Home

iWatch News by The Center for Public Integrity

Follow @iWatch.

Home

About the Center

ICIJ: Global investigations

Donate

Politics

Health

Environment

Accountability

National Security

Juvenile Justice

National Security

New life for the F-22 Raptor

By Nick Schwellenbach

6:10 pm, June 18, 2009 Updated: 7:13 pm, March 24, 2011

Print
E-mail
Tweet

Faced with the potential of massive job losses and under heavy lobbying pressure earlier this year, the powerful House Armed Services Committee fired a shot across the bow of Defense Secretary Robert Gates' budget decision to shutter one of the nation's most costly fighter jet programs. In a narrow 31-30 vote on Wednesday, the committee authorized spending for 12 new F-22 Raptors. These new planes, if approved by additional congressional panels, would keep the program alive and move it above the 187-plane limit Gates announced in April.

Lockheed Martin, the lead contractor making the F-22, spent almost $6.5 million lobbying Congress and the executive branch in the first three months of 2009 in the run up to Gates’ April announcement to cut the program.

“The military advice that I got was that there is no military requirement for numbers of F-22s beyond the 187,” Gates said.

Weeks after Gates’ announcement, a top Lockheed official said in a conference call with investors that the company stopped lobbying for the F-22. Lobbying disclosures for April, May and June won’t be out until July 20.

The mammoth defense contractor’s spending on first-quarter lobbying efforts came almost exclusively from its in-house lobbyists. Lockheed employs numerous lobbyists to work on the defense budget, including on the F-22. One of them is recently-hired Gabrielle Carruth, a former staffer for House Defense Appropriations Chairman John P. Murtha of Pennsylvania. Murtha’s subcommittee is one congressional battleground among many for the F-22 and other weapon systems now targeted for spending cuts or termination by Gates and President Obama.

An argument to save jobs has been favored by proponents of the F-22 and may get a boost from a law enacted last month law that was a focus of Lockheed’s lobbying efforts. The new defense acquisition reform law contains a provision by Georgia Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss — a fierce backer of the F-22, which is made by Lockheed in his state — and Democratic Senator Patty Murray of Washington that requires the Pentagon to consider how decisions to terminate programs will affect the military industrial base. In other words, how it will affect jobs and companies.

The F-22 is the most expensive jet fighter ever built. When the program's research and development costs are factored in, each plane costs more than $300 million; without those costs, each plane costs about $140 million.

Like our National Security coverage on Facebook and get the latest news instantly.
Advertisement

What we're working on

Projects, series, blogs and other investigations from the Center

Investigation

Consider the Source

Democratic operatives seeking million-dollar checks for super PACs

More stories ...

Investigation

Looting the Seas

'Free-for-all' decimates fish stocks in the southern Pacific

More stories ...

Investigation

Poisoned Places

Many Americans left behind in the quest for cleaner air

More stories ...

Investigation

The Great Mortgage Cover-Up

Countrywide protected fraudsters by silencing whistleblowers, say former employees

More stories ...

Investigation

Juvenile Justice

An epidemic of expulsions

More stories ...

Investigation

Raw Deal

Raging against the foreclosure machine

More stories ...

Popular on Facebook

You might also be interested in ...

National Archives electronic records system is years behind, millions over budget

Half of Pentagon’s acquisition programs marred by poor management

Lobbyists stage Capitol Hill dogfight over joint strike fighter engine

Powered by Calais
Advertisement

Donate

  • Make a donation online

  • Make a donation by mail

  • Make a contribution by fax or phone

  • Make a gift of stock

  • Rated 4-stars on Charity Navigator

Subscribe to our Weekly Watchdog email newsletter to find about our investigations.

What the Center investigates

About the Center

Center in the News

  • Politics

    • One Nation Under Debt
    • Consider the Source
    • Raw Deal
    • Congress
    • The White House
    • Elections
  • Health

    • Medicare
    • Public Health
    • Wendell Potter
    • Island of the Widows
    • Pushing Prescriptions
    • Genetics
  • Environment

    • Health and Safety
    • Energy
    • Pollution
    • Climate
    • Natural Resources
  • Accountability

    • Finance
    • Harmful Error
    • Morning Tip Sheet
    • Education
    • State Integrity Investigation
    • The Truth Left Behind
    • Global Muckraking
    • ICIJ Member Stories
    • Lobby Watch
    • Campaign Consultants
    • Iraq: The War Card
    • Well Connected
    • Waste, Fraud and Abuse
  • National Security

    • Homeland Security
    • The Military
    • Intelligence
    • Outsourcing the Pentagon
    • Windfalls of War
  • Juvenile Justice

    • About The Center for Public Integrity

    • Our Organization

    • Our People

    • Our Work

    • About the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

    • Contact Us

    • Advertise

    • Privacy Policy and Terms of Use

    • Susan Ferriss discusses youth in prison with KQED

    • Weekly Watchdog 2/2/12

    • John Dunbar talks year-end super PAC disclosure on PBS NewsHour

    • Center, NPR finalist for Goldsmith journalism prize

    • Weekly Watchdog 1/26/12

    • John Dunbar discusses super PACs on PBS NewsHour

    • International Consortium Adds 41 Investigative Journalists

    • The weekly watchdog: Dec. 12 - Dec. 16

    Copyright 2012 The Center for Public Integrity

    Supported by: