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Mitt Romney Backed Earmarks As Governor

ANDREW MIGA   02/12/12 07:23 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — Mitt Romney takes a hard line against congressional earmarks, but the GOP presidential front-runner had a more favorable view of federal pork-barrel spending when he was governor of Massachusetts.

Under his leadership, Massachusetts sought tens of millions of dollars in earmarks for transportation projects through the state's congressional delegation.

A prime example was the $30 million that the Romney administration requested to renovate the historic Longfellow Bridge that spans the Charles River between Cambridge and Boston. The landmark is seen in many movies and television shows.

Romney's transportation secretary, Daniel A. Grabauskas, asked the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee to include the money in a transportation spending bill. That bill was full of thousands of earmarks that sparked public furor and became a symbol for Washington's out-of-control spending when Congress passed it in 2005.

In a letter June 17, 2004, to the transportation panel's chief of staff that was obtained by The Associated Press, Grabauskas said federal money for the Longfellow Bridge could be provided as part of the "bridge program, a new mega-project or an outside earmark, or a combination of the three." Grabauskas did not immediately respond to phone messages from AP seeking comment.

A Romney campaign spokeswoman would not respond to questions about how many earmarks the Romney administration asked for, the amount of money involved and the particular projects.

"Every state budget in the country is dependent on federal funding, and every governor in the country makes requests for funding, but governors do not get to decide how Congress appropriates money," said Andrea Saul, a Romney spokeswoman. "Gov. Romney supports a permanent ban on earmarks, which are symbols of what's wrong with Washington."

When Romney was governor and his state was desperately seeking federal dollars to repair crumbling roads and bridges, his administration suggested earmarks for projects to lawmakers on Capitol Hill who were in a position to request the money.

Romney officials specified projects they wanted included as earmarks in the transportation bill to members of the Massachusetts congressional delegation as the measure moved through Congress, said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass.

"The Romney administration was crystal clear on earmarks and what they wanted," McGovern said. "They sent us a letter specifically asking for money to be earmarked for projects."

McGovern cited a Feb. 7, 2005, email from Tom Lawler, Romney's deputy director of state-federal relations in Washington, to a senior McGovern aide seeking $50 million for the Charles M. Braga Bridge between Somerset and Fall River, and $25 million for a highway interchange on Interstate 495 in the Worcester Democrat's district.

The Romney aide wrote in the email that the projects were "the state's suggested high priority projects" for McGovern's district.

The term "high priority project" is congressional jargon for an earmarked project, said McGovern, who did not pursue earmarks for Romney's suggested projects.

Rep. Michael Capuano, D-Mass., a committee member who is the delegation's leader on securing money for bridges and roads, said he was also approached by Romney officials asking for earmarks.

"It was a routine thing," Capuano said. "They went to different members in the delegation. They came to me and said, `Here's what we need.' They didn't do a ton of (asking for earmarks), but they did enough of it."

Capuano said he supported the Longfellow Bridge project and secured a $3 million earmark for it after sending a request letter and form to the House committee.

Massachusetts sorely needed money for long-neglected major road and bridge repairs during Romney's governorship because for years federal transportation dollars were sucked up by the massive Big Dig project that buried Interstate 93 in tunnels underneath downtown Boston.

Massachusetts, which had its own office of state-federal relations in Washington under Romney, also relied on lobbyists O'Neill and Associates, headed by the son of legendary former House Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill, to help steer federal dollars to the state.

Romney joined the state's big construction companies and contractors at a big Boston fundraising event in 2003 honoring Rep. Don Young, the Alaska Republican who at the time was chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and who held powerful sway on spending matters as the big transportation bill moved through Congress. Young netted more than $50,000, according to a Boston Globe story at the time.

During his campaign, Romney plays up his anti-earmark views to try to convince GOP voters of his conservative values and to try to undermine his rivals' claims of fiscal conservatism. Earmarks are a hot issue in the GOP race, particularly among conservatives angry about runaway spending and the big federal budget deficits.

Romney's campaign and his allies have hammered rivals Newt Gingrich, a former House speaker, and Rick Santorum, a former representative and senator from Pennsylvania, as "prolific earmarkers" winning federal money, and he has called for a permanent ban on earmarks.

Romney stepped up his attacks after losses to Santorum in in Minnesota, Colorado and Missouri, branding Santorum as a big-spending Washington insider.

"A lot of us feel that the Republican Party lost its way in the past," Romney said Wednesday. "Republicans spent too much money, borrowed too much money, earmarked too much, and Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich have to be held accountable."

"Obviously, some of the things of his record are troubling ... The fact that while he was in Washington, government spending grew by 80 percent. And the fact that he is a defender of earmarks. Look, I'm in favor of a ban on earmarks," Romney said of Santorum in a Fox News Channel interview on Thursday.

The Santorum campaign, jabbing at Romney's past support for federal spending, has highlighted a 2006 radio interview with Romney about the Big Dig where he said: "I'd be embarrassed if I didn't always ask for federal money whenever I get the chance."

Earmarking is the longtime Washington practice in which lawmakers, often at the request of governors and state legislators, insert money for home-state projects such as road and bridge work into spending bills. After the 2010 elections, Congress placed a moratorium on earmarking, following public outrage over a 2005 transportation bill stuffed with money for thousands of pet projects, including the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere" in Alaska.

