See also: porkbarrel and pork-barrel

English edit

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Noun edit

pork barrel (plural pork barrels)

  1. (now rare) A barrel used to store pork. [from 18th c.]
  2. (chiefly US) A ready supply of income; one's livelihood. [from 19th c.]
  3. (chiefly US politics, often attributively) State funds as assigned for local or regional expenditure; especially, central money used for regional projects which are eyecatching or designed to appeal to voters. [from 19th c.]
    • 2011, Steven Pinker, The Better Angels of Our Nature, Penguin, published 2012, page 380:
      Peacekeeping initiatives [] can dangle pork-barrel funding as an incentive to leaders who abide by the peace, enhancing their power and electoral popularity.
    • 2019 August 25, Greg Weiner, “The Shallow Cynicism of ‘Everything Is Rigged’”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
      Similarly, earmarked, pork-barrel spending [] is an invaluable tool for assembling bipartisan majorities for legislation because it helps members of Congress see the good a bill does for their constituents.
    • 2023 November 29, Philip Haigh, “Comment: Can we save HS2 to Crewe?”, in RAIL, number 997, page 3:
      With an election not much more than a year away, distributing HS2's money into roads is pork barrel politics. Or at least it would be if the money existed.

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