Super Committee

 

On Supercommittee Failure

It looks increasingly likely that the supercommittee is going to fail to recommend a deficit reduction package to Congress.

As it fails, we should remember what exactly it is that is failing.  What were the assumptions behind the supercommittee's creation?

The assumptions of the supercommittee's design:

  • public discussion is a distraction, and public attention reduces substance
  • fewer voices at the table leads to clarity
  • contrived deadlines created a shared sense of purpose and urgency
  • it's acceptable for party leaders to force Congress to choose between the supercommittee-creating debt limit "deal" and defaulting on the nation's debts, with no time to examine the "deal", and no ability to change it

Let's look at these assumptions in a little more detail.

Public Attention is Necessary for Legitimate Discussions

Sunlight has been railing against this assumption for most of the last year. The argument can perhaps be best summed up by pointing out that supporters of supercommittee secrecy are saying that it's okay to rewrite the tax code, change social security and medicare, cut defense spending, and rewrite agriculture policy, all in one measure, without any public hearings (on those topics) and with no chance for the rest of Congress to amend or block it.  That's not just misguided, it's antidemocratic and actively invites disaster, just as the Budget Control Act did.

Our votes are meaningless if the most fundamental decisions are completely divorced from the representatives that are making them. The supercommittee's secrecy should become legendary in its wrongheadedness. When Supercommittee members demand secrecy for their talks while anonymously leaking plans and attacks to the press, we don't have to take their professed need for secrecy seriously anymore, and shouldn't in the future, either.  The Supercommittee's failure should become synonymous with ill-advised legislative secrecy.

The only possibility for enduring damage from the supercommittee's secret meetings is that their distorted definition of "meeting" may be contagious. The supercommittee's own rules required their meetings to be public, and the chairs apparently relied on a contrived definition of "meeting" to avoid open meetings. If all the members of a committee in an official room doing official business for 8 hours isn't a meeting under the Rules of the House and the Senate, then we've got to fix that definition. Murray's and Hensarling's disrespect for norms about what constitutes a meeting should be derided, and made impossible to emulate.

Empowering a Small Secretive Group Does not Create Clarity

Just as has been the case with all the other negotiations over the last year, the supercommittee negotiation process has been marked by anonymous leaks, rumors, and an utter lack of public substance.  When Senators accuse each other of lying on the Sunday shows, we have to conclude that, despite having only a few hand-picked members in the room for the negotiations, clarity of purpose was not among the things that the process created.

The supercommittee's design reflects the assumption that politics are for manipulating after the fact, and that real decisions should be the result of inter-party trading.  It turns out that in the absence of the public will, which is intended to motivate congressional action, we ended up with a listless morass.

The supercommittee's failure will probably not move our politics forward at all. Each side's partisan supporters will be told self-supporting stories of valor and purity by their respective representatives, and the complete lack of a public record will enable their manipulation. By assuming that our American political discourse is too hollow for real deliberations, the supercommittee members will ensure that their negotiations make no valuable contribution to the next year's politics. The offers and counteroffers become the basis for competing self-aggrandizing vignettes, our politics becomes even harder to connect to our actual national situation.

Contrived Mechanisms are Contrived

The looming sequestration / trigger was conceived as the keystone of serious negotiations, where a shared stake in avoiding catastrophe brings out lawmakers higher purpose.  In reality, attempting to bind Congress to contrived consequences has become a national laugh line, as Members of Congress attest their willingness to undo the trigger in part or in whole.

If Congress is doing a bad job of understanding consequences, creating "automatic" consequences isn't going to help. The trigger is the mechanism by which Congressional leadership and the President raised the stakes enough to get the supercommittee's agenda to be taken seriously. The power the supercommittee was given, however, (immunity from amendment and obstruction) elides the fact that the House and Senate alone control their procedures, as Section 404 of the Budget Control Act redundantly asserts.  When the Constitution gives you the power to set your own affairs, even previous Acts of Congress are irrelevant.

The sequestration is real, and will take an Act of Congress to undo or change.  But the special powers given to the supercommittee over the chambers (in order to deal with the impending trigger) are only as real as the Chambers' desire to continue accepting them.

