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The budget battle continues

December 21, 2007 | By Nathaniel Ward

   
 

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Though Congress ended up passing the largest spending bill in history earlier this week—the omnibus legislation weighed in at 3,417 pages and cost taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars—the fight isn’t over yet.

Earlier in the week, MyHeritage.org reported how Heritage experts revealed the special-interest earmarks and budget gimmicks hidden in the bill. And it seems the right people were listening: the White House has signaled it may look to block the most egregious pet projects and wastes of taxpayer money.

“The President’s hands are not necessarily tied,” Heritage Foundation budget expert Brian Riedl points out, when it comes to “bring[ing] some merit and accountability to fiscal year 2008’s appropriations.”

For example, the President could issue an executive order blocking certain earmarks. Or he could take a hard line on vaguely-worded language that benefits narrow interests.

A welcome change in South Korea

Lee Myung-bak won South Korea’s presidential election in a landslide on Wednesday. This is good news for both South Korea and America, Heritage’s Bruce Klinger explains.

The conservative former Seoul mayor has pledged to take a firmer stance against North Korea and its nuclear shenanigans, improve relations with the United States and adopt free-enterprise reforms.

Heritage president Ed Feulner discussed U.S.-South Korean policy issues with him in January 2006.

Why religion matters

While the Left looks to build up its misguided and misconstrued “wall of separation between church and state,” the evidence continues to mount that religion plays an important role in our society.

Research compiled by The Heritage Foundation’s FamilyFacts.org finds that religious attendance encourages civic engagement. For example, young people who participate in religious activities are more likely to volunteer in their communities, and those who attend services often are more likely to donate money to and volunteer for non-religious groups.

In other news

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Nathaniel Ward is the Editor of MyHeritage.org—a website for members and supporters of The Heritage Foundation.