‘The Waste Report’ details $50 billion in questionable government spending

By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square

In his Summer 2019 edition of The Waste Report, U.S. Senator Rand Paul details more than $50.2 billion of government spending that he says wasted hard-earned taxpayer money.

Paul, R-Kentucky and chairman of the Federal Spending Oversight and Emergency Management (FSO) Subcommittee for the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, argues the ongoing waste of taxpayer money is a national security issue that must end.

Flickr/401kcalculator.org

Taxpayer money also supported a $10 million “Green Growth” initiative in Peru, $100,000 for the Pakistani film industry, and $46,991 to study frog mating calls in Panama.

Among the items highlighted in the report is $2 million “to increase trust between Tunisian political parties and citizens (State),” in addition to $1.4 billion already sent to Tunisia since 2011.

“What makes [the U.S. State Department] believe $2 million more will succeed where $1.4 billion has failed?” Paul asks.

More than $2 billion has been spent to convert an abandoned mental hospital (St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, an historic landmark) into a Department of Homeland Security headquarters (GSA and DHS).

“Rest assured there will be legislative action taken to ensure this boondoggle does not continue to waste taxpayer dollars,” Paul said.

Taxpayer money also supported a $10 million “Green Growth” initiative in Peru, $100,000 for the Pakistani film industry, and $46,991 to study frog mating calls in Panama.

The report points out that, according to the U.S. State Department, the Pakistani film industry is growing dramatically. If this is the case, Paul asks, “Why do Pakistanis need American tax dollars to further build its capacity? Why are Americans responsible for paying to make Pakistani films better?”

“Simply put,” he answers, “Americans are not responsible, but their State Department is intent on wasting their hard-earned money anyway.”

The report points to the U.S. debt crisis of more than $22 trillion, compounded by a 10-month deficit of $866 billion that is projected to rise to over $1 trillion by the end of the fiscal year.

“As we deal with this crisis and also wrestle with paying for actual priorities, do we really want government funding studies of a non-endangered frog’s mating habits?” Paul asks.

Federal taxpayer dollars also funded fraudulent claims, the report notes.

More than $5.3 million of taxpayer money funded false claims for Superstorm Sandy in New York City, and $48 billion went toward improper Medicare payments.

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has deemed the Medicare program a “High Risk Program,” since 1990, the report notes. Additionally, more than 80 GAO recommendations remain unfulfilled, including 28 recommendations from its 2017 through 2019 High Risk Lists.

“Improper payments fundamentally undermine the effectiveness and stability of federal programs, and Medicare itself is already in a precarious position,” Paul adds, pointing to a CMS prediction that the Medicare Hospital Insurance (HI) trust fund will be entirely depleted by 2026.

Taxpayers also funded $150,000 worth of English and IT skills teaching at Madrassas, and $51,722,107 for Google Scholar searches in Hawaii, according to the report.

“When it comes to wasteful spending, the federal budget is a target rich environment,” Adam Andrzejewski, CEO of OpenTheBooks.com, told The Center Square. “Senator Paul should be commended for doing the hard work of oversight. Identifying examples of waste creates downward pressure on spending, which is exactly what Washington needs.”

OpenTheBooks.com has uncovered billions of dollars of taxpayer money wasted by the U.S. government. Its most recent report found that the U.S. Small Business Administration made more than $24 billion in loans to non-small businesses, the majority of which defaulted.

Image courtesy of Flickr/401kcalculator.org

One thought on “‘The Waste Report’ details $50 billion in questionable government spending

  1. Follow Vermont Grant money and money paid for studies, follow fed money for project, follow, TIFF money, follow, LOT money and you’ll quiclky find millions in waste, right here in good ole Vermont.

    Then to make things interesting follow,lobbyists….you’ll find more waste.

    Article,18 in our Vermont constitution talks of frugality, think they’ve heard about that in Montpelier?

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