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Friday, February 13, 2009

Openness and Transparency Take On New Meaning Under Obama

Will Malven
2/13/2009

As usual with Democrats, "up" is "down" and "black" is "white."

All through his campaign and at the beginning his term as President, Barack Obama has continually promised a new era in American politics. Gone was to be the backroom deals and bills marked up in the dark of night. Everything was to be done in the open under the disinfectant of sunlight.

The new buzz words, offered up as promises from the new administration, were "openness" and "transparency." The "corruption" of prior administrations was to fall under these new tenets of the Administration of "Hope" and "Change."

Well, where I come from a man is known not by his words, but his deeds and so far, President Obama's deeds fall far short of his rosy rhetoric.

He pledged that there would be no corruption...he has had four of his nominees, so far, who appear to have difficulty in paying their taxes on time...or at all.

He pledged that under his administration lobbyists would not be allowed to work for agencies they've lobbied in the last two years, yet he has been forced to sign repeated waivers.
Politico lists 12 lobbyists in the "no lobbyists" Obama Administration:

Eric Holder, attorney general nominee, was registered to lobby until 2004 on behalf of clients including Global Crossing, a bankrupt telecommunications firm.

Tom Vilsack, secretary of agriculture nominee, was registered to lobby as recently as last year on behalf of the National Education Association.

William Lynn, deputy defense secretary nominee, was registered to lobby as recently as last year for defense contractor Raytheon, where he was a top executive.

William Corr, deputy health and human services secretary nominee, was registered to lobby until last year for the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, a non-profit that pushes to limit tobacco use.

David Hayes, deputy interior secretary nominee, was registered to lobby until 2006 for clients, including the regional utility San Diego Gas & Electric.

Mark Patterson, chief of staff to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, was registered to lobby as recently as last year for financial giant Goldman Sachs.

Ron Klain, chief of staff to Vice President Joe Biden, was registered to lobby until 2005 for clients, including the Coalition for Asbestos Resolution, U.S. Airways, Airborne Express and drug-maker ImClone.

Mona Sutphen, deputy White House chief of staff, was registered to lobby for clients, including Angliss International in 2003.

Melody Barnes, domestic policy council director, lobbied in 2003 and 2004 for liberal advocacy groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, the American Constitution Society and the Center for Reproductive Rights.

Cecilia Munoz, White House director of intergovernmental affairs, was a lobbyist as recently as last year for the National Council of La Raza, a Hispanic advocacy group.

Patrick Gaspard, White House political affairs director, was a lobbyist for the Service Employees International Union.

Michael Strautmanis, chief of staff to the president’s assistant for intergovernmental relations, lobbied for the American Association of Justice from 2001 until 2005.
When ones actions fail to meet his words, he is a liar. Of course this is only the tip of the iceberg. If you really want to see the hypocrisy of this President you only need to look to the soon to be passed into law, "stimulus" bill.

This nightmare of a pork bill is scheduled for a vote on the floor of the House of Representatives at 9:00AM today. Members agree that the bill would be posted on the internet for 48 hours prior to the vote...the bill was finally made available at 10:00PM last night. This bill is now 1,071 pages long.

No one knows what all is in this bill except those who wrote it and they didn't finish writing it until last night. This is basically writing a blank check to the Democrat Party and their President.

One Democrat has come forward and spoken the truth, Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ). From CNSNews.com:


Democratic Senator Predicts None of His Colleagues 'Will Have the Chance' to Read Final Stimulus Bill Before Vote

Friday, February 13, 2009
By Ryan Byrnes and Edwin Mora

(CNSNews.com) – Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) predicted on Thursday that none of his Senate colleagues would "have the chance" to read the entire final version of the $790-billion stimulus bill before the bill comes up for a final vote in Congress.

“No, I don’t think anyone will have the chance to [read the entire bill],” Lautenberg told CNSNews.com.

The final bill, crafted by a House-Senate conference committee, was posted on the Website of the House Appropriations Committe
[sic] late Thurday [sic] in two PDF files.

