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Norquist FT-- Transparency: the new democracy
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Chris Kinnan  
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 More options Aug 13 2007, 9:35 am
From: "Chris Kinnan" <kin...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 09:35:10 -0400
Local: Mon, Aug 13 2007 9:35 am
Subject: Norquist FT-- Transparency: the new democracy

Thought this was pretty interesting, good descriptions of some state
projects.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2206f20c-45c9-11dc-b359-0000779fd2ac.html

Transparency: the new democracy

By Grover Norquist

Published: August 8 2007 18:56 | Last updated: August 8 2007 18:56

The nice venture capitalists in Silicon Valley are always looking for "the
next big thing". While we will have to wait for another six months to learn
who will make it through the Republican and Democrat "Survivor" reality show
we call primaries we can already see the next big thing in politics bubbling
up from the 50 states: transparency. Making state budgets, contracts and
individual expenditures available to the public on the internet

Rick Perry, the Republican governor of Texas, helped advance this cause of
transparency last autumn by putting his own governor's office expenses on
the web in a searchable form. Susan Combs, the state's elected comptroller,
followed suit when she took office in January.

Five states passed laws this spring mandating various levels of
transparency, such as posting all contracts and grants and even all state
expenditures on the web: Kansas, Oklahoma, Minnesota, Hawaii and Texas.
Legislation was introduced or debated in a dozen others and is set to pass
next spring.

The state of Texas has further required that any school district that cannot
prove that it is spending at least 65 per cent of its education budget in
the classroom must publish its check register – every single expenditure –
online for citizens to inspect.

Republican Mitch Daniels, Indiana's governor, put his state's contracts on
the internet <http://www.in.gov/idoa/proc/> on the very day he took office
in January 2005.

Governor Matt Blunt of Missouri, a Republican, has gone the furthest the
fastest. Through executive order, Mr Blunt has put up the Missouri
Accountability Portal ("Map Your Taxes <http://mapyourtaxes.mo.gov/map/>")
website, which posts a wide range of government expenditures.

You can look up the actual expense records of your favourite politician and
bureaucrat. A linked
website<http://www.oa.mo.gov/purch/contracts/index.htm>provides access
to the actual contracts let by the state. There are other
plans, including the posting of state employee salaries.

Mr Blunt explained: "One of my goals has been to transform state government
by using technology to improve efficiency and enhance transparency. The
old-way bureaucrats like the paper-based system, which empowers them and is
less accountable to taxpayers. Few Missourians can take the time to root
through mounds of paperwork in some de­partment to find out where their
taxes are going. Missourians deserve open- ness in state spending. These
dollars belong to the people of our state."

Popular response? The Map Your Taxes website has received more than 600,000
hits in its first few weeks.

Opponents of transparency tried in other states to assume large costs to
posting financial data on the web. Some proffered estimates ran into the
millions.

Mr Blunt demolished this delaying tactic for other states when he put the
entire state finances online without a single additional appropriation –
just using existing staff and resources.

Transparency is advancing rapidly for several reasons.

First, it is moving fastest at the state level and is not stymied by
partisan wrangling in Washington, where everything is about gaining a
footing in the 2008 presidential campaign.

Second, transparency has a visible supporter in the media. Putting state
government or school board expenditures on the web might be called the
"lazy-journalist-wins-a-Pulitzer" legis­lation. Newsmen and women like
openness. No more waiting around for pre-digested bits of news coming
through press releases. Now everything the state or local government does is
visible 24/7.

Third, most of this information in most states is already legally public
information. It just sits in boxes in the basement of city hall or state
government buildings. Putting it on the web does not require changing any
laws or asking permission.

Fourth, the effort is oddly trans-ideological. This writer, a taxpayer
advocate, and Ralph Nader, a somewhat left-of-centre consumer advocate,
jointly sent a letter to all governors of both parties urging them to make
their books transparent. Both teams assume the other guys are up to no good.
And they are probably both right.

And what about Washington? The Bush administration was urged to put its
contracts and grants and books online years ago.

Mr Daniels, then at the Office of Management and Budget, supported the
effort, but the White House could not be bothered. So Senator Tom Coburn of
Oklahoma, a conservative, and Senator Barack Obama of Illinois, a
certifiable liberal, joined together to require that at least an outline of
grants and contracts be made available online. The legislation passed last
September and will be fully implemented by January 2008. Although it is a
step in the right direction, this legislation is very weak beer compared
with what has been or is being implemented at the state level.

Washington will fall last. The Democrats now running Congress have been
moving backwards by making their 38,000 secret earmarks – pet projects of
individual members of Congress – less transparent, and the keeper of the
executive branch's privileges against the public's right to know is Dick
Cheney, vice-president. His penchant for secrecy makes Howard Hughes look
like Gypsy Rose Lee.

There is a history of reform coming to Washington through the states: the
property tax revolt in the 1970s, term limits for politicians in the 1990s,
and now transparency. The argument that something "cannot be done" or "costs
too much" collapses when a dozen states have shown the way.

*The writer is president of Americans for Tax Reform. A detailed memo on the
transparency movement can be found at www.atr.org*

Copyright <http://www.ft.com/servicestools/help/copyright> The Financial
Times Limited 2007


 
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Mark Tapscott  
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 More options Aug 13 2007, 10:10 am
From: "Mark Tapscott" <mark.tapsc...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 10:10:20 -0400
Local: Mon, Aug 13 2007 10:10 am
Subject: Re: [openhouseproject] Norquist FT-- Transparency: the new democracy

More evidence of the founders' wisdom in making the states laboratories for
democracy. This is not a new thing for Grover, he's been making these
arguments for many years.

On 8/13/07, Chris Kinnan <kin...@gmail.com> wrote:

--
Mark Tapscott
Editorial Page Editor
The Washington Examiner
1015 15th Street NW
Suite 500
Washington, D.C. 20007
202-459-4968 (Newsroom)
301-275-6645 (Cell)
mark.tapsc...@gmail.com
mtapsc...@dcexaminer.com
http://www.examiner.com/
Proprietor,
Tapscott's Copy Desk blog
http://www.examiner.com/blogs/tapscotts_copy_desk
"Tether the state in the morning and by noon it knows the full length of its
tether." ---John Cotton (Paraphrased, actually)

 
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John Wonderlich  
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 More options Aug 14 2007, 5:27 pm
From: "John Wonderlich" <johnwonderl...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2007 17:27:15 -0400
Local: Tues, Aug 14 2007 5:27 pm
Subject: Re: [openhouseproject] Re: Norquist FT-- Transparency: the new democracy

I just posted a pseudo-response to this article to the OHP blog, playing off
the states-as-transparency-model theme, and posting some CRS reports with
particular relevance to Norquists's ideas here.

John

On 8/13/07, Mark Tapscott <mark.tapsc...@gmail.com> wrote:

--
John Wonderlich

Program Director
The Sunlight Foundation
(202) 742-1520 ext. 234


 
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John Wonderlich  
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 More options Aug 14 2007, 5:39 pm
From: "John Wonderlich" <johnwonderl...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2007 17:39:43 -0400
Local: Tues, Aug 14 2007 5:39 pm
Subject: Re: [openhouseproject] Re: Norquist FT-- Transparency: the new democracy

I forgot the link.  Here you
go!<http://www.theopenhouseproject.com/2007/08/14/crs-tuesday-house-of-re...>

John

On 8/14/07, John Wonderlich <johnwonderl...@gmail.com> wrote:

--
John Wonderlich

Program Director
The Sunlight Foundation
(202) 742-1520 ext. 234


 
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