Porker of the Month: Rep. Stephen Fincher
Citizens
Against Government Waste (CAGW) has named Rep. Stephen Fincher
(R-Tenn.) Porker of the Month for his efforts to resurrect the wasteful
Export-Import (Ex-Im) Bank after its authorization expired on June 30.
Founded in 1934 to help finance U.S. exports, the bank today is an
egregious example of taxpayer-funded corporate welfare benefitting some
of the most profitable U.S. companies that have no trouble securing
private financing. Elected in 2010 as a Tea Party fiscal conservative,
Rep. Fincher voted against reauthorizing the bank in 2012, but he now
leads the coalition attempting to raise it from the dead. Not only has
Rep. Fincher flip-flopped, he has repeatedly made erroneous claims
in defense of the Ex-Im Bank, including that it “supports about 200,000
jobs each year at no cost, let me repeat, no cost.” However, a May,
2014 Congressional Budget Office report found that when the fair
value accounting method is used, Ex-Im Bank has an estimated 10-year
cost of $2 billion. For his leadership in the battle to revive a
wasteful and unnecessary haven for corporate welfare, CAGW names Rep.
Fincher the July Porker of the Month. Read more about the Porker of the Month.
CAGW Appalled by Latest GAO Report on ObamaCare
CAGW expressed outrage over a July 16 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report on
the Affordable Care Act’s (ObamaCare) complete lack of fraud prevention
capability. The report updates and expands on a “secret shopper” investigation
GAO conducted in 2014 to test whether or not the federal healthcare
exchange was able to detect and prevent falsified applications. Of the
12 fictitious identities that applied for taxpayer subsidies, 11 were
approved, a 91 percent failure rate. Over the course of 2014, the
government paid out $30,000 to these fake individuals. In its latest
investigation, GAO found that every one of the 11 was re-enrolled in
2015 for another year. “The fact that there is still no system in place
to prevent this type of rampant fraud is evidence that this law is not
working,” declared CAGW President Tom Schatz. “This damning report is
further justification that this flawed law should be completely
overhauled and replaced.” Read more about GAO’s latest report on ObamaCare fraud.
CCAGW Applauds Resignation of OPM Director Archuleta
CAGW
this month applauded the resignation of Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) Director Katherine Archuleta who presided over the worst
cyberattack in U.S. history, dubbed a “Cyber Pearl Harbor.” Beginning in May, 2014, cyber hackers breached the massive OPM database
multiple times. The hackers extracted personal and financial records
on more than 21 million current, former, and prospective federal
employees and contractors, including information collected in background
checks, Social Security numbers, health information, and criminal
records. The multiple attacks were not discovered until May, 2015, a
year after they began. In the midst of five separate congressional hearings on this massive security failure, admonishment of Archuleta came from both sides of the political aisle
in both chambers, but the OPM Director, who previously served as
National Political Director for President Obama’s 2012 reelection
campaign, seemed undeterred and even dismissive about taking
responsibility. “We are pleased that Ms. Archuleta changed her mind and
finally took responsibility for the disaster that occurred on her
watch,” said CAGW President Tom Schatz. “Now it is up to her successor
to implement the much-needed reforms at OPM so that this kind of
incident never happens again.” Read more about OPM’s “Cyber Pearl Harbor.”
CAGW Slams CMS for Touting Its Fraud Prevention System
CAGW
has expressed dismay that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) would boast about new fraud prevention technology while
keeping the Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) program, CMS’s most
successful fraud-prevention tool, on the bench. On July 14, CMS flaunted
the supposed success of its “Fraud Prevention System” (FPS), designed
to identify and prevent improper Medicare payments, claiming it had
saved the Medicare Trust Fund $820 million since 2010. By contrast,
until CMS suspended certain RAC audits in October, 2013, RACs were
recovering about $1 billion per quarter, which eclipses the FPS’s
savings rate. “Once again, we see CMS patting itself on the back over
its ability to measure the waste and fraud,” commented CAGW Vice
President for Policy and Communications Leslie Paige. “If CMS wants to
really impact the staggering amount of Medicare fraud … then release the
RAC program from administrative purgatory.” Read more about CMS’s suspension of the RAC program.
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