Creating impending doom turns out to be a very poor way of  creating a shared sense of purpose.

Party Leaders Should Lead Parties

The entire supercommittee debacle was started when Obama, Boehner, and Reid apparently took seriously the idea of giving enormous power to just 12 people, and trying to intimidate and bind Congress to their decisions. Announced as an act of courage, the supercommittee ended up undermining our trust in Congress, even when lower numbers seemed impossible.

At its core, though, creating the supercommittee was an overreach from party leaders. Given a recalcitrant and divided Membership, party leaders created a proxy for Congress. They jammed all of our national disagreements under one tiny roof, and threw their weight behind the seriousness of that process.  Nevermind the lobbyists, the fundraisers, the secrecy, and the disagreements. The supercommittee scheme assumed that if we had a small enough room, with a looming enough deadline, and forced Congress to go along, we could create compromise.  It turns out, though, that the alchemical formula for bipartisanship, if there is one, isn't comprised of power, secrecy, and contrived deadlines.

If Congress is to learn anything from this debacle, maybe it should be to treat leadership differently.  The supercommittee process was essentially an agreement among the party leadership -- the negotiators from July's debt ceiling debate.  When they foisted the Budget Control Act on Congress at the 11th hour, they gave Congress the ridiculous choice between a sane process and a national default.

Congress shouldn't accept this from leadership ever again.  An 11th hour "deal" is inimical to self-governance, and leads to ridiculous schemes like the supercommittee process.

If party leaders decide to hammer a deal amongst each other, then they should do that, among each other.  They should write up a public memo of understanding, and share it with everyone.  Say what your "deal" is.  A balanced budget amendment vote as trade for unemployment extensions? Fine, write it up.  But the Budget Act deal wasn't a compromise at all, it was an attempt to make a better Congress, created with no reflection or public consideration.  Every assumption that went into the supercommittee's creation was anti-democratic and ill-conceived.

The Supercommittee was One Among Many Plans

If the party leaders need to make deals in order to face tough issues, so be it.  There are any other number of "you measure, I cut" compromises that could be created by party leaders, without giving up on how a democratic legislature is supposed to work. Boehner and Obama apparently bought the argument that public discussion was toxic, and that contrived doom would motivate progress.

What if they had started with other assumptions?

If the leaders had all decided that deficit reduction needed a contrived process, what other possibilities could they have chosen?  What if they had declared a deadline for a fall proposal from the Republicans, and vowed an up or down vote in both the House and Senate on their plan, on the condition that if Republicans fail, Democrats get their chance in the Spring? And that this process would continue until one side's bill passed? If the agreement were built on the public word of the party leadership, then both parties would start vying for legitimacy, rather than positioning themselves for failure.

That might be a ridiculous idea.  But the point is that the supercommittee process was borne of a particular set of assumptions about how compromise should work, and was structured to reflect those assumptions.  Those assumptions have been discredited.

Secrecy plus power plus contrived deadlines equals embarrassing failure.

May our leaders see the supercommittee as rock-bottom for their secrecy addiction, rather than finding a new way to double down.  And the next time they create a power-sharing scheme, they should remember the difference between their discretion as party leaders, and the expectations for self-governance inherent in a democracy.

 

 

Broad Spectrum of Interests Urge Super Committee Transparency

A bipartisan assembly of groups representing a variety of interests—from a conservative government watchdog to a supporter of women’s rights to social security advocates—today sent a letter to the twelve members of the Joint Committee on Deficit Reduction asking them to post their recommendations for trimming at least $1.2 trillion from the federal budget online for 72 hours prior to a committee vote.

The breadth of groups that joined the letter demonstrates that Super Committee transparency is an issue that matters to every American. Anyone with an interest in any federal program should have the opportunity to read the bill and determine its impact on the programs they care about. Likewise, the members of Congress who will be called on to vote on the Super Committee’s recommendations without amendment should have more than hours or minutes to determine how to cast their vote. They should, too, have a chance to weigh in with Super Committee members before the bill is finalized, if their constituents feel strongly that the bill should be changed.

