By Congressman Ken Buck,
(R-CO)
Corruption on Capitol
Hill is "worse than you think," Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo., insists. "When
you first get here, you think that you are in some sort of fairy-tale
novel," Buck said. "They wine and dine you and they show you just
exactly what it's like if you play the game. It's a wonderful life."
Things quickly change,
however, if "you don't play the game." "If you don't play the
game, it becomes a much less conformable existence here," Buck said.
Buck, who has served
Colorado's 4th Congressional District since 2015, previewed his new book,
"Drain the Swamp: How Washington Corruption is Worse Than You Think," published on Tuesday.
Chapters in Buck's book
include "Why Washington is a Swamp," "Play the Game-Or
Else," "Beating the Beltway Bullies," and "What You Can Do
To Drain the Swamp."
Buck said his book
addresses corruption present in government today that he was not prepared for
after being elected to Congress in 2014. "One of the things that I found
startling when I got here is that you have to pay dues to be on a
committee," Buck said.
During the time he
served on the House Judiciary Committee, Buck said he had to pay periodic dues
of $200,000 to the National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign
committee of the House of Representatives.
Now, as a member of the
House Rules Committee, Buck's periodic dues are $450,000. The obligation to pay
dues, Buck said, forces members of Congress to hold fundraising receptions and
encourages corrupt influences from special interest organizations who attend
the fundraisers.
"Who comes to those
receptions with checks?" Buck said. "Lobbyists, special interests that
want something in return. So there is a game that goes on that you owe the
party money and you are expected to vote with the chairman and you are expected
to help special interests groups in Washington, D.C."
Buck said there is also
a significant amount of corruption in how Congress justifies spending for new
project or programs. "In the book, I list very specific ways that we need
to change the incentives that we have in Congress," Buck said. "I
talk about what we call 'pay-fors.' When we have new spending, we find ways
to pay for that new spending program."
Some of the ways
Congress could pay for a new project or program are through tax increases or
cuts to other programs, both of which are unlikely, Buck said. Instead, Congress
"makes up" sources of revenue.
Buck explains: So we
pass a transportation bill, and in the transportation bill we say that we're going
to sell oil in a strategic petroleum reserve to pay for that transportation bill. Now, what's
fascinating about this is that the average price that that oil was purchased at
is $76. The price when we sold that oil was $48. Only in government is that
considered a profit.
An issue with this
system, Buck said, is that revenues from "pay-fors" have already been
accounted for. "One of the problems is that that barrel of oil that was
used in the transportation bill as a 'pay-for' was already sold twice
before," Buck said.
This form of governing,
Buck said, is irresponsible. "If everything's
been paid for for so long, how did we get $20 trillion dollars in debt?"
Buck said.
In an effort to bring
transparency to the "pay-for" phenomenon, Buck introduced a bill last
Thursday that would require the Office of Management and Budget to track and report the revenue
that "pay-fors" actually bring.
"One of the bills
that I just recently dropped would ask the Office of Management and Budget to do
an annual report to Congress so it is available to the American people on how
much revenue did those 'payfors' generate," Buck said.
Buck's goal, he said, is
to educate the American people about the corruption in government so they are
not as naive as Buck found himself when he started working in Congress.
"Before I got here,
I knew that D.C. was broken, I didn't know the specifics," Buck said.
"I'm hoping that by giving the American public the specifics, we actually
have the record out there just to make sure that people are aware."
The Daily Signal is the
multimedia news organization of The Heritage Foundation.
Comments
Campaign
finance reform is needed to remove special interest’s ability to make campaign
contributions to elected officials. A
good replacement for the current corruption would be to only allow registered
voters the right to make campaign contributions, but only for those who appear
on their ballots. Special interests can
exercise their free speech on their own websites and their own ads.
If you
look at Conservative Review Scorecard, you will see scores for members of
Congress based on their votes. Low scores
go to most of these members because they voted for unconstitutional Bills. High scores go to the few members who voted
against unconstitutional Bills.
Ron Paul
served in Congress for 30 years and his score was always 100%, because he never
voted for a single unconstitutional Bill.
His Texas district voters knew he would do this and they kept sending
him back to Congress. They called him “Doctor No”, but the problems he exposed
in his annual address to Congress always turned out to be true. But he refused
to ‘play the game’.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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