Working The System

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrint

In a recently published article in Government Executive Magazine Robert Brodsky uncovers that "the 20 biggest federal contractors received at least 80 earmarks worth more than $212 million." (See the chart below to see who garnered the most) These big companies know how to maneuver through the syst...  In a recently published article in Government Executive Magazine Robert Brodsky uncovers that "the 20 biggest federal contractors received at least 80 earmarks worth more than $212 million." (See the chart below to see who garnered the most)

These big companies know how to maneuver through the system, and how the current system operates, that means they have lobbyists willing to make campaign contributions to members who are willing to sponsor earmarks.  They also know this is an easy way of circumventing the competitive bidding process, thereby undercutting smaller firms.

The House has established rules for transparency, requiring members to certify who requested the earmark as well as whom the beneficiary would be.  The Senate established a similar rule before the Democratic leadership watered down the rule so that the requesting Senator only has to declare that the earmark will not end up in personal financial gain. 

The 80 earmarks scrutinized by this report are only from members of the House;  meaning that roughly $5.3 billion were sponsored or cosponsored by one or more members of the Senate, without disclosure of the beneficiary.

I don’t know about you, but $5.3 billion is not a small sum of money, and if I am paying for it, I want to know where it is going and for what.

It is clear from this report that the earmarking process is far from reformed.



























































































































Contractor



Earmarks



Total Value



Lockheed Martin Corp



3



$4,680,000



Boeing Co.



2



$5,000,000



Northrop Grumman Corp.



7



$27,800,000



General Dynamics Corp.



9



$22,000,000



Raytheon Co.



7



$21,800,000



KBR Inc.



0



$0



L-3 Communications Holdings



19



$54,140,000



SAIC



11



$21,400,000



United Technologies Corp.



1



$3,200,000



BAE Systems



7



$16,800,000



McKesson Corp.



0



$0



Bechtel Group Inc.



0



$0



University of California System



4



$6,800,000



Computer Sciences Corp.*



0



$0



General Electric Co.



3



$5,500,000



Fluor Corp.



0



$0



Humana Inc.



0



$0



Battelle Memorial Institute



3



$8,800,000



EDS



0



$0



Honeywell Inc.



4



$14,800,000



Total



80



$212,720,000



Top 20 contractors courtesy of Eagle Eye Publishers



*A $1 million House earmark was eliminated in conference with the Senate





Connect with John: 
FaceBook-icon Twitter_icon Youtube48

NewOfficeImage

Irvine Office

20 Pacifica, Suite 660
Irvine, CA 92618
Click here to Contact

Washington Office

2331 Rayburn HOB
Washington, DC 20515
Click here to Contact

houseseal_5_66

Amplify Facebook Green Eyeshade Blog Laptop Report YouTube Follow RepJohnCampbell on Twitter
Washington DC Web Development Company for WordPress, Drupal.
Site by Govtrends