Yes, time is running out. But that is no excuse for the Super Committee to claim they can’t allow the public to read the bill. They have known since August that the public and members of Congress have been calling for the committee’s recommendations to be made public before a committee vote. They can’t be surprised if there is outrage should they decide to ram a bill through at the 11th hour. Members of Congress are procrastinators. They will wait until a deadline to come to any conclusion. It won’t matter if the deadline is 72-hours earlier than they had hoped.

We strongly urge the Super Committee to heed the call of those urging them to complete their work and post the bill online 72 hours before they vote. In what has been an entirely secretive and undemocratic process so far, it is the least that can be done to attempt to restore the public’s faith in the deficit cutting process.

72 Hour Sign on Super Committee Letter

It's Not Too Late for the Public to Read the Super Committee's Bill

The Super Committee has 10 days to reach a deal to reduce the debt by at least $1.2 trillion. They should do it in 7. Here’s why. From the beginning, negotiations and lobbying on the committee’s efforts to reshape the federal budget have been handled in secret. If the Super Committee does come to an agreement, the public must have the option to see for themselves which programs will be cut, which will be spared, and why. The 523 members of Congress who are not on the super powerful, super secret committee should likewise have time to digest and weigh in on proposed changes before it is too late for the bill to be modified. In an affront to our democratic traditions, no member of Congress will be able to amend the bill when it goes to the floor of the House or the Senate. The only chance an elected official will have to voice the concerns of his or her constituents is if he or she is given the opportunity to read the bill before the Super Committee votes.

We can hear the excuses already: Super Committee members need every last minute to hammer out a deal; It’s not fair to shave 3 days off of the time they need to negotiate; The deal is too important to risk it failing for lack of time. We’re not buying it. In August, well before the Super Committee began hiding behind closed doors to attempt to negotiate a solution, Sunlight and many others publicly called for the committee’s recommendation to be made public before a committee vote. Legislation has also been offered to mandate online disclosure of the bill before a vote. Members can’t now feign shock that people are demanding to read the bill. Nor can they complain that they need those extra three days. We have seen time and time again that members of Congress are procrastinators. They will wait until a deadline to come to any conclusion. It won’t matter if the deadline is 72-hours earlier than they hoped. If there is any chance they will come to an agreement (and Super Committee co-chair Jeb Hensarling says he hasn’t “given up hope”) and if they believe transparency is at all important, they will find a way to arrive at an agreement in time for the details to be made public, online, before a final committee vote.

Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle regularly voice concern about one party or the other “ramming through” legislation at the 11th hour. Now is the time for the bipartisan super committee to recognize that before they make decisions that will impact every American—whether by restructuring social services, modifying the tax code, or altering the defense budget—we have the right to read the bill.

Video Recap: Haunt the House

Halloween may be over, but our fight for greater Super Committee transparency isn’t. Want to know what Haunt the House was really like on Monday? Check out this sweet video:

Thanks again to those of you who participated!

As hinted in my last post on Monday’s action, we’ll be promoting more ways for you to take action on the Super Committee early next week. In the meantime, check out more ways to make your voice heard at http://sunlightfoundation.com/opensupercongress.

The Super Committee and November 23rd

Conventional wisdom holds that if the Super Committee does not come up with a plan to reduce the federal deficit by November 23, that failure will trigger $1.2 trillion in budget cuts. While this is useful shorthand, the reality is more complex. What's the importance of November 23rd?

It's the deadline by which the Super Committee must vote on a report and legislative language or lose the special privileges that ease consideration by the House and Senate. These privileges are particularly important in the Senate, where any recalcitrant Senator can hold up proceedings absent the special provisions. Failure to meet the deadline is not fatal: each chamber could re-enact special rules (similar to those in the Budget Control Act) to allow debate to move forward.

But, there's a curious provision in the law. Assuming the report and legislative language are approved by the Super Committee on Nov. 23, the law doesn't require them to be submitted to key elected officials until December 2, 2011 -- ten days later. Why the gap? Some time could be eaten up by the three calendar days allocated to Super Committee members who want to express additional views in the report. And if amendments are agreed to by the Committee, it may take some time to edit the legislative or report language reflect those changes. The December 2nd date places a drop dead date to any scrivener work.

