from Common Cause, the liberal lobbying group:

CauseNET for November 6, 2003

EYE ON IRAQ â An Expensive Bill, Cheap Talk

The $87 billion emergency-spending bill passed by Congress on Monday may be the 
largest bill of its kind in history, bigger than the budgets of Departments of 
Homeland Security and Education combined.  Yet, Congress has left itself only a modest 
role to play in the oversight of how the money is actually spent.

Originally both the House and Senate agreed that more transparency and accountability 
were necessary in the reconstruction process.  But many of the provisions that members 
voted for were later removed when House and Senate negotiators agreed on a single 
bill.  For example:
 
=> The Senate originally voted 97 to 0 to have the General Accounting Office conduct 
audits of the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) in Iraq.  That provision was 
stripped in the conference committee on a party line vote.

=> Responding to the uproar about non-competitive bidding in Iraq, the House passed an 
amendment requiring competitive bidding on oil contracts. But that was also removed 
during a conference committee vote.

=> Perhaps most astounding, Congress in its final Iraq spending bill did not even 
include language offered by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) to penalize war profiteers 
for defrauding American taxpayers.  The Senate Appropriations Committee unanimously 
approved a provision to ensure that contractors who cheated the American taxpayer 
would face fines of up to $1 million and jail time of up to 20 years.  Senators of 
both parties supported the provision, but Republican House negotiators refused to 
include the language in the final bill. 

In the end, for all the grandstanding about transparency and accountability in Iraq, 
Congress has made only a modest attempt to oversee how the reconstruction money will 
be spent.  And Congress doesnât seem interested in punishing people who are 
convicted of defrauding the government.

BUT ITâS NOT TOO LATE.  Congress can still do something.  Senator Leahy is offering 
his anti-profiteering provision as a freestanding bill, the War Profiteering 
Prevention Act of 2003. 

Call your Senators and ask them to prove they are interested in protecting the 
American taxpayer by cosponsoring S. 1813, the War Profiteering Prevention Act of 2003.

If you know who your Senators are, you may call the Capitol Switchboard and ask for 
them directly:

=> 202-224-3121

Otherwise, you can look up your Senators and their numbers here:

=> http://capwiz.com/afr/utr/1/FTBUCGPGCP/NDICCGPGKW/


Reply via email to