Posted on 05/08/2007 7:15:55 AM PDT by jazusamo
May 08, 2007
Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa.) exploded at a colleague on the Appropriations defense subcommittee, Rep. Todd Tiahrt (R-Kan.), on the House floor last week after Tiahrt voted in a private meeting to cut $23 million from a project in Murthas district.
By voting to shut down the National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC) in Murthas district, Tiahrt violated an unspoken rule of the Appropriations Committee: Dont mess with your fellow appropriators projects. This is especially important when the project belongs to the chairman of a powerful subcommittee.
Murtha vented his anger against Tiahrt for voting last Wednesday to kill the center in Johnstown, Pa., by unleashing a loud, finger-jabbing, spittle-spraying piece of his mind, according to lawmakers who witnessed it. Murtha threatened to withdraw support from a defense project associated with Boeing that would convert commercial aircraft into military refueling tankers. Such a move could create big problems for the project because Murtha is chairman of the Appropriations Defense Subcommittee, which allocates all defense spending.
The tanker project is vital to Tiahrts district, which includes Wichita, home to a Boeing plant that would help assemble the planes. Over the past three years, Boeing has been the second-biggest federal contractor in Tiahrts district, selling $1.1 million worth of services to the federal government since 2004, according to FedSpending.org, a website that tracks government contracts.
Tiahrt, who once worked for Boeing, estimates that the tanker project could create 800 to 1,000 local jobs. In January, Tiahrt triumphantly announced: Boeing will locate the KC-X finishing center in Wichita if Boeing is successful in winning the air refueling tanker contract with the United States Air Force.
Both Tiahrts and Murthas projects have come under intense scrutiny in recent years.
The Pentagons attempt to lease tankers from Boeing for $30 billion resulted in investigations by Congress and the Defense Departments inspector general and eventually led to a former Air Force procurement official going to jail for negotiating with Boeing over the tankers while also jockeying for a job at the company.
In 2005, Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), then chairman of the Armed Services Committee, called it the most significant defense procurement mismanagement in contemporary history.
A tanker contract with Boeing is still possible. But the controversy has forced Boeing to compete for the deal with a team lead by Northrop Grumman and EADS North America.
Murthas project has also faced criticism.
President Bush recently set aside $16 million in his proposed budget to close the Drug Intelligence Center, which employs nearly 400 people in Murthas hometown. Last year, the House Government Reform Committee also called for its shutdown.
NDIC was never able to fulfill its original mission of centralizing and coordinating drug intelligence, given its remote location and the unwillingness of the other Federal agencies to contribute significant information, the panel concluded in its report, which described the centers budget as an expensive and duplicative use of scarce federal drug enforcement resources.
Many projects in the intelligence authorization bill escape public notice because the bill is marked up in secrecy, and some projects are included in classified addenda. This has prompted Rep. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), an outspoken fiscal conservative, to ask Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to set up a special task force to investigate secret earmarks in the intelligence bill.
Critics of NDIC say it largely replicates the work of the Drug Enforcement Administrations El Paso Intelligence Center, which is located at the frontlines of the drug war along the Mexican-American border.
Those critics include Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), who last week introduced an amendment during a closed-door mark-up of the intelligence authorization bill that would have cut $23 million from NDIC, leaving it with just enough money to close down and transfer its essential operations to other federal facilities.
When that proposal failed on a party-line vote, Rogers offered a second amendment directing the Justice Departments inspector general to conduct an audit of the effectiveness of the Drug Intelligence Center. Such a report could have embarrassed its supporters by agreeing with the Bush administration that a center in Johnstown is unnecessary.
This should not be about a members interest, it should be about national interest, said Rogers in an interview. Rogers said the Drug Enforcement Administration has a hiring freeze in place and that the money used to run the Drug Intelligence Center could be used to hire 350 new agents.
Tiahrt voted for both amendments, but he is the only Republican on both the House Select Committee on Intelligence and the Defense Appropriations subcommittee, which Murtha chairs.
Certainly in the Appropriations Committee members mark their territory and dont expect anyone encroaching, said Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, which describes itself as a nonpartisan budget watchdog group.
You stick together and you vote for all the appropriations bills and you support other members, he said. Youre not supposed to go into somebody elses sandbox and mess with their toys. Youre supposed to stay in your own sandbox and people will leave you alone.
When confronted on the House floor Wednesday night, Tiahrt explained that he was unaware that the project was one of Murthas, since Murtha doesnt sit on the intelligence panel. But Murtha set him straight, swiftly and firmly.
Luckily for Tiahrt and Boeing, Rep. Norm Dicks (D-Wash.), the second-ranking member of the defense appropriations subcommittee, was nearby during Murthas blowup and helped smooth things over, said witnesses. Dicks is one of Boeing staunchest allies in the House. Along with voters in Tiahrts district, Dicks constituents would be big winners if Boeing wins the tanker competition. Boeing would build the aircraft in Everett, Washington, which is within commuting distance of Dicks district.
For his part, Tiahrt says the loud flap with Murtha was merely a misunderstanding and declined to discuss it. It was a little misunderstanding, said Tiahrt. I dont want to talk about it.
Roxana Tiron contributed to this report.
LOL! Tiahrt broke al-murthawi's first commandment: Thou shalt not screweth with my pork.
It sounds like his tirades are becoming more frequent.
To be added to the Murtha Watch ping list please notify myself or RedRover.
ROTFL!!!
We <3 Tiahrt here. :)
Yep...The old fool can’t have a conscience or he wouldn’t be able to sleep at all now.
How dare you cut my pork, I’ll cut your pork!
Sounds like a pork war, no one wins except the tax payer, how sad.
The saddest thing about this is murtha brazenly admits this is the way things are done. Several months backs he stated it publicly and was proud of it.
Ewww! That's an ugly picture.
murtha should be more careful, he can ill afford to unleash pieces of his mind. LOL!
LOL!!
There couldn’t be a more appropriate photo for that line.
Some people just don’t know how to properly handle power.
Rep. Tiahrt has South Dakota roots...his ancestors were from my home town. We have to make up for producing George McGovern and Tom Daschle.
We know that Murtha is the chief conductor on the Haditha Railroad. The reason, it seems to me, is that Murtha and his cohorts are doing everything possible to make the WOT impossible to wage as a preemptive, hot war.
When we think of the Cold War, we think of good men like President Reagan. But, behind the scenes, worms like Murtha just used the Cold War for pork, pork, and more pork.
That seems to be Murtha’s main motive for his treason against our country and his betrayal of the Corps.
sounds like Tiahrt's going to change his vote now that he knows it was a Murtha project. This is so corrupt and so much why we can't cut the government.
And shows how stupid people have to be to say we can't afford to cut any more from the government spending.
I love it. I believe all Republicans should take a scorched Earth policy on this issue. Bring on the Pork Wars! (There is a good Star wars parody in that somewhere)
Memo to the rest of the spineless members of the GOP:
Take notes from Tiahrt.
Agreed...This piece pretty well laid out why the National Drug Intelligence Center is a waste, it was murtha’s baby in the beginning and he can’t let it die. It reflects the ultimate corruption of murtha and his MO of you grease my palm and I’ll grease yours.
This is just one of the many projects of one corrupt Congressman, think how many others there have to be.
This will hurt Rep.Tiahart big time.
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