WASHINGTON — For decades, lawmakers helped home-state manufacturers lower the cost of imported materials by crafting tiny bills that reduced or eliminated tariffs on products that range from massive factory equipment to vats of industrial-strength chemicals. WASHINGTON — For decades,
WASHINGTON — For decades, lawmakers helped home-state manufacturers lower the cost of imported materials by crafting tiny bills that reduced or eliminated tariffs on products that range from massive factory equipment to vats of industrial-strength chemicals.
Every year or two, hundreds of these duty suspensions would be rolled into one big miscellaneous tariff bill — an MTB, in Capitol Hill parlance — and passed. Such legislation was so routine, it was approved by unanimous voice vote.
But like so much else in Washington these days, the commonplace has become controversial, and these targeted tax breaks have come under scrutiny.
The scrutiny has opened a rift among Republican lawmakers. They like tariff reductions as tax cuts, but some who favor a flatter income-tax system and a “level playing field” for businesses see miscellaneous tariff bills as congressional pork doled out to favored companies with lobbyists to push for the duty suspensions and campaign contributions for senators or representatives who get them.
Perhaps nowhere is the rift clearer than in South Carolina, a conservative bastion with seven of eight congressional seats held by Republicans.
Sen. Jim DeMint is known as Senator Tea Party, while Rep. Mick Mulvaney is a tea party favorite who joined Congress in the 2010 wave of conservative newcomers.
DeMint, a Greenville Republican, wants to limit lawmakers’ role in obtaining the duty suspensions, which he views as another form of the spending earmarks he’s led colleagues to ban.
“Why must we erect needless obstacles and force businesses to hire lobbyists and grovel for attention from politicians just to be heard?” DeMint told McClatchy Newspapers.
Mulvaney, an Indian Land Republican, disagrees with the junior senator from his state — and has let DeMint know it.
“I’ve had very candid conversations with Sen. DeMint,” Mulvaney said. “He’s trying to make the case why these are earmarks. I just don’t get it.”
DeMint and Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat who’s waged her own battle against earmarks, are pushing legislation that would allow companies to seek duty relief directly from the International Trade Commission. Under the current system, the trade commission vets such requests after receiving them from members of Congress.
“We have a win-win, bipartisan solution that will result in more tariff suspensions, streamlines the process, ends the pay-to-play scheme, gives small businesses better access and still retains congressional authority,” DeMint said.
The DeMint-McCaskill measure would require Congress to pass legislation containing the duty reductions or removals the trade commission approved. It would retain the current $500,000 maximum for each tariff suspension, most of which last two or three years.
South Carolina’s senior senator, fellow Republican Lindsey Graham, said while the DeMint-McCaskill bill had some merit, it might create other problems.
“Is it better to have unelected bureaucrats who are really not accountable to the voters make these decisions or is it better to have elected officials do the gate-keeping?” Graham said.
Instead of lawmakers trading votes among themselves, Graham said, transferring more power to the executive branch could lead to favor exchanges between a presidential administration and members of Congress.
“I’m sure I could have gotten money to deepen the Port of Charleston if I had voted for Obamacare,” Graham said, referring to President Barack Obama’s signature 2010 health care law.
The political problem for Mulvaney is that he was among the 87 House Republican freshmen who, shortly after their 2010 elections, pushed their party elders to adopt a House rule that expanded the earmark ban to include “limited tariff benefits.”
Now that Mulvaney has been in Washington for 16 months, he’s having second thoughts.
Mulvaney joined 64 other House Republican freshmen — three-quarters of the congressional class — last month in writing to Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, to ask that tariff suspensions be excluded from the earmark ban.
“The MTB remains critical to expanding manufacturing employment,” the lawmakers wrote. “In other words, it’s a jobs bill.”
Fellow South Carolina Republican freshman Reps. Tim Scott and Jeff Duncan also signed the letter. Rep. Trey Gowdy, a former Spartanburg, S.C., prosecutor who defeated then-incumbent Rep. Bob Inglis in the 2010 Republican primary on a fierce anti-government platform, declined.
“He views the MTB’s as earmarks, and he is not supporting any,” Gowdy spokesman Josh Dix said.
Gowdy, DeMint and House Democratic Leader Jim Clyburn of Columbia are the only members of South Carolina’s eight-person-strong congressional delegation who haven’t crafted bills seeking tariff suspensions in the current session of Congress or aren’t in the process of doing so.
Mulvaney has written 31 bills, followed by Scott and Republican Rep. Joe Wilson with 20 each, and Duncan with seven.
McCaskill, a first-term Democrat who’s built a reputation as a maverick and faces a tough re-election fight in November, criticized the effort to rehabilitate lawmakers’ advocacy of tariff suspensions.
“This bipartisan bill is an important step to strengthen a valuable tool for our job creators while ensuring that tool doesn’t turn into a back door for allowing earmarks to worm their way back into the legislative process,” she said.