INTRODUCTION
The federal budget provides numerous slush funds that can be used to subsidize the lobbying and political activities of special-interest groups. The agendas of these tax-subsidized groups tend toward bigger government, more spending, and increased regulation. Every American is forced to finance this system that allows well-connected Washington-based groups to use taxpayer funds to advance political causes to which many Americans object. Congress can put a stop to subsidized politicking by refusing to fund the most egregiously abused programs.
Top Ten Federal Programs That Actively Subsidize Politics and
Lobbying1
1. AmeriCorps $427 million
2. Sr. Community Service Employment Program $400 million
3. Legal Services Corporation $400 million
4. Title X Family Planning $189 million
5. National Endowment for the Humanities $180 million
6. Market Promotion Program $75 million
7. Senior Environmental Employment Program $45 million
8. Superfund Worker Training $32 million
9. HHS Discretionary Aging Projects $26 million
10. Telecomm. & Info. Infrastructure Assistance $25
million
Total $1.8 billion
In 1995, Congress attempted
to address this problem by ending grants to groups that engage in
lobbying. Unfortunately, the restriction Congress approved applies
only to one category of lobbying organizations. Efforts to erect
broader restrictions on taxpayer subsidies for lobbyists,
principally the Istook-McIntosh-Ehrlich Amendment, were stymied.
They should continue in 1996.
While broad efforts to end
"welfare for lobbyists" continue, Congress also should identify and
eliminate those programs that serve most often to prop up special
interests. The best way to do this is to shut off the largest
spigots of funding for big-government activist groups. Ten programs
stand out. Some have been slated for reform by one or both houses
of Congress, but no changes have been enacted into law. All deserve
to be eliminated outright.
1. AmeriCorps $427 Million
In 1993-1994, AmeriCorps employed about 20,000
"volunteers"described as "working all over America, helping people
person to person."2 In reality, a significant
number of these paid volunteers work in federal or state
bureaucracies, government-funded programs, or political action
organizations3. Moreover, ignoring the Corporation's
mission statement to address the nation's problems through direct
community service, several AmeriCorps programs have engaged in
advocacy and direct partisan politics at the expense of the
taxpayers.
Section 132(a)(3) of the
National and Community Service Trust Act of 1993 clearly states
that "any approved national service position provided to an
applicant will not be used to perform service that provides a
direct benefit to any... partisan political organization.... " But
in San Francisco, the AmeriCorps "Summer of Safety" program
organized 40 groups to rally against a "three strikes and you're
out" crime bill provision.4
Elsewhere, one of the biggest
abusers of AmeriCorps' mission was a nonprofit group located in
Cole, Colorado, which was supposed to use its volunteers to help
people in northeast Denver neighborhoods. Instead, according to
state records, leaders of the Cole Coalition sent program
participants to hand out political fliers directly attacking a
local City Councilman, Hiawatha Davis. "The 'volunteers' had to
draft campaign fliers and distribute them door-to-door in April and
May [1995] when Davis and [Mayor Wellington] Webb were fighting for
re-election."5 According to 21-year-old volunteer Joseph
Taylor, "We realized there was something politically partisan. The
more we began to pose a threat to blowing the whistle, the more
they tried to pacify us. They kept saying... this was a great
position we were in, making public officials accountable for their
jobs."6 Although the Cole Coalition was stripped of its
funding, the AmeriCorps program lives on as does the
potential for abuse.
In proposing the AmeriCorps
program, President Clinton declared that "National service will be
America at its best building community, offering
opportunity, and rewarding responsibility. National service is a
challenge for Americans from every background and way of life, and
it values something far more than money."7 Like many
other government programs, however, AmeriCorps has not lived up to
its promise. Subsidizing political activism does not qualify as
responsible behavior.
2. Senior Community Service Employment Program $400 Million
The Senior Community Service
Employment Program (SCSEP) is operated by the Department of Labor.
It provides more than $400 million in annual funding for senior
citizen employment.8 The stated purpose of this program,
authorized by Title V of the Older Americans Act of 1965, is "To
provide, foster, and promote part-time work opportunities (usually
20 hours per week) in community service activities for low income
persons who are 55 years of age and older. To the extent feasible,
the program assists and promotes the transition of program
enrollees into unsubsidized employment."9
States, national nonprofits,
and territories are eligible to receive grants. In reality,
however, 78 percent (more than $320 million) of SCSEP grant money
is segregated from state funding to subsidize nine national
nonprofit organizations. The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance states explicitly that "The Department [of Labor]
annually renews grant agreements. There are no plans to add
additional organizations." Moreover, "Awards are not on a
competitive basis."
