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Senate appropriations earmark requests start rolling in

Almost all Democrats, only 15 Republicans participating so far

By Jennifer Shutt, CQ-Roll Call
Published: July 3, 2021, 6:51pm

The Senate has officially kicked off its process for inserting “congressionally directed spending” into appropriations bills for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, with almost all Democrats but only 15 Republicans in that chamber participating so far.

The first batch of publicly disclosed earmark requests went live Friday, under Senate Appropriations Committee guidelines that members post their requests within 15 days of submitting them.

The first panel deadline for requests was June 16 for the Energy-Water subcommittee, responsible for the highly popular Army Corps of Engineers accounts, among others, though requests have also trickled in for the Agriculture subcommittee, which had a June 17 deadline.

Senate Republicans have been split on the subject of earmarks since it became apparent Democrats in both chambers intended to restore the practice this year after a decadelong absence, due to various “pay to play” scandals in the mid-2000s and the appearance of wasteful spending.

Of the 15 Republicans who have submitted requests so far, nine are members of the Appropriations Committee, led by ranking member Richard C. Shelby of Alabama, who’s retiring after this Congress.

Six Republicans on the spending panel haven’t asked for local projects yet, including Kentucky’s Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader and a onetime prolific earmarker, and Florida’s Marco Rubio, who faces a potentially tough swing-state reelection fight.

One noteworthy Republican who’s asked for earmarks is South Dakota’s John Thune, the No. 2 GOP senator and McConnell’s top vote counter. Thune’s sole request at this point is $21.9 million for a Bureau of Reclamation project in Tea, S.D., to build additional water delivery lines and expand the number of communities served in his home state as well as neighboring Iowa and Minnesota.

On the Democratic side, just two senators have yet to submit requests: Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, considered one of the most vulnerable incumbents on her side of the aisle, and Montana’s Jon Tester, the top Democrat on the Senate Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, which isn’t accepting earmark requests this year.

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