Open Government, Illegals, FIS, Twitter & Astronomical Gas Prices
By Eric Margulies, VoterWatch Staff
This week’s edition of the Transparency Recap commences with the
implementation of a major step in the arena of governmental transparency. On
August 1st, The Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of
2007 saw its first act of realization take place as information pertaining
to lawmakers’ assets, liabilities and lobby-related-expenditures and gifts were
posted on the House Clerk’s website.
However, a quick perusal of the disclosure database proves slow and somewhat
difficult to navigate given its complex interface. In addition, the files can
only be viewed in .PDF format meaning that for many who are without the software
required to open .PDF files, the information is lost. Dan Auble at the Capital
Eye Blog writes about the current flaws with the system of disclosure and how
the Center for Responsive Politics is already seeking to remedy them:
And in other news, in Madison County, Alabama, a law requiring venders to
sign a pledge stating that they will not willingly hire illegal immigrants is
being challenged for alleged unconstitutionality. In a political climate in
which immigration is a major issue of concern, cases such as this one are
extremely intriguing. According to Judicial Watch:
In other government transparency news, Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) recently filed a request to the Public Interest Declassification
Board (PIDB) to review the classified opinions of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance (FIS) Court over the past 10 years and to make recommendations
regarding the classification or declassification of said opinions.
The FIS Court deals almost exclusively with the authorization for domestic
intelligence surveillance. Occasionally the court deals with the interpretation
of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that binds their actions,
creating a secret court whose jurisdiction is, seemingly, at their own will.
Clearly there is a necessity for action as Judge John D. Bates, himself a member
of the FIS Court, recognized that the Court had indeed issued several “legally
significant decisions that remain classified.” The idea of there being such a
thing as a secret court would be stunning and unsettling to many Americans, but
many aren’t even aware of the FIS Court’s existence.
Moving forward, House interaction with Twitter has continued to produce
further insight into the machinations of Congress. For those unaware,
Twitter.com is a free social networking site that allows its users to send real
time updates of up to 140 characters. (known as Tweets) through its
micro-blogging service. Recently, there had been much debate over the use of
Twitter to unveil the workings in the House casting the parties in opposing
positions. Republicans lobbied for the free use of Twitter; Democrats remained
weary of the technological step forward.
House Republicans took the floor after the body adjourned for summer recess
to protest the failure of the House to vote to allow offshore drilling. While
the protest was raging Rep. John Culbertson (R-TX), the House’s foremost Twitter advocate, was busy Tweeting the
proceedings on his account. While this can at first seem humorous, one must
keep in the mind that Culbertson’s tweeting allowed those reading his account to
receive a real time update on an event the mainstream media had not yet become
aware of. However, as Paul Blumenthal on the Sunlight Foundation Blog points
out:
The debate on offshore drilling continues to rage despite the recess as
Americans and the economy in general continue to be heavily burdened by
astronomical gas prices.
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For more content from VoterWatch, please visit the Transparency Recap blog at www.voterwatch.org/voterwatch/blog


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