Republican Sen. Tom Coburn’s quirky Wastebook is out again, detailing $30 billion in government spending the Oklahoma senator deems wasteful.
The annual report illustrates Coburn’s uber-conservative fiscal policy—the senator famously opposed aid to his tornado stricken state earlier this year unless it could be offset by cuts elsewhere—with photos and kitschy clip-art.
“Do each of these represent a real national priority that should be spared from budget cuts or are these excesses that should have been eliminated in order to spare deeper cuts to those services and missions that should be performed by the federal government?” Coburn asks in the introduction of the Wastebook.
The report comes on the heels of a budget deal that has been criticized for cutting military pension benefits and unemployment benefits.
“We’ve got a four trillion budget every year and the only place these people can find to cut spending comes from military retirees?” Joe Scarborough said on Morning Joe. “And their the only people whose benefits we can cut? I’m sorry, that’s just obscene.”
The Wastebook highlights what Coburn deems to be 100 particularly egregious and wasteful items funded by the government; it includes everything from the predictable complaints against the millions spent promoting and building the botched healthcare.gov site to some seriously bizarre expenditures.
“With nearly half-a-billion dollars in government funding put behind promoting a product relatively few people seem interested in purchasing from a website that doesn’t work,” the Wastebook writes. “Obamacare is perhaps the biggest marketing flop since Coca-Cola introduced the world to “New Coke” in 1985.”