Fortunately, the FY 1996
House Appropriations Committee report begins to address this
problem. Although the program's funding was reduced by only $50
million in the House proposal, the report states that "The
Committee has funded the program under the basic law rather than
continuing the past practice of earmarking 78% of the funds for
national contractors and 22% for the states."
Even under this reform,
however, the nine recipient organizations are not prohibited from
receiving funds. They simply are thrown into the same pot as the
states, and federal bureaucrats might be able to award the grants
in a similar fashion. To stop the potential for abuse, these
organizations should be cut off entirely.
3. Legal Services Corporation $400 Million
The Legal Services
Corporation (LSC) was established by the Legal Services Corporation
Act of 1974 to provide free legal assistance to the indigent in
civil, non-criminal matters. Its origins lie in President Lyndon
Johnson's War on Poverty, specifically with the Office of Economic
Opportunity (OEO), which in 1965 began making direct grants to
local legal aid organizations.10
The Corporation uses its
budget (currently $400 million) to funnel federal tax dollars to
323 private groups around the country. These taxpayer-funded legal
groups then engage in political and lobbying activities, often at
the expense of the genuine legal services needed by poor
people.
Legal Services suffers from
an institutionalized ideological bias. Its attorneys regularly
promote racial preferences and illegal immigration. Its grantees
are sufficiently politicized to become involved in congressional
redistricting, litigation, and campaigning on ballot referendum
questions. Over the past 30 years, the LSC has been the legal
pillar of the welfare state. Through litigation, advocacy, and
lobbying, it has helped to generate hundreds of billions of dollars
in increased local, state, and federal welfare spending and the
addition of millions of people to the welfare rolls11.
It has sued to stop welfare reform in New Jersey and in other
states. It even has engaged in actions litigating to
prevent the eviction of drug dealers from public housing, for
example that harm the poor.
The LSC clearly has abandoned
its mission to such a degree that no meaningful reform can be
enacted. There is only one way to end this glaring abuse of the
taxpayers' funds and trust: abolish the LSC.
4. Title X Family Planning $189 Million
Perhaps a more accurate name
for these multiple slush funds would be "Planned Parenthood Planned
Giving Programs." Despite the fact that much of Planned
Parenthood's agenda is repulsive to large numbers of Americans,
this high-profile political organization receives a substantial
portion of its revenue each year through government
"contributions." Planned Parenthood and its affiliates join with a
handful of other active organizations in taking advantage of these
costly grant programs.
The key components of Title X include:
Family Planning Services/Umbrella Councils ($183 Million)
Among the organizations
funded under this heading are Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin ($2.6
million), Planned Parenthood of Minnesota ($2.3 million), the New
Jersey Family Planning League ($4.2 million), and the California
Family Planning Council ($11.7 million).
These nonprofit groups
receive $62.6 million one-third of the total annual
allocation. However, much of the remaining $120.4 million is likely
to benefit similar nonprofits. According to the Catalog of
Federal Domestic Assistance, "Projects include: (1) A State
Health Department which subcontracts to service providers
throughout an entire State; and (2) a service provider to serve
several counties or a smaller geographical area."
Accordingly, many states will
subgrant or subcontract with nonprofits that engage in lobbying all
levels of government.
Personnel Training ($5 Million)
The stated purpose of this
program is "To provide training to Title X project staffs; to
improve utilization and career development of paraprofessional and
paramedical manpower in family planning services, particularly in
rural areas. "
The notice in the Catalog
of Federal Domestic Assistance states that "funds may not be
used in programs where abortion is a method of family planning."
This prohibition notwithstanding, at least 20 percent of these
funds was allocated to Planned Parenthood chapters and family
planning councils that typically deal with abortion and engage in
legislative or political advocacy.
Service Delivery Improvement ($500,000)
The stated purpose of this
program is "To promote service delivery improvement through
research studies, and application of knowledge."