Romney now has joined the chorus of tea party backers and fiscal conservatives who say lawmakers treat taxpayer money like a slush fund.

A pro-Romney group targeted Santorum with ads in recent primary contests assailing his support for pork-barrel spending in Congress. The Romney campaign has used a small group of House Republicans considered fiscal conservatives to attack Gingrich's earmarking.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Sundiszno
Facts are facts carnival barkers!
05:33 PM on 02/13/2012
Which one?
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Ramon Noches
Retired Air Force
02:42 PM on 02/13/2012
Back then, it was politically fashionable for both parties to use earmarks as a means to benefit their constituencies and supporters. As governor, Romney probably acted no differently than 49 other governors. So, why are earmarks an issue for him in 2012. A lot has changed since his days as governor. Republicans who oppose Mitt Romney need to find valid reasons for their positions. By criticizing, him about a "Mole hill" they need to find a "mountain" that provides more credence to their political assaults.
01:01 PM on 02/13/2012
Romney request a few million for a bridge and Santorum get's 1 billion for his state.

Don't get me wrong the I oppose earmarks but when that's the only channel to get money back into your state for very much needed projects, I don't oppose it, especially when that was the channel offered at the time to get your money. The big difference is Santorum tried to hook up a pump and drain the lake so to speak. It sounds good for Pennsylvania but that's what put this country into a bind financially - earmars and entitlements.
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duegger
onto others
10:56 AM on 02/13/2012
Can't blame Rommey for that, the W Whitehouse and Republican Congress were spreading largesse as msuch as they could.
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10:17 AM on 02/13/2012
This is pretty lame, remember Kennedy and the big dig?
12:19 PM on 02/13/2012
The piont is showing that what we hear is not what we'd get. Romney and the entire GOP create issues and makes statements that are not part of their history or true believes. Romney has nothing in mind but winning to protect his wealth. has zero concern for me you or this countrya s long as he and his gated community buddies are protected
10:15 AM on 02/13/2012
I do not like Romney as a candidate but bashing him on this issue is like saying you took tax deductions while you are trying to change the tax structure would be the same thing. We use the system that is in place until we are in a position to change it. If he didn't request the earmarks for his state he would have been a very bad Governer.
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fehc
10:06 AM on 02/13/2012
HEY - HE HAS CHANGED HIS POSITION SINCE THEN - also his favorite color is plaid!!
10:03 AM on 02/13/2012
This election will be difficult. Romney dislikes poor people & Obama dislikes white people. Im poor and white. I have no candidate
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Brown Buddha
Throwing pebbles into the ocean
09:47 AM on 02/13/2012
If Willard were to do the Dos Equis commercials, he would be known as the most uninteresting man in the world.
09:45 AM on 02/13/2012
Wow, big shocker here. Earmarks are a great way to pay off big buck contributers. Get federal dollars to build something and pass the contract to some company that gave you thousands of dollars for your campaign. The Republican congress broke the record for earmarks during the Bush administration and spent like drunken sailors. Makes you wonder why they call them conservatives. I guess because they get a haircut every saturday so they look good for church on sunday.
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ebanks84
Grandma knows best!
09:34 AM on 02/13/2012
Is there anything new here? What do you expect from the biggest liar?
09:30 AM on 02/13/2012
This is a really big "duh" type story. What might you have written if the Gov bypassed opportunities to bring federal money to his state? Surely if you must play gotcha politics with your biased reporting dig a little deeper and find something meaningful.
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paul macleod
09:29 AM on 02/13/2012
now hear this ... now hear this... Romney cannot win a race against Obama.. all conservatives, please pay attention.. Romney is not a conservative .. he is at best a RHINO... like Snow and Collins.... he thinks like a liberal... and he lies.... or tells half truths while he attacks attacks attacks on the very same topics that he was in support of while Gov.the Obama bunch will just crush his run for the office... there will be nothing left of the Republican party.. we must not nominate him...
09:19 AM on 02/13/2012
earmarks are not necessarily bad. know what's bad? people who imagine we live in a black and white world with no shades of gray. completely sick of the extremes preached from both left and right---it's all pathetic
09:11 AM on 02/13/2012
"Massachusetts sorely needed money for long-neglected major road and bridge repairs during Romney's governorship because for years federal transportation dollars were sucked up by the massive Big Dig project that buried Interstate 93 in tunnels underneath downtown Boston." Gee, perhaps they did need to money more than the "California Billion Dollar Train" program. By the way, tell me which governor of which state has never asked for tax money for something that needed to be done in their state, whether Dem or Repub?
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paul macleod
09:33 AM on 02/13/2012
you cannot avoid the un happy truth.. Romney is not an honest person.. he attacks others for the very same thing that he himself supports while saying with a straight face that he is against it.... sounds exactly like a liberal to me.. and his records supports my accusation... he is not a conservative... it is the very reason why the press is calling this race over .. they want Romney to be nominated.. so that Obama can beat his pants off.... it will be no contest.. don't be fooled by all the big money and heavy advertising by Romney.. it's the left that wants him to run
09:40 AM on 02/13/2012
Paul, I may, or may not agree with your comments. But the fact is your comments have nothing to do with what I posted and questioned. The Huff article seems to want to point out Romney, but in reality all governor want more money from the feds tax coffers. Unless of course, you know one who does not, and if so, please post their name and state.