ANALYSIS — As one longtime congressional staffer told us years ago: Sen. Richard C. Shelby “usually gets what he wants.”
Now, as appropriations earmarks have returned after a dozen years’ hiatus, the retiring Alabama senator has delivered once more for his state — with over a half-billion dollars’ worth of “congressionally directed spending” in the $1.5 trillion fiscal 2022 omnibus bill that President Joe Biden signed Tuesday.
Shelby, the top Republican on Senate Appropriations, blew away the rest of the field by securing more than $548 million in home-state projects in this year’s spending bills — not counting $3 million for which he shared credit with Rep. Jerry Carl, R-Ala.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., another senior appropriator, was No. 2 overall, with about $334 million worth of solo requests that made it into the package, a CQ Roll Call analysis found.
Senate Labor-HHS-Education ranking member Roy Blunt, R-Mo., came in third at $265 million; $181 million was in his own subcommittee bill. In all, Blunt — who, like Shelby, is retiring after this Congress — accounted for about 10 percent of total dollars earmarked in the Labor-HHS-Education bill.
Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, the top Republican on Interior-Environment Appropriations, was next with almost $225 million. Little Vermont punched above its weight, with Senate Appropriations Chairman Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vt. — also retiring after this year — rounding out the top five.
The top 10 senators bringing home earmarks are Appropriations Committee members, as are 16 of the top 20. Two of the four who aren’t on that panel — GOP Sens. James M. Inhofe of Oklahoma and Richard M. Burr of North Carolina — are retiring. The others are Georgia’s Raphael Warnock, a freshman considered one of the most vulnerable Democrats in the midterms, and Colorado’s Michael Bennet, also up for reelection but considered a safer bet to win.
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