Whenever the final draft is finished, the Super Committee is required to "promptly" make the report, legislative language, and vote available to the public. While we agree the public has a right to see the finished product, we also should be able to see final drafts. Specifically, the proposed report and legislative language should be available to the public on the Super Committee's website at least 72 hours before the committee vote. Some may argue that politicians only work well under a deadline, and the bill will keep changing right up until midnight. That's not entirely true, and brings me to my second point.

Even if the legislative language and report is voted on by midnight on November 23rd, much of the work will have to be completed before then. The Super Committee is not allowed to vote on any version of the report, recommendations, or legislation unless CBO estimates of its effect on the deficit are available for consideration by all members of the Super Committee at least 48 hours prior to the vote -- no later than midnight on November 21st. CBO will likely need significant time before then to come up with a score.

The Super Committee proposals are already being debated in public, but in a leaked, bastardized, dumbed-down form. We should remember that the Budget Control Act and the Super Committee Rules are only as enforceable as our political leaders want them to be. While there's still time left -- and in the hope of regaining some credibility -- the Super Committee should open its doors to the public.

Haunt the House (and Senate): Our Kind of Halloween

Giant frogs. Bugs. Wild, ferocious-ish bears. These are but a few examples of the daring costumes worn by Sunlighters this past Monday as they stopped by their nearest Super Committee member’s office. Dozens of people in over 10 cities made this unconventional trick or treat trip as part of our Haunt the House (and Senate) campaign. To be fair, not everyone came in costume, but we all carried the same powerful message:

We are tired of the lack of transparency in the Super Committee and we support common sense reforms to improve the process.

We’ve blogged extensively about these reforms here (and here and here and you can learn more here), but the long and short of it is that the kind of access that we need to ensure that the Super Committee’s recommendations are made as part of a democratic process are easy to achieve and painless for the Committee to enact. So, they should.

Sunlight and our coalition of nearly 40 partners have been pushing this message through conventional means -- letters to Congress, calls, etc. On Halloween, we asked you to help us take this message directly to the source. In response, Senators Portman, Kerry, Kyl, Murray, and Toomey, and other members of the Super Committee got multiple knocks on the doors of several of their district offices.

Overall, Sunlighters seemed to have a great haunting experience, with friendly, attentive, note-taking staff who promised to take the message to the top. (We'll post and blog about any responses received as we get them.) At a few offices, Senator Portman’s in particular, staff were aware we were coming -- of course, the “we” they expected was a rancorous rally, not the friendly haunters looking to sit for a chat. Still, it made for an extra splash for the people in Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati making their visit.

We’ll have more info -- and a super sweet video -- to share about this event within the next few days, and will be sure to keep you posted about how the Senators and Representatives act in response. Curious for what’s next or bummed that you didn’t get to participate because you don’t have Super Committee representation? Don’t worry. We hear you. We are going to keep up the pressure on the Committee, so look for more ways to participate soon. In the meantime, check out http://sunlightfoundation.com/opensupercongress for more ways to make your voice heard.

The News Without Transparency: Members of Debt Panel Have Ties to Lobbyists

The congressional debt committee, commonly referred to as the super committee, has been a popular topic in the news since it was created by the Budget Control Act of 2011. We have been tracking lobbyist ties and campaign contributions to members of the committee since August. The Washington Post published an interesting report in early September announcing that many of the super committee members had ties to lobbyists. The Washington Post article uses GE as a case study to discuss the almost 100 registered lobbyists who are former employees of super committee members and are now "representing defense companies, health-care conglomerates, Wall Street banks and others with a vested interest in the outcome of the panel's work." While this article involved some heavy duty investigative journalism, many of its major claims can be substantiated by publicly available data. The article states that Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) "has employed more than a dozen currently registered lobbyists." The Center for Responsive Politics' "Revolving Door" tool allows investigators to search for individuals by former employee or by former employer. A search for "Murray, Patty" as "employment" returns 18 people who have formerly worked for the senator. Clicking on an individual record shows the individual's former position as well as their new employer and title. Digging into the 18 people returned by the initial search gives us 16 former Murray staffers who may currently be working as lobbyists. (See the end of this post for a full breakdown of the 16.)
The article mentions revolvers associated with other members of the super committee as well. The same search technique described above will identify those revolvers identified:
  • Two dozen former staffers to Sen. Max Baucus, including three former chiefs of staff, now work as lobbyists.
  • Rep. Hensarling's senior advisor is a former lobbyist. Two former aides to the congressman are also now employed as lobbyists.
  • Over a dozen of Sen. John F. Kerry's former staffers are now employed as lobbyists.
  • A minimum of ten former aides to Sen. Jon Kyl now work as lobbyists.
The article states that, "At least eight GE lobbyists used to work for members of the supercommittee" could also be substantiated using this tool. A search for "General Electric" as "employment" returns 37 results, 17 of which are listed as current employees and once worked on the Hill .  Clicking on these records returns the individual's employment history, which indicates whether he or she has worked for any of the 12 super committee members.

