鈥 said Mr. Paul, a tea party leader whose primary victory against a GOP establishment-backed rival was an early sign of the impact of conservative protesters in the 2010 election. Earmarks are a key issue because they 鈥渟ymbolize the waste up here, and people are annoyed by [them],鈥 he said, in between freshmen orientation sessions on Monday.

How big a deal are earmarks?

Earmarks account for less than 1 percent of the federal budget but take up an outsize share of lawmakers鈥 time. Conservative critics dub them 鈥渇avor factories鈥 and a 鈥済ateway drug鈥 to big government, deficit spending. A handful of GOP lawmakers 鈥 notably Sens. Jim DeMint of South Carolina and Tom Coburn of Oklahoma and Rep. Jeff Flake of Arizona 鈥 mounted scores of failed challenges to specific earmarks for years, most of which lost by lopsided votes.

While the House Republican caucus voted last year to voluntarily give up earmarks for the 2010 fiscal year, Senate GOP leaders had insisted that earmarking is a congressional prerogative and should be preserved. Despite the House GOP moratorium, House Democrats and members of both parties in the Senate passed 9,129 earmarks worth some $16.5 billion, according to Citizens Against Government Waste.

But the energy and success at the polls of the tea party movement gave the anti-earmark drive fresh momentum. Tea party activists call earmarks a symbol of corruption and arrogance. At a mid-day rally outside the Capitol sponsored by the anti-earmark group Americans for Prosperity, activists cheered calls for reform and shouted: 鈥淣o compromise!鈥

鈥淓verything has changed here in Washington. I think people are listening,鈥 said Senator DeMint, an early backer of tea party candidates. 鈥淚f we can鈥檛 decide as a federal government that it鈥檚 not our job to build local museums, then we don鈥檛 understand what limited government is,鈥 he told the crowd.

Would a ban be permanent?

After the rally, DeMint dismissed suggestions that the earmark vote was a proxy battle between him and GOP leader McConnell. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a proxy between us and the American people,鈥 he said. The earmark vote is a key signal to voters that Republicans heard the message of the 2010 election. 鈥淭his is not a time to send a signal that we鈥檙e going to weasel out of it,鈥 he added.

In a related move, Sen. Lamar Alexander (R) of Tennessee, who chairs the Senate Republican Conference, announced support of moratorium on earmarks 鈥渂ecause they have become a symbol of wasteful spending.鈥 But he saw the move only as a temporary one to 鈥渓imit the number of earmarks and make sure they are worthy.鈥

鈥淐leaning up earmarks is good short-term policy, but as long-term policy it would undermine the Constitution because instead of placing a check on the president, it turns the checkbook over to him,鈥 he said in a statement. 鈥淭his moratorium will help put the spotlight on executive branch earmarks, which in 2008 spent more than congressional earmarks.鈥

GOP challenges Obama

For his part, DeMint applauded McConnell鈥檚 decision and issued a challenge to the president.

鈥淣ow that Republicans are taking real action to end wasteful spending, I hope President Obama follows through with his rhetoric and promises to veto any bill with Democrat earmarks,鈥 he added.

In his weekly radio address on Saturday, Mr. Obama also called for an earmark ban. "I agree with those Republican and Democratic members of Congress who've recently said that in these challenging days, we can't afford what are called earmarks," he said. "We have a chance to not only shine a light on a bad Washington habit that wastes billions of taxpayer dollars, but take a step toward restoring public trust.

On the House side, Congressman Flake suggested that the ban become universal and mandatory. 鈥淚 hope that the Republican leaders in the Senate strictly enforce the will of its conference. Republicans will have a difficult time being taken seriously if some Republican senators are allowed to circumvent the ban,鈥 he said in a statement on Monday.

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