The first PDF was 424 pages long and the second PDF was 575 pages long, making the total bill 999 pages long. The House is expected to vote on this 999-page bill Friday, and the Senate either later Friday or Saturday. [Editor's note: The first PDF, as posted on the House Appropriations Committee website as of 8:20 AM Friday morning, had grown by 72 pages to 496 pages, increasing the length of the total document to 1,071 pages.]
Woops looks like I was wrong, the bill was not posted last night, it was posted at 8:20AM. Vote on the passage of this abomination will occur today and inspite of massive opposition to this bill by those who are more concerned about the wasting of tax-payer money.

Democrats have the votes and have decided to grant another waiver...this time breaking their own House rules to force a vote without giving the American people the 48 hours they promised us we would have to examine the bill.

Pay attention people! Democrats don't care about you. They don't want you to read this bill because they know that the more you learn about it the greater your opposition to it will be. This is governing without the consent of the governed.

This bill will not create very many jobs; it will not help the average person looking for work; it is a political document intended to pass through as many Democrat agenda items as possible without allowing the to be scrutinized by the voters, the press (what few actually care how badly Americans are being served/screwed, or even the congressmen and women who are casting their votes.

That's right folks...your Democrat Congress is voting on a bill and they don't even know what all is in it.

Remember this contempt for your opinions and wishes in 2010. Despots are now in control of your government and they do not believe in following the rules they themselves brought into being last month. I hope that we will still be allowed to vote in 2010. Right now it's looking pretty iffy.

Think about it people; if they have such contempt for their own word and rules, how can you ever trust them or anything they may promise you in the future? This is the most blatant case of Liberals lying I have ever witnessed...it is much more reminiscent of the Soviet Union than America.

Long Live Our American Republic!!!!

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Foundation joins research, business, and taxpayer groups to deliver "Blueprint for an Effective Budget"

Guidelines on using Rainy Day Fund, improving performance measures, setting funding priorities, and increasing transparency will help legislators make responsible budget decisions

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation joined several other research, business, and taxpayer groups at the Texas State Capitol today to deliver "Blueprint for an Effective Budget," an agreed-upon set of guidelines for the Legislature to draft an effective state budget.

"Our legislators will have difficult budget decisions to make over the next few months," said The Honorable Talmadge Heflin, Director of the Texas Public Policy Foundation's Center for Fiscal Policy. "If they follow these guidelines, they can maintain essential services for the citizens of Texas while positioning our state for a strong economic recovery."

Heflin called for the 81st Texas Legislature to preserve a balance of at least $4.5 billion in the state’s Rainy Day Fund, and to use it only for emergency tax relief or one-time expenditures.

"Yes, we are in a rainy day, but no one knows for sure how long this storm will last," Heflin said. "Texas families have the instinct to stretch their emergency savings as long as possible, and state government needs to show that same discipline."

Heflin also urged the legislature to proceed with caution regarding the pending federal stimulus legislation.

"While we expect there will be some money, it is not guaranteed and we do not know what forms it might take," Heflin said. "This money should be treated the same as our rainy day fund – for use on one-time expenditures."

The blueprint includes several guidelines on how to responsibly establish spending priorities.

"The mathematical task of closing a budget shortfall can be straight forward – just cut everything across the board," Heflin explained. "But writing an effective budget in these times requires that you separate needs from wants, and that you prioritize your spending based on what you're required to do – first by the Texas Constitution, then by state law – and by what produces the greatest value to the taxpayers."

Heflin said that it was important for the Texas Legislature to continue the state's movement toward complete financial transparency.

"Through websites like the Comptroller's Where The Money Goes and our own TexasBudgetSource.com, we’re engaging all Texans in the effort to ferret out waste and fraud in government spending," Heflin said. "We need to ensure that all budgets, expenditures, contracts, and other relevant financial information are published online in a searchable and user-friendly format."

The nine guidelines in the "Blueprint for an Effective Budget" are:

• Limit the growth of state spending to no more than the sum of population growth plus inflation, or the growth in personal income, whichever is less.
• Prioritize state spending on the basis of constitutional mandates, followed by statutory requirements.
• Return excess fee and tax revenues to those who paid them.
• Limit the use of the Rainy Day Fund to either emergency tax relief or one-time emergency spending items.
• Maintain a Rainy Day Fund balance of at least 5 percent of the general revenue and general revenue-dedicated funds spent in the 2010-11 budget.
• Make it easy to identify and report government fraud and waste by posting all budgets, expenditures, contracts, and other relevant financial information online in a searchable and user-friendly format.
• Structure state agencies' performance measures to reflect outcomes rather than outputs.
• Fund only those programs that return a greater value to the taxpayer than the program's cost.
• Avoid duplication of services by focusing on programs that are not provided by local governments or the private sector.