This search technique could also be used to obtain the results for when the article states that, "the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America employs lobbyists who previously worked for Murray, Baucus, Kerry and Rep. Dave Camp (R-Mich.)." A search for "Pharma" returns a number of results, but not all are for the correct organizations. A look at these search results shows that CRP's data uses the term "Pharmaceutical Rsrch & Mfrs of America" to refer to PhRMA. A search for this term returns 45 employees, many of whom are current employees who have previously worked on the hill. This example demonstrates the need to be careful and thorough when doing this type of research.
The article also notes that companies such as GE, "which has been awarded nearly $32 billion in federal contracts over the past decade," may have a particularly strong interest in influencing the super committee. Our "Influence Explorer" tool has data regarding federal grants and contracts awarded, which is searchable by company, and of course free and easy to use. A simple search for "General Electric" returns a list of 75 grants and 1,663 contracts awarded to the company between 1999 and 2012. TransparencyData.com also has in-depth information on grants and loans as well as contracts, which can be downloaded in bulk format.
So there you have it. If you have the time and patience, you can replicate the Washington Post's investigation using CRP data, Influence Explorer, and Transparency Data.
List of former Sen. Murray staffers that are now employed as lobbyists (from above):
  1. Douglas Clapp, a former Aide to Murray, now works as the director of Washington state's Washington, DC office.
  2. Rick Desimone, Murray's former Chief of Staff and former Vice Chair and Chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, is now an Executive Vice President at McBee Strategic Consulting.
  3. Carrie Desmond, a former Legislative Assistant to Murray, now works at Lockheed Martin's Washington Operations organization.
  4. Christy Gullion, a former Northwestern Regional Director for Murray, now works as chief federal lobbyist for the University of Washington.
  5. Shay Michael Hancock, a former Legislative Assistant to Murray, is now a Senior Vice President at the lobbying firm Denny Miller Associates.
  6. James Jones, Murray's former Speechwriter (as well as Sen. John Kerry's former Communications Director), now works as a Manager of Integrated Communications at Exxon Mobil.
  7. Joy Langley, a former Legislative Assistant to Murray, now works as the Assistant Director of Government Affairs at J Street.
  8. Dale Learn, a former Senior Legislative Assistant to Murray, is now the President of Gordon Thomas Honeywell's Governmental Affairs.
  9. Justin LeBlanc, former Senior Staffer to Murray, is now the President of LeBlanc Government Relations.
  10. Eric Masten, former Legislative Assistant to Murray, now works as a Public Policy Associate at the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network.
  11. Ben Lee McMakin, former Legislative Director to Murray, is now the Managing Director of Government Issues at Van Ness Feldman.
  12. Heather Meade, former Deputy Scheduler/Assistant to the Chief of Staff for Murray, is now the Senior Manager at Washington Council Ernst & Young.
  13. Nate Potter, former LA to Murray, is now a Federal Affairs Consultant for Gordon Thomas Honeywell.
  14. Casey Sixkiller, former Policy Advisor to Murray, is now a Senior Advisor at SNR Denton's Indian Law and Tribal Representation practice.
  15. Karen Waters, Murray's former Deputy State Director, is now a Senior Vice President at Strategies 360.
  16. Todd Webster, Murray's former Communications Director, launched his own strategic communications firm, Webster Strategies.

