. . . . . . . "Ever since the country was founded, congressional lawmakers have curried favor with hometown voters by providing funds -- known as earmarks -- for local projects and favored firms. Recently, however, the number of earmarks has skyrocketed from 2,000 projects worth $10.6 billion in 1998 to 15,584 items totaling $32.7 billion in 2004. Defenders of such spending argue it aids valuable local projects like parks and after-school programs that might otherwise go unfunded. But critics warn that such pork barrel politics also fuels corruption. Former Rep. Randy \"Duke\" Cunningham, R-Calif., recently pleaded guilty to accepting $2.4 million in bribes to direct earmarked funds to defense contractors. Opponents of uncontrolled earmarking also complain that local \"pork\" projects take funds away from national needs. A current defense spending bill, for example, would divert money from troop support and other Pentagon priorities to local defense contractors for lower-priority projects."@en . . . "Electronic books"@en . . . . "Do earmarks lead to waste and corruption?"@en . . . "Pork barrel politics : do earmarks lead to waste and corruption?"@en . . . . "Pork barrel politics"@en . "United States" . .