Citizens Help Tally Which Lawmakers Disclosed their 2009 Earmark Requests Online
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 15, 2008
Contact: Gabriela Schneider 202/742-1520 ext 236
WASHINGTON, DC – At least 76 lawmakers have disclosed their fiscal year 2009 earmark requests online, with a majority posting their requests on their official Web sites and another 11 disclosing directly to the media. An additional 46 have foregone earmarks for fiscal year 2009, while 10 members of Congress said they will not disclose their earmark requests. All these findings are according to a collaborative study by citizen journalists organized by the Sunlight Foundation in conjunction with Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) and Taxpayers for Common Sense (TCS).
To create more transparency about the earmarking process, Sunlight, CAGW and TCS called on citizens to help collect information to reveal which members of Congress voluntarily disclosed their fiscal year 2009 earmark requests. Sunlight maintains that list on its Web site, and will continue to update it as more members of Congress disclose their earmark requests online.
“While who's asking for what in this 'earmark gold rush on the Potomac' is already known to the insiders on the Appropriations Committee, the public is left in the dark,” said Bill Allison, senior fellow of the Sunlight
Foundation. “We decided to see if, while we're waiting for the official disclosures from the committees, we can prevail upon members of Congress to be a bit more forthcoming, and asked citizens to help us reveal which
lawmakers post their earmark requests online.”
Dozens of citizens participated in the effort, calling on congressional offices and asking lawmakers whether they had disclosed their earmark requests, and urging all to disclose them on their Web sites. Additional
lawmakers have pledged to disclose their earmark requests online, but have yet to do so.
The Sunlight Foundation supports, develops and deploys new Internet technologies to make information about Congress and the federal government more accessible to the American people. Through its projects and
grant-making, Sunlight serves as a catalyst to create greater political transparency and to foster more openness and accountability in government. Visit SunlightFoundation.com to learn more about Sunlight’s projects,
including LetOurCongressTweet.org, EarmarkWatch.org and OpenCongress.org.
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Web Mentions
- Paul Blumenthal: Pass S. 223! August 7, 2008
- Support Congress’s Right to Tweet August 7, 2008
- Networked _Performance — Rebooting America August 7, 2008
- MetaFilter Projects: Pass S.223 August 7, 2008
- Metreo Active: Independence 2.0 August 6, 2008
- Lostinthought: Bundlers Galore August 6, 2008
- Port City Underground: Pass S. 223. Pass It Now. You Can Make It Happen. : PORT☆CITY☆UNDERGROUND August 6, 2008
- cnewmark: Twittering while Nerdistani; Writing bad haiku; Revenge of the Nerds! August 6, 2008
- AMERICAN NONSENSE: Pass S. 223. Pass It Now. You Can Make It Happen. August 6, 2008
- Daily Kos: Pass S. 223. Pass It Now. You Can Make It Happen. August 6, 2008
Press Mentions
- Earmarks remain an issue in Congress August 1, 2008
- Lobbyist Reports Show $181,000 for McCain July 28, 2008
- Editorial: Earmark disclosure should be required July 24, 2008
- Editoral: Bad form July 22, 2008
- What, Not Where Should Govern Internet Postings July 21, 2008
- Congress wades through 'tweets' July 15, 2008
- Editoral: Congressional earmarks posted on Sunlight Foundation Web site July 15, 2008
- Congressman has financial stake in O.C. tollway July 15, 2008
- Commentary - There they go again, stifling free speech July 13, 2008
- McCain takes lead in transparency race July 13, 2008













