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2Day in #OpenGov 4/23/2013

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NEWS ROUNDUP:

  • The Philippine Department of Agriculture is embracing the message of transparency being spread by their president with a new open data portal. The portal aims to raise public awareness of the department's projects and includes budget data, photos, and mapping features.  (Future Gov)
  • A new proposal from the European Commission would require companies to publicly disclose information about their anti-bribery and corruption efforts. The proposal would target some 16,000 European companies that have at least 500 employees. (TrustLaw)
  • A prominent Russian blogger and political activist who exposed corruption in the United Russia party is facing up to ten years in prison on charges of corruption that independent reviewers have called "laughably bogus." Aleksei Navalny, who got his start advising a provincial governor, exposed millions of dollars in corruption and led opposition to the United Russia part in recent elections. (Tech President)
  • A data disclosure bill working its way through the California legislature has attracted some negative attention from big tech firms like Facebook and Google. The bill would require companies to provide customers with any personal information that the company holds about them upon request and is similar to laws that are already in effect in Europe. (Ars Technica)
  • The Chamber of Commerce pulled up slightly on its rapid election year lobbying pace, but the group still managed to spend more than $10 million on lobbying during the first quarter of 2013. The Chamber has more than 40 in house lobbyists and 14 firms on retainer. (Roll Call)
  • On Monday, Michelle Bachmann's former chief of staff, Andy Parrish, testified that Bachmann personally approved payments to an Iowa state senator as part of her presidential campaign despite rules against the practice. He also stated that those involved believed that they acted within the law. (National Journal)
  • Companies that chose to file their first quarter lobbying reports early are generally showing spending increases. It's hard to say if the trend will continue as more companies file or if the overachievers were just eager to show off. (Roll Call)

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A win for open data: CFPB’s consumer complaint database

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Here’s another win for open data. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau releases data on which banks have the most consumer complaints. Even before the data becomes public officially, banks start improving response times and responding more favorably to customer complaints. That’s the story that’s emerging from the CFPB’s bold decision to make bank consumer complaint data public. This is exactly what open data is supposed to do. It equalizes the balance of power. In this case, it has empowered consumers, and brought accountability to big banks.

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Democratic establishment betting heavily on Colbert Busch upset in S.C.

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The shifting political tides in a coastal South Carolina congressional district are vividly apparent from the first look at last-minute big donations to Mark Sanford and Elizabeth Colbert Busch, rival candidates for the House seat left vacant when Republican Tim Scott was promoted to the U.S. Senate earlier this year.

Under federal law, any donations of $1,000 or more made during the final days before the May 7 election must be reported to the Federal Election Commission. Over the weekend, both campaigns filed their first reports, and they showed the late money breaking strongly in favor of Democrat ...

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2Day in #OpenGov 4/22/2013

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NEWS ROUNDUP:

  • Despite still being allowed to file their campaign finance reports on paper, a growing number of Senators are embracing the future and filing electronically. John Tester, who introduced legislation that would require every Senator to e-file, is joined by a bipartisan group, although more Democrats have taken up the practice than Republicans. (Public Integrity)
  • Steven VanRoekel, the US CIO, expressed his hopes that open data will become "the default setting of the federal government" during a speech last week. As part of his message he urged vendors and contractors to plan to collect and distribute data in ways that will allow agencies to make it available in free, non-proprietary formats. (Federal Computer Week)
  • GOP Boy Wonder Marco Rubio's leadership PAC raised $650,000 during the first quarter. Insert played out joke here: the PAC spent more than $47,000 on bottled water. (Roll Call)
  • I think everyone can agree that last week was tough on America's mental state, and through that our productivity. But, the string of tragic events didn't slow the train of political fundraising moving all across the nation. (Public Integrity)
  • Mark Zuckerberg's FWD.us jumped into the immigration debate feet first last month, paying Republican lobbyists with the firm Fierce, Isakowitz & Blalock $30,000 in march to lobby on the issue. FWD.us also signed up Peck Madigan Jones, but the firm has yet to file their first quarter report. (Roll Call)
  • The NRA is spending more than ever on federal lobbying as they face a massive push to reform some gun laws. They spent at least $800,000 in the first quarter to lobby on a number of bills in the House and Senate. (Public Integrity)
  • President Obama raised more than $43 million to fund his second inaugural festivities, not quite reaching the high bar that he set with his first inaugural haul of $53 million. A number of major corporations and unions cut big checks. (The Hill, Washington Times)

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