Appropriations

House Republicans have been working hard to get this country back on the right fiscal track.

GETTING WORK DONE

  • House passed 7 of 12 Appropriations bills
  • Full Committee passed 11 of 12 bills
  • Subcommittees passed all 12 bills

FULFILLING REPUBLICAN COMMITMENTS

  • No earmarks in any bill
  • Domestic bills below FY09 spending levels
  • Continued roll‐back of federal discretionary spending—cutting an additional $15 billion
  • Republican bills will cut total domestic discretionary spending three years in a row — reducing spending by more than $110 billion from FY10 to FY13

OVERVIEW OF EACH OF THE HOUSE-PASSED APPROPRIATIONS BILLS

WHAT I’VE DONE TO CUT SPENDING AND REDUCE THE SIZE OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT:

  • I’ve supported legislation that would begin to rein in runaway spending and reform entitlement programs, including:
    • The Ryan Budget (H.Con.Res 34), which would trim $6.2 trillion from the federal debt over ten years as compared with President Obama’s FY12 budget.
    • Cut, Cap and Balance (H.R. 2560), which would immediately trim $111 billion from FY12 discretionary spending and cap future spending just under 20% of GDP by the end of the next ten years.  These caps would save $5.8 trillion over ten years.

  • As a staunch fiscal conservative, I have strenuously opposed spending increases regardless of who has occupied the Oval Office.

  • I voted against $2.3 trillion in new spending during the Bush Administration, including:

    • Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Program – $1.2 trillion over 10 years
    • 2008 TARP Bailout – $ 787 Billion
    • 2002 Farm Bill – $104 Billion
    • No Child Left Behind – $24.4 Billion in NCLB-tied funding

  • To date, I’ve voted against $7 trillion in new spending during the Obama Administration, including:

    • H.R. 3590 – Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act – $1.3 trillion
    • H.R. 1 – American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Stimulus) – $787 billion
    • H.R. 3961 – Medicare Physician Payment Reform Act – $200 billion
    • H.R. 4213 – Unemployment Compensation Extension Act – $34 billion
    • H.R. 4173 – Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Bill – $10.2 billion
    • H.R. 5297 – Small Business Jobs and Credit Act of 2010 – $3.371 billion

In 2010, the House Republicans instituted an earmark moratorium. An “earmark” is money that an individual Member of Congress requests for an individual project. Banning earmarks does not reduce federal spending. All it does is leave decisions on how to spend your tax dollars to unelected bureaucrats in backrooms of federal agencies. I support an open and transparent earmark process in order to ensure that tax payer dollars are being spent responsibly on worthwhile public projects. To see the appropriations projects I have submitted and received funding for since I was elected to Congress, please select the links below.

FY2011FY2010FY2009FY2008FY2007FY2006FY2005FY2004FY2003FY2002

Responses to “Appropriations”

  1. Susan Wier says:

    I heard you on Fox News this morning talking about illegal immigrants not getting social security, welfare, food stamps, etc. You must not be aware that this is happening in southern Florida. We have a family member who is working in this area. How is it that I have paid into social security for years and am a citizen and they are illegal and are getting not only social security, but other monies. She said this was going on during Bush’s time in office also. What is going on? How is money appropriated for this? How many other states are doing this?

    Thank you for your interest.

  2. Dart Stoddard says:

    Mr. Culberson,
    I’m currently Vice President of the Texas Rural Letter Carriers’ Association. I wanted to express just how much our state and national associations are against switching to five day delivery from the current six day. As a business the Postal Services only real job is delivering the mail. Times are tough but even during the Great Depression, the Postal Service didn’t go to five day delivery. Perhaps Mr. Potter isn’t the right person at this time to lead the Postal Service through these difficult times. I urge you to stand strong and not let Mr. Potter take a path that could lead to the Postal Services total demise. Thank you for your attention and your service to this Great Nation.

  3. Lake says:

    I recently received a bill for $1200 in tax that I failed to pay in 2007. I looked over the information and realized that I did indeed owe the money and therefore sent a check for the tax amount plus interest. I wonder what would have happened to me if I refused?

    Strangely the chairman of the committee in charge of tax law failed to report well over a hundred times the income that I failed to report, and nothing seems to be happening to him. He is apparently still qualified to be in charge of taxes. Is it any wonder why nobody trusts Congress?

    Thank you Congressman Culberson for trying to get rid of him, but it was of course futile b/c he is a friend of Pelosi the Great (Liar).

    Keep up the effort!


Join the Conversation!