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Mugging Taxpayers in the Swamp
townhall ^ | Dec 29, 2018 12:01 AM | Peter Ferrara

Posted on 01/05/2019 1:25:35 AM PST by vannrox

The big dollar muggings in Washington these days are not done with pistols. The sophisticated weapons of choice are “sole source contracting,” lobbyists, and insiders. And the victims are not tourists, but taxpayers.

Large multinationals game the system using the revolving door between government and the private sector, with the help of aggressive lobbying. There are so many examples, but one is the fourth largest privately- owned company in the United States, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited, which originated as one of the biggest accounting companies in America.

Today they are masters of the D.C. contracting game with sole source contracting. They are not doing anything illegal, but the end result is that taxpayers and small entrepreneurs are shafted.

They and affiliates haul off as much as $38 billion a year in perfectly legal, clean, government contracting. No Saturday Night Specials needed.

Federal contracting is big business, governed by dozens of federal statutes enacted by Congress, explained in dozens of legal volumes that can be found in every law library across the nation. Federal policy as provided in that governing law is based on the concept of “competitive bidding,” because as the most rudimentary economics shows, better results in terms of price and quality are obtained by competition rather than by monopoly.

But if a company is a crony favored by contacts, friends, or relatives of company employees, or of lobbyists working for the company, that company can get “sole-source contracts” or even sole source grants, not subject to any competition. The money flows just when the contact, friend or relative working inside of some contracting government agency signs on the dotted line, giving away some share of the federal government’s trillions in annual spending. CARTOONS | Henry Payne View Cartoon

And what happens to price and performance under such “sole-source contracts”? Price goes up and quality, service and performance go down. Because there is no competition or incentive for lower prices or better quality, service and performance, when you can get the contract or grant without competition. Is anybody even monitoring quality, service and performance under such secretive sole-source contracts?

Sometimes such contracts are for unnecessary services, with bloated, non-competitive budgets. Even redundant services, or goods already provided by someone else under another contract.

This is all why they call it “the Swamp.”

The Small Business Administration reports that small businesses make up 99.9% of U.S. companies, 30.2 million spread from Maine to California and beyond, with 47.5% of private sector employees, 58.9 million in 2015. But these small businesses and companies do not have contacts, friends and relatives in faraway Washington, D.C. bureaucracies, and cannot even afford lobbyists. They and their workers are completely excluded whenever a sole source contract or grant is given away along with your taxpayer money in the Swamp.

The esteemed Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is a major source of these noncompetitive sole source contracts. In 2014 alone, DHS gave away 465 noncompetitive contracts and grants doling out $425 million in taxpayer funds, for overpriced, substandard goods and services (“waste”). Over the prior 6 years, such giveaways totaled more than $3 billion, just from this one agency alone.

Deloitte is not the only company that has mastered the art of “sole-source” contracting, yet they are a great example of a company that has figured out how to game the system and avoid the competitive bidding process. The worry is that some companies embed former staffers and relatives of staffers at government agencies as a way to get at the non-competitively bid system. The “revolving door” is still alive and well in the D.C. Swamp.

Governing federal contracting law does provide for eight exceptions to competitive bidding for sole source contracts. But many of the sole source contracts on closer inspection do not seem to meet these exceptions, with other potential contractors often documented as able to do better work at lower prices.

The Swamp can be cleaned up in these cases simply by better enforcement of federal law, providing for competitive bidding. The biggest federal contracting agency of all, the Defense Department, is still burdened by some of these swampy practices, but obvious abuses such as sole source contracting do not seem prevalent any more.

Such federal contracting abuses are an obvious opportunity for the Trump Administration to clean up the Swamp, as promised.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: corruption; fund; swamp; trump

1 posted on 01/05/2019 1:25:35 AM PST by vannrox
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To: vannrox

Voters get the government they deserve!

When majority of voters figure out that more free stuff can be obtained by voting for certain politicians, the democratic republic is nearing it’s end.


2 posted on 01/05/2019 2:43:19 AM PST by entropy12 (One million LEGAL immigrants/year is too many, without vetting for skills, Wealth or English skills.)
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To: entropy12

This article is so spot on. What this dynamic also does is enrich the political class with our tax dollars. It fuels the lobbying and donations, hence the wealth building of our politicians.

Repealing the 17th Amendment would crimp this overnight. Repealing the 16th Amendment would kill it off permanently.


3 posted on 01/05/2019 3:11:20 AM PST by Article10 (Roger That)
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To: Article10

Yes it is. And this is not just on a national level, despite what they might claim about bidding, the same happens on the local level. It always seems to be a board member or official’s brother in law who ends up with the contract.


4 posted on 01/05/2019 3:55:03 AM PST by Openurmind
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To: vannrox
There are legitimate occasions for sole-source contracts. Not always, but often enough.

Governing federal contracting law does provide for eight exceptions to competitive bidding for sole source contracts. But many of the sole source contracts on closer inspection do not seem to meet these exceptions, with other potential contractors often documented as able to do better work at lower prices.

Evaluated by whom, precisely?

5 posted on 01/05/2019 6:15:55 AM PST by sauropod (Yield to sin, and experience chastening and sorrow; yield to God, and experience joy and blessing.)
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To: vannrox

As long as the lobbyists own the congress nothing will change.


6 posted on 01/05/2019 7:25:57 AM PST by Vaduz (women and children to be impacIQ of chimpsted the most.)
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To: vannrox

I was a government contractor at a DOE research lab. About every 2 years or so Deloitte would make another run to get their foot in the door to begin taking over the management of the DOE national labs and the DHS labs as well.

It always boiled down to one question. How far do you want nuclear weapon information to spread?

They will then shut up for a year or so. Every program I worked in for over 35 years Deloitte made an attempt to take over. JUST A BUNCH OF SCUM ACCOUNTANTS AND LAWYERS!


7 posted on 01/05/2019 7:55:57 AM PST by Agatsu77
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To: vannrox

Another issue is the preference that is given minority and woman-owned companies. The normal standards of cost, schedule, and ability to perform or deliver are secondary to the genetic qualifications of the company ownership. That creates a de-facto sole-source situation in many cases.


8 posted on 01/05/2019 8:06:21 AM PST by Fresh Wind (Fox News: "We distort, you deride")
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To: Vaduz

>>>As long as the lobbyists own the congress nothing will change.

Don’t forget the White House.

HHS Secretary Alex Azar is the former president of drug giant Eli Lilly’s U.S. operations.

Acting EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler is a former lobbyist for the coal industry.

Acting Interior Secretary David Bernhardt is a former lobbyist for the oil and natural gas industries.

Acting Secretary of Defense Shanahan is a former longtime Boeing executive.


9 posted on 01/05/2019 8:09:13 AM PST by oincobx
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To: vannrox
When I was in Air Force R&D, I let a lot of sole source contracts. They were always based on an original or innovative idea that someone had come up with. Putting these ideas out for subsequent competitive bidding would have dried up the supply of innovative ideas. Why submit an innovative idea if the government is going to steal it and award the contract to someone else? We got quite a few very good ideas that way.
10 posted on 01/05/2019 11:45:32 AM PST by JoeFromSidney (Colonel (Retired) USAF)
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To: oincobx

Congress is the one who make the laws and control the money it’s why the lobbyists love them so much.
Everyone gets freezer money.


11 posted on 01/06/2019 6:30:42 AM PST by Vaduz (women and children to be impacIQ of chimpsted the most.)
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