Examples of previous funding
include studies of factors influencing women to discontinue
attending family planning clinics and studies of particular family
planning needs of underserved subgroups of low-income women. In
other words, the principal purpose of this half-million dollar
program is to discover why people are not demanding even more
government-subsidized services.
5. National Endowment for the Humanities $180 Million
The National Endowment for the
Humanities actively promotes a liberal political and
ideological agenda. In recent years, it consistently has funded
politically correct projects, including the highly controversial
National History Standards that were denounced by former NEH Chair
Lynne Cheney and other serious scholars. These so-called standards
took political correctness to a new level by ignoring major events
in American history that fail to bolster the liberal academic's
world view. Simply put, the recent work of the NEH has served to
undermine support for Western civilization.
Abuse of federal grant
dollars for political purposes is rampant in the NEH's most
prominent current project, the so-called National
Conversation. At the cost of millions of dollars, the endowment
is subsidizing such special-interest groups as the National Council
on Aging, American Bar Association, and American Library
Association, none of which is any stranger to government grants.
Once again, the "Beltway Bandits" have managed to manipulate the
bureaucracy to tap the public purse.
In creating the National
Conversation, NEH Chairman Sheldon Hackney stated that he sought "a
national conversation open to all Americans, a conversation in
which all voices are heard in which we grapple seriously with the
meaning of American pluralism." Apparently, Hackney believes that
meaningful public dialogue is possible only if the government
intervenes and pays for it to happen, and that the increasing
number of Americans participating in talk radio a
largely conservative phenomenon are not "serious."
The fact of the matter is
that these so-called conversations are simply a high-profile tool
to promote a politically correct agenda. The NEH describes the
National Council on the Aging's grant, for example, as directed
partly toward financing "short film clips [that] will serve as a
catalyst for discussion on topics such as... crossing ethnic
boundaries, and practicing politics."12
Scattered throughout NEH
documents are references to ethnic diversity and "equality and
commonality." For example, the description of the grant to the
American Bar Association states that its purpose is to foster
more than one hundred nationwide conversations using legal cases to explore the meaning of "e pluribus unum" (out of many, one) through five topics: race, gender, affirmative action, and socioeconomic equality; the place of religion and religious expression in the "public square"; pluralism in public schools and curriculums; immigration and American identity; and controversial ideas and speech in a diverse society.
The effect of establishing
"discourse" based on such an agenda inevitably is to encourage the
perpetuation of a liberal hegemony over American political
life.
6. Market Promotion Program $75 Million
The stated purpose of the
Market Promotion Program (MPP) is "to encourage the development,
maintenance, and expansion of commercial export markets for U.S.
agricultural commodities through cost-share assistance to eligible
trade organizations that implement a foreign market development
program."
The funds from the MPP go to
support some of the largest and most vocal special interests in the
country. In 1995, for example, MPP grantees opposed bipartisan
efforts to reform farm subsidies. They fought successfully against
the effort to eliminate this program outright, and they also fought
reforms designed to decrease taxpayer subsidies to farmers,
particularly large corporate farms. Once again, all of these
self-serving efforts were subsidized unwittingly by the American
taxpayer.
The few grantees under the
Market Promotion Program that are not special-interest associations
are large, profitable corporations benefiting from a slush fund
that moonlights as corporate welfare.
7. Senior Environmental Employment Program $45 Million
The Senior Environmental
Employment Program (SEE) purports to "use the talents of Americans
55 years of age or older [to] provide technical assistance to
Federal, State, and local environmental agencies for projects of
pollution prevention, abatement and control." Only private,
nonprofit organizations designated by the Secretary of Labor and on
the "approved list" pursuant to Title V of the Older Americans Act
of 1965 may receive funding. The approvals read like a laundry list
of special-interest groups.
The annual appropriation for
SEE is $45 million, spread out over approximately 250 grants per
year. No matching funds are required. Funded projects often have
provided senior citizens to EPA for "research and general
administrative and clerical tasks," as well as for surveys and
monitoring projects.
This program provides a dual
benefit to the promoters of big government and increased
regulation: Numerous senior citizen groups receive subsidies for
their lobbying and political activity, and the EPA benefits from
additional troops to enforce its regulatory agenda. According to
the Federal Assistance Awards Database System, virtually every
regional EPA office and every division within the agency's
headquarters receives support from these grants. This permits the
agency to evade existing employment caps without anyone
knowing.
For example, internal EPA
documents obtained by the Heritage Foundation indicate that in
March 1995, the agency's Region 10 offices in Seattle had more than
50 employees from special-interest groups on staff, including seven
from the National Council of Senior Citizens and six from the
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP). There is every
reason to believe similar situations exist in every other regional
office, as well as at EPA headquarters in Washington.
8. Superfund Worker Training Program $32 Million
This program provides nothing
short of direct payoffs to unions which, in turn, work with their
allies in the environmental movement. Authorized by the Superfund
law, these grants purport to provide "practical health and safety
training programs [for those] who are engaged in activities related
to hazardous materials."
Much like its namesake,
however, the Superfund Worker Training program is a failure.
Despite the billions of dollars spent on Superfund itself, less
than one-quarter of the most dangerous toxic waste sites have been
cleaned up. Why, then, train people in failure? Millions of dollars
are wasted preparing people to clean up waste sites that never get
cleaned up.
The nature of this program is
demonstrated by its blatantly political selection of grantees,
which include many of the nation's most powerful labor unions. (A
selection of recent beneficiaries can be found in the appendix to this paper.) The Department is
conducting a program evaluation that should be ready sometime this
spring. It is hoped that this evaluation finally will note the
potential pitfalls of providing more than $25 million of $32
million in total annual funding to organized labor.
9. HHS Discretionary Aging Projects $26 Million
This program, administered by
the Administration on Aging, is one of three programs authorized
under the Older Americans Act that serve to underwrite the
activities of senior-oriented special-interest groups, such as the
96 percent federally funded National Council of Senior Citizens.
The stated purpose of the Discretionary Aging Projects program is
"to provide adequately trained personnel in the field of aging,
improve knowledge of the problems and needs of the elderly, and to
demonstrate better ways of improving the quality of life for the
elderly."
However benign its stated
purpose, most of this program's funds flow to organizations that
promote government interventionism. Grantees in 1994 included some
of the major groups that opposed efforts to reform Medicare,
including the American Association of Retired Persons, Families
USA, and the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and
Medicare. Other grantees (like the Child Welfare League of America)
stand out not simply for their political advocacy activities, but
also because there is no clear relationship between their missions
and the field of aging.
10. Telecommunications and Information Infrastructure Assistance $25 Million
The Telecommunications and
Information Infrastructure Assistance Program (TIIAP) is operated
by the National
Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) in the
U.S. Department of Commerce and is a key element of Vice President
Al Gore's attempt to impose central planning on the "information
superhighway." The program gave out $24.4 million in FY 1994 and
was slated to dole out $36 million in 1995. In 1994, 92 grants were
made. Last year, 120 subsidies were given out to help numerous
liberal groups post propaganda on the information
superhighway.
According to NTIA documents,
in 1994, Planned Parenthood Federation of America received $300,000
to set up a "nationwide on-line information system" for itself and
all 164 of its affiliates. Likewise, in 1994, a California
organization called LatinoNet received funding to "establish a
network of regional field representatives" and "demonstrate a model
for building a national grassroots information system," among other
things.
Organizations that filed
proposals and applications for funding in the FY 1995 process
include Families USA, lead lobbyists for Hillary Clinton's failed
attempt at a government takeover of the U.S. health care system;
ACORN, which led noisy demonstrations in Congress last year; the
Congressional Black Caucus Foundation; and Citizens Fund, an
affiliate of Citizen Action, an aggressive grassroots lobbying
organization. While these groups did not receive funding last year,
they clearly are interested in the program and no doubt will seek
subsidies in the future.
The most egregious abuse of
the TIIAP program was discovered last fall. A $200,000 grant was
provided to an online bulletin board called HandsNet to establish a
training center and recruit additional advocacy organizations to
its ranks.
An examination of postings on
the HandsNet Internet site,
makes it clear that the group's principal purpose is political
advocacy. The site has been used in recent months to fight welfare
reform and the Istook-McIntosh-Ehrlich Amendment to end
taxpayer-subsidized political corruption, among other issues.