"The News Without Transparency" shows you what the news would look like without public access to information. Laws and regulations that force the government to make the data it has publicly available are absolutely vital, along with services that take that raw data and make it easy for reporters to write sentences like the ones we've redacted in the piece above. If you have an article you'd like us to put through the redaction machine, please send us an email at mbuck@sunlightfoundation.com.

Healthy Lobbying of the Super Committee

The healthcare industry is dominating lobbying activity before the Super Committee, according to third quarter lobbying reports. Almost 30 percent of the organizations that reported lobbying the Super Committee represent healthcare companies or associations. Together, the 61 healthcare companies and associations have spent more than $10 million on lobbying. Add in single-issue healthcare groups (such as the American Cancer Society, the American Heart Association and the National Kidney Foundation), and a total of 74 groups (more than a third of the total) lobbying the committee work on health issues.

 

Other leading industries flexing their lobbying muscle are the communications/electronics industry (20 filings and $7.1 million in lobbying spending between them) and the finance/insurance/real estate industry (18 filings and $5.5 million in lobbying spending). Taken together, the three industries mentioned represent almost half of the organizations and more than half of the lobbying muscle aimed at shaping the decisions of the super committee.

Other ideological groups filed 15 relevant reports and disclosed spending $3.9 million on these issues and others. This includes such groups as AARP (which spent $2.75 million), Planned Parenthood, the National Taxpayers Unions and the American Civil Liberties Union.

What’s also telling is who’s not putting effort into lobbying the committee. Only four filings represent the defense sector, despite the major cuts to defense spending looming if the super committee cannot reach an agreement by the Thanksgiving deadline. Additionally, only four filings represent agribusiness, despite threatened cuts to agricultural spending programs.

Anupama Narayanswamy with the Sunlight Foundation’s Reporting Group wrote about the entities that disclosed lobbying the super committee last week. Her article provides a link to all the organizations filing lobbying reports linked to the super committee.

 

 

This Halloween, Haunt the House...and the Senate

For most of us, this week marks the final countdown to Halloween, a time to gather wigs and face paint before the clock runs out this weekend.

But this year, the clock is also ticking on Capitol Hill -- not for Halloween, but for the Super Committee. Today, we are less than one month from the presentation of the Committee’s recommendations before Congress. If that doesn’t scare you, it should. The Super Committee has been charged with cutting $1.5 trillion from the national deficit in a single bound with no measures (zero, zip, nada) to make this unprecedented process transparent. So, when the Committee began to dodge their own rules about holding (nominally) public meetings, there were no mechanisms in place to hold them accountable.

But closed-door meetings aren’t the worst of it. Last month, a lobbyist predicted that the special interest activity around the committee would be “like the Crusades.” Just the other day, Politico reported that “in just six weeks, nearly 200 companies and special interests have reported that they’re lobbying the 12-member committee” (emphasis mine). (Check out Sunlight's reporting on the lobbying here.) And how much disclosure is required of these 12 members, to ensure that this most significant committee does not fall to the backroom malaise of so many of their peers? None. Sure, they have to file quarterly, as usual, but in order for this process to be accountable -- heck, democratic -- the public must know who is meeting with our legislators, what issues they’re pushing for, and what sort of campaign contributions are coming in real time as these things happen. Otherwise, we won’t find out any of this information until January, well after the Committee has submitted their recommendations to the rest of Congress.

Whether you’re a firm supporter of Social Security or tax reform (up, or down), whether you care about the environment or supporting our troops, you need to care about what’s happening with this Super Committee. A $1.5 trillion cut is nothing to sneeze at. We’re all going to feel it. But why should we have to wait months after the decisions are made and the work is done to be spooked by the results? We -- as in the public, the constituents our elected officials are supposed to represent -- cannot be be closed out of one of the most important economic decisions in US history in favor of well-funded special interests.

