Thanks to House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH)
FACT CHECKING THE “STIMULUS” SPENDING BILL’S FIRST 100 DAYS
May 27, 2009 | House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH) | Permalink
Today,
the Administration is releasing yet another report on its
trillion-dollar “stimulus” spending bill – one that Democrats claim
will produce only half the jobs at twice the cost of the House GOP’s
better stimulus solution.
It’s been a full 100 days since the bill became law, and the
Administration is pulling out all the stops to put a positive spin on
the legislation, which has been increasingly panned by media and state
and local officials as wasteful and inefficient – basically, anything
but the “timely, targeted, and temporary” bill Washington Democrats
promised earlier this year. As the Administration marks the 100th day
of the “stimulus” spending bill, let’s take a closer look at some of
the claims Democrats made about the legislation earlier this year – and
how those claims stack 100 days later:
Claim:
The President claimed that the stimulus “…will save or create 3 million
to 4 million jobs over the next two years.” (Remarks by the President
in Elkhart, Indiana, WhiteHouse.gov)
Fact Check:
“State officials have complained about the difficulty of obtaining
grants for construction projects, while economists question
administration claims that the effort already has saved or created
150,000 jobs.” (Adriel Bettelheim, “Tinkerbell Effect, Part 3: Obama’s
Job Creation Efforts,” CQ Politics, May 27, 2009) The Associated Press reported
that: “The early trend seen in the AP analysis runs counter to
expectations raised by Obama, that road and infrastructure money from
the historic $787 billion stimulus plan would create jobs in areas most
devastated by layoffs.” (Matt Apuzzo and Brett Blackledge, “Stimulus
Watch: Jobs, But Not Where Needed Most,” Associated Press, May 11, 2009)
Claim:
The President claimed that it would contain, “[n]ot a single pet
project. Not a single earmark.” (Remarks by the President at his first
press conference, WhiteHouse.gov)
Fact Check:
The “stimulus” “contains dozens of narrowly defined programs that send
money to specific areas or cater to special interests.” In fact, the
“stimulus” contains “$50 million for habitat restoration and other
water needs in the San Francisco Bay Area” and “$62 million for
military projects in Guam.” (Michael Grabell and Christopher Weaver,
“In stimulus bills, earmarks by any other name,” ProPublica, Feb. 5, 2009)
Claim:
The President claimed that the stimulus “…contains an unprecedented
level of transparency and accountability, so that every American will
be able to go online and see where and how we’re spending every dime.”
(Remarks by the President at his first press conference, WhiteHouse.gov)
Fact Check:
“Although President Obama has vowed that citizens will be able to track
‘every dime’ of the $787 billion stimulus bill, a government website
dedicated to the spending won’t have details on contracts and grants
until October and may not be complete until next spring — halfway
through the program, administration officials said.” (Matt Kelley,
“Details thin on stimulus contracts,” USA Today, May 6, 2009)
Claim: The
President pledged that “nearly 400,000 men and women will go to work
rebuilding our crumbling roads and bridges.” (Remarks by the President,
WhiteHouse.gov)
Fact Check: So far “a full 99.7 percent” of money allocated to the Transportation Department remains unspent, according to The Washington Post.
Perhaps an aide to House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee
Chairman James Oberstar (D-MN) said it best: “To some extent, I think
the administration oversold the transportation aspect of this…It was
sold as the heart and soul of the package, and it really just isn’t.”
(Matt Apuzzo and Brett Blackledge, “Stimulus Watch: Jobs, But Not Where
Needed Most,” Associated Press, May 11, 2009)
Claim:
Then-Senator Obama promised that was he would, “not sign any
non-emergency bill without giving the American public an opportunity to
review and comment on the White House website for five days.”
(Organizing For America, “Obama’s Stance on Ethics”)
Fact Check:
Congress passed the stimulus bill on Friday, February 13; the President
signed it in Denver on Tuesday, February 17 – less than the five day
review period promised by the President. This troubling trend has
continued throughout the year. Just last week, for example, the
President waited only one day before signing the Defense Department
weapons acquisition bill after Congress passed it and waited two after
Congress passed the “Credit Cardholders Bill of Rights Act” before his
signature made that bill law (Stephen Dinan, “Obama ducks promise to
delay bill signings,” Washington Times, May
26, 2009); in fact, as of March, “Of the nine bills Mr. Obama has
signed so far in his term, he has signed six of them less than five
days after Congress sent them to him,” including the trillion-dollar
“stimulus” bill. (Stephen Dinan, “Obama to sign lands bill before 5
days of comment,” Washington Times, March 30, 2009)
REPUBLICAN LEADER PRESS OFFICE
REP. JOHN BOEHNER (R-OH)
H-204, THE CAPITOL
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(202) 225-4000
| GOPLEADER.GOV




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