HandsNet offers three key information services: Action Alerts, a
Weekly Digest that summarizes the Alerts, and daily updates on key
issues. Members of HandsNet include such liberal special interests
as the Children's Defense Fund, the Alliance for Justice, OMB
Watch, and Families USA.
CONCLUSION
Government funding of
political activism is indefensible. Yet hundreds of groups now
receive government grants which are used, and used effectively, to
subsidize their political activities. Americans deserve better
treatment of their hard-earned tax dollars. Funneling millions of
dollars in public subsidies to special interests to subsidize
political advocacy qualifies as a significant abuse of the public's
money and the public trust.
Congress should continue to
consider ending all government grants. But in the meantime, it can
reduce government-subsidized politicking significantly by
eliminating funding for those programs most abused by political
activists.
[This study uses material prepared by Ken Boehm and Peter
Flaherty of the National Legal and Policy Center (for the Legal
Services Corporation section) and James F. Hirni, Research
Assistant at the Heritage Foundation (for the AmeriCorps
section)].
The following tables list some
of the recent grantees under some of the programs noted in this
paper. The dollar amounts represent funding between July 1993 and
June 1994 and should not be considered complete. Identification
numbers shown correspond with those in the Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance and are provided to permit readers to
examine the programs in more detail.
While the data shown are
correct, actual amounts may well be larger due to inconsistent
reporting by federal agencies. The organizations listed in these
tables do not necessarily engage in legislative or political
advocacy, but are shown to illustrate the types of grantees found
in each program
Market Promotion Program
Catalog #10.600
Department of Agriculture
Organization Subsidy
U.S. Meat Export Federation
$7,200,000
Cotton Council International
6,440,000
USA Poultry and Egg Export Council
5,120,000
Wine Institute 4,950,000
Mid-America International Agri-Trade
4,470,000
Southern United States Trade Association
4,470,000
East U.S. Agricultural and Food Export
4,430,000
Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute
4,400,000
Western U.S. Agricultural Trade Association
4,020,000
State of Florida, Department of Citrus
3,800,000
USA Rice Council
3,660,000
U.S. Feed Grains Council
3,650,000
California Walnut Commission
2,890,000
Almond Board of California
2,810,000
California Table Grape Commission
2,520,000
Pillsbury Company
2,222,000
California Prune Board
2,180,000
U.S. Mink Export Development Council
1,940,000
California Pistachio Commission
1,150,000
Pet Food Institute
1,140,000
California Cling Peach/Pacific Coast Cannery
1,090,000
California Tree Fruit Agreement
950,000
National Peanut Council
870,000
USA Fresh Sweet Cherry Promotion
863,000
National Dry Bean Council
830,000
National Sunflower Association
620,000
California Strawberry Commission
520,000
Northwest Wine Promotion Coalition
470,000
USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council
400,000
California Avocado Commission
370,000
New York Wine and Grape Foundation
350,000
Catfish Institute
340,000
International Apple Institute
340,000
Asparagus USA 310,000
Ginseng Board of Wisconsin
260,000
National Honey Board
230,000
AGRIPAC, Inc. 205,000
U.S./South Africa Trade Association
150,000
Campbell Soup Company
40,000
Entenmann's, Inc. 40,000
Del Monte Foods, USA
20,000
Senior Community Service Employment
Program Catalog #17.235
Department of Labor: Employment and Training Administration
Organization Subsidy
Green Thumb, Inc.
$102,000,000
National Council of Senior Citizens
61,000,000
American Association of Retired Persons
48,000,000
National Council on Aging
38,000,000
Asociation Nacional Pro Personas Mayores
12,000,000
National Caucus and Center on Black Aged, Inc.
12,000,000
National Urban League
4,000,000
National Indian Council on Aging
2,000,000
National Pacific/Asian Resource Center
2,000,000
Senior Environmental Employment
Program Catalog #66.508
Environmental Protection Agency
Organization Subsidy
AARP $20,000,000
National Caucus and Center on Black Aged, Inc.
1,500,000
Asociation Nacional Pro Personas Mayores
1,500,000
National Council on the Aging, Inc.