"Blueprint for an Effective Budget" and the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s research on state tax and budget issues can be on the Foundation's primary website, http://www.TexasPolicy.com, and on its government spending transparency website, http://www.TexasBudgetSource.com.

The Honorable Talmadge Heflin is Director of the Center for Fiscal Policy at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a non-profit, free-market research institute based in Austin. Heflin served 11 terms in the Texas House of Representatives and chaired the House Appropriations Committee in 2003, leading the Texas Legislature's successful efforts to close a $10 billion budget deficit without a tax increase.

The Texas Public Policy Foundation is a non-profit, non-partisan, free-market research institute based in Austin. More information can be found on the Foundation's primary website, www.TexasPolicy.com, or its government spending transparency website, www.TexasBudgetSource.com.

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Statement on Governor Rick Perry’s State of the State Address

Statement by Justin Keener, Vice President of Policy and Communications

“We applaud Gov. Rick Perry’s focus on fiscal responsibility in his remarks today. This is the time for state government to restrain spending, not to increase taxes or expand programs. Texas must continue to lead by example, rather than to follow other large states like California down the path to bankruptcy.

“We join Gov. Perry in urging the Texas Legislature to take the next step toward full government financial transparency. Especially during difficult economic times, we need to engage all interested Texans in the battle to root out government waste and inefficiency at both the state and local levels.

“The legislature should also heed Gov. Perry’s call to finish the job of protecting Texans’ property rights from eminent domain abuse. The Legislature took a good first step shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court’s Kelo decision, but it now needs to finish the job of protecting Texas property owners.

“Gov. Perry’s support for increasing the amount of funding for incentive pay and removing the legislative cap on open-enrollment charter schools shows that he understands the importance of promoting competition within Texas public schools.”

Justin Keener is Vice President of Policy and Communications for the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

The Texas Public Policy Foundation is a non-profit, free-market research institute based in Austin. More information can be found on the Foundation’s website, www.TexasPolicy.com.

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Thursday, December 18, 2008

Texas PolicyCast: Opening Texas' books

Texas has set the national standard for government financial transparency, thanks in large part to the leadership of the state's Comptroller of Public Accounts, Susan Combs. Her agency's "Where the Money Goes" website lets you see how state agencies are spending your money - right down to the pencil. And last week, Combs unveiled Open Book Texas, an initiative that will provide an even more comprehensive view of government spending, and she discusses it with us on this episode.

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Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Statement on Comptroller Susan Combs’ Transparency Initiatives

Statement by The Honorable Talmadge Heflin, Director of the Center for Fiscal Policy

“Almost 53 percent of spending by Texas governments is done at the local level. Unfortunately, detailed information on that local spending is virtually inaccessible to taxpayers, who are the true local control.

“As our new report Texas Transparency: Then and Now published earlier this week shows, Texas’ experience with spending transparency undercuts all the excuses not to provide detailed expenditure information to the public. The technology is available, powerful, and inexpensive. The state’s savings were many times the startup costs, and hundreds of local school districts have seen value in embracing spending transparency.

“Texas has set the national standard in spending transparency thanks largely to Comptroller Susan Combs’ leadership. Today’s debut of the Texas Transparency Check-Up website affirms her commitment to open government.

“Texas already has open records and open meetings. The next step toward transparent and accountable government is open checkbooks, and the 81st Texas Legislature should make that the standard for local governments as it already is for the state. Taxpayers deserve to know how all levels of government are spending their money.”

The Honorable Talmadge Heflin is Director of the Center for Fiscal Policy at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a non-profit, free-market research institute based in Austin. Heflin served 11 terms in the Texas House of Representatives and chaired the House Appropriations Committee in 2003, leading the Texas Legislature’s successful efforts to close a $10 billion budget deficit without a tax increase.

The Texas Public Policy Foundation is a non-profit, free-market research institute based in Austin. More information can be found on the Foundation’s primary website, www.TexasPolicy.com, or its government spending transparency website, www.TexasBudgetSource.com.

