Posts Tagged ‘Jeff Flake’

Bonner Pressed By Fox News on Earmarks, Appropriations

Monday, June 9th, 2008

Here’s another round of criticism directly aimed at Rep. Jo Bonner on earmarks and being selected to the Appropriations Committee. Fox News interviewer Gregg Jarrett presses Bonner on earmarks, reform and the ethics of other members - including former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert.

YouTube Interview

Transcript below:

Jarrett: “President Bush challenged Congress on this issue in his last State of the Union address in January. But weeks, later when a GOP seat opened up on the Appropriations Committee, it did not go to Washington’s most tireless anti-earmark crusader Rep. Jeff Flake. Instead, Jo Bonner, a less senior Republican from Alabama, who’s been criticized for earmarking millions himself got the spot.”

Jarrett: “The abuse of earmarks has been a big issue and in fact many have said that may be one of the reasons why Republicans lost control of Congress. Do you agree?”

Bonner: “I do. It can be an addiction and it can be a cancer that can corrupt the process. Now, that said, all earmarks are not bad.”

Jarrett: “You’ve given earmarks – more than a $1 million to clients represented by lobbyists, who have in turn contributed thousands of dollars to your campaign. Do you think it’s right?”

Bonner: “Now, you’re question makes it suggests what I’ve done inappropriate or illegal.”

Jarrett: “I’m asking you. Is it inappropriate?”

Bonner: “It’s not illegal. And I don’t believe it is inappropriate.”

Jarrett: “Is it inappropriate?”

Bonner: “If you look at the balance of the contributions that I’ve received and probably most members of Congress – it’s come from individuals who live in our district and who support the philosophy of the member of Congress or the candidate who’s running for that seat.”

Jarrett: “So what does Congressman Bonner think of the cases we uncovered?”

Jarrett: “Dennis Hastert earmarked $207 million to build a highway out to rural land that Hastert bought up and once the president signed the bill – sold the property, making millions of dollars in profits. Is that wrong?”

Bonner: “Speaker Hastert has denied the facts that you’ve stated are accurate.”

Jarrett: “I looked at the records.”

Bonner: “If that is in fact true, then not only was it wrong, it would be indefensible.”

Jarrett: “Paul Kanjorski, member of Congress – earmarked $10 million over four years to a company that’s run by his family.”

Bonner: “If a member of Congress is personally benefiting or his or her family is personally benefiting then that may involve the Department of Justice in which case I can’t comment on it.”

Jarrett: “Why not you’re a public official. You can comment on anything you want to.”

Bonner: “I’m also on the House Ethics Committee and if the matter were to come before our committee for review, then I am not allowed to discuss that.”

Jarrett: “The Ethics Committee weighed on Congressman Ken Calvert. He set up a transportation center within two miles of seven properties that he owned. Right or wrong?”

Bonner: “Gregg, I’m not going to answer questions about members of Congress and what they have allegedly done.”

Jarrett: “Come on, isn’t this abusive? Isn’t this precisely what Americans hate?”

Bonner: “I understand the way you have phrased the question that would lead many people to say, ‘Absolutely.’ I’m not familiar with the circumstances, but let me just tell you, the 435 members of Congress – 420 of them, probably even more are not doing this for personal enrichment.”

Jarrett: “Bonner says he is calling for more transparency in earmarks and has personally cut his requests in half this year. His party has proposed a one-year moratorium on all earmarks.”

Bonner: “Unfortunately, Speaker Pelosi – her leadership team would not meet us halfway on that.”

Bob Novak Takes Shot at Bonner

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

It’s probably not the national spotlight Mobile’s congressman wanted, but Jo Bonner was written about in Bob Novak’s column in The Washington Post on March 11:

“House Republican Leader John Boehner, who, unlike McConnell, does not earmark and criticizes the practice, flinched from making a bold move as this year’s session began. He could have led the House Republican Conference to endorse a yearlong moratorium and name reformer Jeff Flake of Arizona to a vacancy on the Appropriations Committee.

Instead, the Republicans picked Jo Bonner of Alabama, who spent 18 years as a House staffer before his election in 2002. Bonner has voted against Flake in 49 out of 50 attempts to kill earmarks. He has promised his Mobile area constituents that they would get “fair value” for their tax dollar — the justification for bringing home the bacon from Washington. Incredibly, Boehner hailed Bonner’s selection as a step toward earmark reform.”

Novak, whose column is nationally syndicated, doesn’t have a lot of faith in Bonner to be the ultimate fiscal conservative. His criticism is a little unfair. Bonner isn’t likely to be quite as hawkish as Flake, but he won’t line up at the trough like Jack Murtha, the appropriations chair, or even Alabama’s senior senator, Richard Shelby.

Nonetheless, the Novak’s “shout-out” is the latest in national attention Bonner has gotten since getting the assignment on the House Appropriations Committee from conservatives demanding earmark reform.