185,000
National Council of Senior Citizens
165,000
National Asian Pacific Center on Aging
150,000
National Association for Hispanic Elderly
150,000
Discretionary Aging Projects
Catalog #93.048
Department of Health and Human Services
Organization Subsidy
National Association of State Units on Aging
$1,132,000
National Academy of Sciences
733,000
National Association of Area Agencies on Aging
700,000
AARP 625,000
National Citizens Coalition for Nursing Home Reform
500,000
National Association of Nutrition Agencies
430,000
National Caucus and Center on Black Aged, Inc.
400,000
Three Feathers Associates
400,000
American Public Welfare Association
350,000
Pension Rights Center
320,000
Asociation Nacional Pro Personas Mayores
300,000
U.S. Department of Commerce
300,000
Washington Business Group on Health
300,000
National Hispanic Council on Aging
284,000
National Council of Negro Women, Inc.
280,000
Andrus Gerontology Center
250,000
Center for Social Gerontology
250,000
Community Transportation Association
250,000
Families USA Foundation
250,000
National Council on Aging, Inc.
250,000
National Indian Council on Aging
250,000
National Pacific/Asian Resource Center
212,000
American Bar Association
200,000
Child Welfare League of America, Inc.
200,000
National Senior Citizens Law Center
200,000
Senior Focus 200,000
Legal Services for the Elderly, Inc.
175,000
Association for Gerontology and Human Services
173,000
National Consumer Law Center, Inc.
150,000
National Title VI Directors Association
150,000
Alliance for Aging, Inc.
145,000
American Society on Aging
137,000
National Bar Association
120,000
U.S. DHHS, Office of the Secretary
117,000
American Institute of Architects
100,000
Easter Seal Society for Disabled Children
100,000
Legal Services of Northern California
100,000
Older Womens League
100,000
Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene
100,000
U.S. DHHS, Public Health Service
100,000
Sunshine Terrace Foundation, Inc.
98,000
Mental Health Law Project
90,000
National Clearinghouse for Legal Services
90,000
California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform
75,000
Housing Counseling Services, Inc.
75,000
Legal Assistance for Seniors
75,000
National Committee to Preserve Social Security and
Medicare 75,000
National Senior Citizens Education and Research Center,
Inc. 75,000
U.S. Department of Education
75,000
U.S. DHHS, National Institutes of Health
72,000
American Medical Association
50,000
Catholic Charities USA
50,000
National Committee for the Prevention of Alcoholism
50,000
Gerontological Society of America
30,000
Superfund Worker Training
Program Catalog #93.142
Department of Health and Human Services
Organization Subsidy
Laborers AGC Education Fund
$7,917,000
United Brotherhood of Carpenters
3,723,000
International Chemical Workers Union
3,319,000
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union
2,898,000
International Union of Operating Engineers
2,532,000
Teamsters 1,716,000
George Meany Center for Labor Studies
850,000
International Association of Firefighters
709,000
United Auto Workers
671,000
Service Employees International Union
628,000
Endnotes:
- The funding levels shown reflect FY 1995 figures as reported in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance or by program administrators.
- President William J. Clinton, State of the Union Address, January 24, 1995.
- For a more complete discussion of the problems with AmeriCorps, see James Hirni, "AmeriCorps: A $575 Million Boondoggle," Heritage Foundation Issue Bulletin No. 212, September 13, 1995.
- Elizabeth Shogren, "Reviews Mixed for Trial Run of Youth Corps," The Los Angeles Times, September 11, 1994, Part A, p. 1.
- Katie Kerwin, "Cole Loses AmeriCorps Funding," Rocky Mountain News, July 22, 1995, p. 14A.
- Ibid.
- Mark Pitsch, "Clinton Launches Sales Campaign for Service Plan," Education Week, Vol. 12, No. 24 (March 10, 1993), p.1.
- See also Marshall Wittmann and Charles P. Griffin, "Federal Budget Targets Nine Seniors Groups for Subsidies," Heritage Foundation Government Integrity Project Report No. 7, November 7, 1995.
- Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, program ID 17.235.
- For a more complete discussion of the Legal Services Corporation, see Kenneth F. Boehm and Peter T. Flaherty, "Why the LSC Must Be Abolished," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1057, October 18, 1995.
- See Howard Phillips and Peter H. Ferrara, "The Real Cost of the LSC: A Two Trillion Dollar Bypass of Electoral Accountability," Conservative Caucus Research, Analysis and Education Foundation, June 14, 1995.
- From NEH World Wide Web site, January