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Monday, August 11, 2008

TPPF RELEASE: Foundation applauds Collin County Financial Transparency Project

Foundation applauds Collin County Financial Transparency Project
Collin is first county in U.S. to post its actual expenditures online

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation congratulates Collin County Judge Keith Self and his colleagues on the commissioners court for their successful launch last Friday of the Collin County Financial Transparency Project.

“While many cities and counties have their adopted budgets online, it’s refreshing to see Collin County take the initiative to become the first county in America to open its financial data to the taxpayers,” said Talmadge Heflin, Director of the Foundation’s Center for Fiscal Policy. “By creating this level of transparency, Collin County is forging a true partnership with its citizens.”

The Collin County Financial Transparency Project includes a listing of checks written by county government for all of its operations since October 2007, the beginning of the current fiscal year. Checks that involve protected privacy information about employees or private citizens receiving county services will be excluded from the register.

The project also includes the county’s financial trends for the last five fiscal years; graphs of year-to-date total revenues, tax revenues, cash, and investments for county operations; a newsletter highlighting county government financial operations and projects; and monthly utility costs and consumption for county facilities.

"This adds an important, new dimension to open government for our citizens," Self said. "Providing our taxpayers with up-to-date, easily understandable information not only brings accountability, but goes a long way to ensuring public trust in how we spend their tax dollars for local services."

“Collin County has shown the path forward to more accessible and accountable county government,” Heflin continued. “We call on the other 253 Texas counties to follow their lead and open their own financial books to the public.”

The Texas Public Policy Foundation has been a champion of spending transparency at all levels of government. Its research provided the impetus for last year’s House Bill 3430, which created the Comptroller’s “Where the Money Goes” website. The Foundation has encouraged Texas school districts to post their check registers online, and worked closely with Collin County’s leadership as they developed their initiative.

Links to the Collin County Financial Transparency Project have been added to the Collin County page on TexasBudgetSource.com, a website the Foundation launched last month as the comprehensive resource for information on state and local government budgets and spending.

About the Texas Public Policy Foundation: TPPF is a non-profit, free-market research institute based in Austin, Texas.

About Talmadge Heflin: Mr. Heflin is the Director of the Center for Fiscal Policy at the Texas Public Policy Foundation. He served 11 terms in the Texas House of Representatives, and is a former Chairman of the Texas House Appropriations Committee.

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Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Foundation launches TexasBudgetSource.com

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation debuted TexasBudgetSource.com today, a new website that will provide a comprehensive resource for information on state and local government budgets and spending.

“Texas has been a leader in the movement to increase transparency of state and local government spending,” said Foundation president Brooke Rollins. “Citizens become better informed voters when they can see how their tax dollars are being spent. Spending transparency also puts governments on notice that they can no longer get away with spending tax dollars in wasteful, duplicative, or self-serving ways.”

TexasBudgetSource.com features the following information:

* Original research and analysis on the Texas state budget produced by the Texas Public Policy Foundation;
* A “spend-o-meter” that keeps a running tab on how much Texas state government has spending during the current budget cycle;
* Links to the “Where The Money Goes Website” on state agency expenditures, as administered by Comptroller Susan Combs;
* Links to the online budget information (where available) of all 254 Texas counties and Texas’ 25 largest cities;
* Links to the online check registers of more than 150 Texas independent school districts;
* “Fast Facts” about Texas government spending;
* A glossary of key budget-related terms to help the public’s understanding of budget documents; and
* Videos featuring Combs, Rep. Mark Strama, Americans for Tax Reform president Grover Norquist, and others talking about the importance of transparency in government spending.

“Instead of having to walk into dozens of different government buildings or painstakingly search all over the Internet to find how tax dollars are being spent, you can simply go to TexasBudgetSource.com,” said Talmadge Heflin, Director of the Foundation’s Center for Fiscal Policy and a former chairman of the Texas House Appropriations Committee.

“Transparency forces government to be smarter about how it spends the taxpayers’ money,” Combs said in one of the videos to be featured on the site. “It creates a culture of transparency that guards against waste.”

“The Texas Public Policy Foundation has been a longtime champion of transparency in government spending,” Rollins said. “Not only have we shown the possibilities through the legislation that passed last year, but TexasBudgetSource.com provides a template that other states can follow to make government spending more accessible to taxpayers.”

The Texas Public Policy Foundation is a non-profit, free-market research institute based in Austin, Texas.

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