Whether you’re a gun owner, a home builder, an environmentalist or all of the above, you probably have no idea... View Article
Continue readingUS House Adds Live Web Video
In a big step forward for public access online, the US House launched live streaming video today, on the new... View Article
Continue readingWhy should public data be online?
While some things don’t really need a public service announcement, we felt our Public=Online campaign could benefit from one. The... View Article
Continue readingRead The Bill Goes To The Hill
This week Sunlight marched up to Capitol Hill to deliver the petition signatures of more than 20,000 people who are... View Article
Continue readingMy Talk at Web2.0 Expo
Live From the Supreme Court
U.S. Supreme Court Justices Stephen Breyer and Clarence Thomas were surprised today when Texas Representative and transparency advocate John Culberson... View Article
Continue readingUtah aims to create its own Youtube!
From Municipalist As more states investigate use of YouTube as a multimedia portal (see California and Virginia), the state of... View Article
Continue readingVideo of Lessig’s Change Congress Launch
As promised, here's video of Lessig's Sunshine Week lecture, sponsored by Sunlight and Omidyar Network:
Official Footage from National Press Club:
Sunlight Footage:
Audio from the Change Congress lecture (mp3, 34mb)
End of Sunshine Week Thoughts
If you could treat information about your work the way information about Congress is treated, it would be the equivalent of going into a job interview with a nearly blank resume. A resume is information that a potential employer uses to hire you for a job. And because members of Congress work for us, how can we evaluate their job performance if we don't have meaningful access to information about what they do and who they do it for?
Congress should put information, which relates to the business of lawmaking, online in real time. All their required filings (such as reports about their personal financial investments and their campaign finance reports) should be posted on the Internet in real time and in a way that people can easily search them. The legislation that lawmakers are going to vote on should be posted online three days before the vote so ordinary people can read and evaluate it. The correspondence between Congress and the executive branch should be put online. Congressional earmarks in both the Senate and the House should be fully disclosed with the who, what, where, and why before they are decided on. (For more information click here.)
These measures - and there are no doubt others -- can help create a more open and accountable Congress. The purpose of Sunshine Week is to partake in dialogue about what it means to have an open government and how we can achieve it. The events of the past week are a call to lawmakers to be more transparent and accountable. The image that this week provides is of a united citizenry asking government to be more open so we can trust them again. Let us in because we can help each other run a great nation.
Continue readingCRP Meets Colbert
Steven Colbert’s nascent presidential campaign came up against reality last night when he interviewed Massie Ritsch, the communications director for the Center for Responsive Politics. Ritsch gave Colbert the one-two of how he could legally finance his presidential run, which, at one point stunned Colbert into silence. Enjoy the whole encounter.
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