Lobbying Problem? Solution: Haunt the House

Apparently, the only way to get this message to Congress is to say it in person. So, this Halloween, Sunlight, along with a broad coalition of partners, is asking you to join us as we Haunt the House (and the Senate). On October 31st, citizens all over the country will be visiting the district offices of members of the Super Committee. If you’re represented by

  • Rep. Hensarling (TX)
  • Sen. Murray (WA)
  • Sen. Baucus (MT)
  • Rep. Becerra (CA)
  • Rep. Camp (MI)
  • Rep. Clyburn (SC)
  • Sen. Kerry (MA)
  • Sen. Kyl (AZ)
  • Sen. Portman (OH)
  • Sen. Toomey (PA)
  • Rep. Upton (MI), or
  • Rep. Van Hollen (MD)

...You should click here to find your closest district office and join (or sign up to lead) a meetup. Not in a Super Committee district? No problem. We’ll update soon with ways you can support the movement.

Keep your eyes on the blog this week for more about this epic haunting. In the meantime, if you’re interested in getting involved or having your organization sign-on to our campaign, get in touch: info@sunlightfoundation.com.

The grassroots campaign on opening the Super Committee

Over two months ago, a special committee was created to offer recommendations on how to reduce the national deficit by at least $1.5 trillion over the next ten years. The bi-partisan Joint Select Committee, also known as the Super Committee, is comprised of 12 members and has until November 23 to come up with solid recommendations that will be used as guidelines in shaping our nation’s deficit budget conundrum.

When talk of formation of the committee started making the rounds, we immediately went to work creating a website resource to inform and share information on all things Super Committee.

Our grassroots campaign to make sure that citizens are kept in the loop about what the members are doing kicked off with enthusiastic responses from the public eager to open the Super Congress.

Contacting the Super Committee

Our friends at Open Congress created better self organizing tools to help you simultaneously contact all three of your members of Congress and let them know that you are tracking their actions. If you have a representative on the Super Committee, let them know you demand transparency. If your representatives aren’t on the Super Committee, ask them to support H.R. 2860 and other Super Committee transparency initiatives. Learn more about Open Congress’s tools here:

Join the campaign

On the home front, we asked you to join hands with us by signing on to tell the Super Congress to be open .

Write to Congress

We also provided you with a customizable letter to write to your representative or visit your local congressional office with tips on how to make the most out of your trip. Lastly, we asked you to ‘sing it from the rooftops’ by using the hashtag #opensupercongress to share your visit or letter with your social media network. All the while, giving you four options to reach your respective member of congress. We did not stop at that, we wanted to hear how your district visit to your representative went, so we sent out a survey encouraging you to share your experience so others can be inspired to visit their leaders too.

The Committee itself has also aided the process further by designing an official website where citizens can now write directly to the members with suggestions on what they think can be done to reduce the country’s deficit. But voicing your ideas on how we can beat the deficit is not enough. We have to ensure that while they are negotiating these issues, all meetings and hearing are publicized and any financial contributions attached to a member of the Committee, disclosed.

With the introduction of the Deficit Committee Transparency Act, which calls for members and staff of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction to disclose lobbying activities and campaign or member-designated political action committee contributions, the campaign for openness gained even more momentum. Last month, we complimented this momentum by hosting a conference call with our partners at Public Citizen to discussion updates on the Super Committee. Click here to listen to the audio from the conference call. It was also the perfect forum to bring up experiences for activists to made the trip to their representatives’ offices. Sunlight's Lisa Rosenberg and Public Citizen's Craig Holman were on hand to answer participants questions and an audio recording will soon be available for those who did not make it to the conference call.

A movement forms

In addition, over 5,230 signers citizens have signed on to support the campaign for a transparent Super Committee -- you still can here.

Blogging: the element of each one reaching one

We still encourage local bloggers to take up this issue. Local bloggers play a crucial role in spreading the word to their communities and followers -- and as the Committee members are also representatives and senators to some of the local bloggers, it becomes a civic responsibility to inform the constituents represented by these members. Maybe you would rather illustrate your message, we made it easier by creating this video which you are welcome to use in your blog post. Several local bloggers including Jason Williams, Stefan Passantino, Charles Davis and Celeste Meiffren (who loved our video) Michael Signer  have already started spreading the word!

The Super Committee is continuing its work, though behind closed doors. We have less than a month left. Join us to help demand an open and transparent process.

 

This week, we will be bringing you more updates including actions planned to open up the Super Committee. Stay tuned...