BREAKING: Gabbard Confirms Obama Has Been Referred to DOJ for Criminal Investigation
After the Release of the Russian Collusion Docs, We Know Why Obama Tried...
Wait, Did Biden Spy on Trump's 2024 Campaign?
You Won't Believe How the Illegal Immigrant Who Shot a Border Patrol Officer...
TikTok Trend Likely to Get People Killed
Criminal Justice Reform Is Needed, but Not Like the Left Wants
Food Is Stockpiled in Gaza and the UN Is Refusing the Group Ready...
Mahmoud Khalil Refuses to Condemn Hamas on CNN
UN's Top Court Says Failure to Stop Climate Change Violates International Law
No Arrest, No Deportation, No Death: DHS Slams Allentown Grandpa Story as Fake
Man Who Went Viral for Throwing Rocks at Law Enforcement Vehicles During LA...
Pro-Palestine Protestors Crash Senator Hawley's Speech
You Won’t Believe This Pro-Abortion Legislation Championed by Democrats
One Rideshare App Will Allow Passengers to Request Female Drivers, Passengers
House GOP Moves to Rename Kennedy Center Opera House After This Iconic First...
OPINION

Highway Bill: The Unmentionable Option

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

In an article about federal highway legislation yesterday, the Washington Post illustrated the art of advocacy journalism cloaked as news reporting. The article explored different options for raising federal taxes $100 billion to fund state highways. It quotes three transportation lobbyists and included scare lines about the supposed consequences of not raising taxes (“… hundreds of thousands of construction jobs put at risk…”).

The article does not mention that spending cuts are an option for the upcoming highway bill. Everyone agrees that there is a large gap in the Highway Trust Fund (HTF), but gaps can be closed either by tax hikes or spending cuts. Yet the “transportation advocates” the Post talked to agreed, “until there is consensus on finding more money, transportation may be doomed to limp along in perpetual crisis.”

Nonsense. As I testified here, federal spending cuts would balance the HTF and solve the crisis, while spurring greater efficiency and innovation in U.S. transportation as the states played a larger role. The Post did not bother to explore that option, despite support from conservatives in Congress, prominent think tanks, and independent transportation experts.

In the election, Congress swung decidedly in a small-government direction, but the Post’s reporting did not reflect that reality, and instead presented only the lobbyist point of view. The Post’s silence on the spending-cut option is all the more striking because the newspaper admits that it would be very difficult to raise transportation taxes due to political and public opposition.

It will be interesting to see how Congress closes the HTF gap before the May expiration of the current highway bill. I hope that we have a robust debate on all the options and that the Washington Post changes course and presents its readers with a more balanced perspective.

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement