As stated in the note from the Sunlight Foundation′s Board Chair, as of September 2020 the Sunlight Foundation is no longer active. This site is maintained as a static archive only.

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2Day in #OpenGov 11/8/12

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NEWS ROUNDUP:

Government
  • What the election means for federal IT: What will another term of President Barack Obama's administration mean for federal information technology? Some are predicting more government innovation when it comes to using technology. (FedScoop)
  • Some elections monitors blocked: International elections observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) were blocked from accessing polling places in nine states on Election Day. The United States is an OSCE member. (Politico)
Campaign finance 
  • Money doesn't guarantee U.S. Senate victory . . .  Spending in U.S. Senate campaigns was not a clear indicator of who would be the winner, an analysis of the money shows. (NPR)

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Online Contracts Monitoring: First Year Lessons Learned

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Sunlight’s International Fellow presents an up-for-grabs contracts monitoring platform and year-one takeaways. In late 2011, the government in the small country of Slovakia took a bold policy step mandating almost all public contracts and invoices be published online. A reaction to series of scandals this was done in hopes of bringing unprecedented levels of transparency and accountability (read more here). However, the official portal government launched in early 2012 was half-baked, missing full-text search, documents preview or space for comments. While the policy produced more data (“transparency,” if you will), it left accountability untouched.

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2Day in #OpenGov 11/7/12

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NEWS ROUNDUP:

Campaign season
  • Obama wins a second term: Democratic President Barack Obama defeated Republican challenger Mitt Romney on Tuesday to win a second term in office. (Washington Post)
  • Congress can bar contractor contributions: A federal court has ruled Congress can prevent federal contractors from trying to buy influence by contributing to candidates, parties, and committees. (Lobby Comply Blog)
  • Campaigning by House committee? A video released by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform is drawing questions about whether it is too close to being a campaign ad attacking President Barack Obama. The video highlights what it calls wasteful spending by the administration and includes the slogan "Spend like he says, not like he does." (Public Integrity)

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How Independent are Outside Groups? Not very.

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Almost a quarter of the $1.2 billion spent in this election cycle ($292.6 million.) has come from dark money organizations, typically 501(c) groups, which are not required to disclose their donors. These groups, led by Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, are afforded such leeway because they cast themselves as “social welfare organizations” engaged in non-political issue advocacy. These organizations claim to be independent of the political party infrastructure, and the overtly political super PACs, but their behavior suggests otherwise. We find, instead, that many of these groups' allocations of resources closely resembles the patterns observed in party committees, like the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) or the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC). We looked at the 33 outside groups with over $2 million in total spending as of November 2nd, excluding those organizations, which had only spent on the presidential race. By looking at which candidates these groups have spent in support or opposition of, as well as how much they have spent, we have calculated the group’s spending similarity to the Republican and Democratic Senatorial and Congressional committees. These scores range from -1 to 1. A score of 1 indicates that a group allocates its funds across the relevant races in exactly the same ratios as the committee to which it is being compared, and -1 indicates perfectly opposed allocations. Of the groups analyzed spending in the Senate, the average similarity score for that group as compared to the party committee with which it is aligned was 0.395. In the house the effects were notably weaker, with an average similarity score as compared to the aligned party committee of only 0.171. This indicates that outside groups pick and choose the House races in which to be involved much more selectively in the House than the Senate, as compared to party committees whose spending is more widespread. A highly similar spending allocation indicates that an organization is working towards the same strategic goals as one of the party committees, while a directly opposing allocation indicates that it is working against that committee’s goals. One might expect that non-political groups would appear more independent than the overtly partisan super PACs. Were this the case, ‘non-political’ 501(c)s would tend to have scores closer to 0 than super PACs. However, analysis of the data here finds no evidence, that the spending of these 501(c) groups is any less partisan than the registered super PACs. Our analysis found no statistically significant variation in these similarity scores between super PACs and the 501(c)s. If anything, the dark money groups seem to emulate one party’s spending or oppose the others spending to greater extent than do the super PACs. Instead, we find high levels of similarity between the party committees and their aligned outside group, which calls in to question the independence of these controversial groups.

Party Alignment     Organization Type

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2Day in #OpenGov 11/6/12

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NEWS ROUNDUP:

Campaign finance
  • What to do with idle money? Former lawmakers, some of whom have become lobbyists, have thousands or millions of dollars left in their old campaign accounts. Their parties are urging them to consider donating some of it. (The Hill)
  • DC donors top the charts: Donors from inside the Beltway have given more to PACs than donors in any other city. DC contributions amounted to more than $71 million for this election cycle.  (Roll Call)
  • Top PAC donors by industry: What industries do the top PAC donors represent, and which candidates have they supported? Public Integrity has the answers. (Public Integrity)

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Sunlight’s Priorities for the Next Administration

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Regardless of who wins the presidential election, the next administration will have enormous power to say how open our government will be. We have organized our priorities for the next administration below, to share where we think our work on executive branch issues will be focused, in advance of the election results. From money in politics to open data, spending, and freedom of information, we'll be working to open up the Executive Branch. We'd love to hear any suggestions you might have for Sunlight's Executive Branch work, please leave additional ideas in the comments below. (We'll also be sharing other recommendations soon, including a legislative agenda for the 113th Congress, and a suite of reform proposals for the House and Senate rules packages.) Sunlight Reform Agenda for the Next Administration:

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2Day in #OpenGov 11/5/12

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NEWS ROUNDUP:

Government
  • Watergate records unsealed:  A federal judge has unsealed some of the records from the trial of two Watergate conspirators who served on President Richard Nixon's re-election campaign. (Politico)
Campaign finance
  • NY lawmaker proposes three strikes rule: A New York lawmaker is proposing a "three strikes and you're out" rule for those who fail to file campaign finance reports. Three failures to file the reports would result in prison time. (Lobby Comply Blog)
Lobbying
  • Maryland governor's aide joins lobbying firm: Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley's top legislative aide, Joseph Bryce, is leaving office to join the lobbying firm Manis Canning & Associates. (Washington Post)

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Las Vegas – Average Political Ad Costs $1,000; Candidates get 40% Discount during the Final Stretch

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Within 60 days of an election, every dollar spent by a candidate has the same television advertising buying power as $1.63 from any non-candidate source, according to a new analysis of advertisement contracts in the Las Vegas media market. During this period, FCC regulations mandate that TV stations charge candidates “no more per unit than the station charges its most favorite commercial advertisers” for the same ad time. As it turns out, this preferred status nets candidates a significant discount over super PACs, dark money organizations and party committees. According to this new data—collected through Sunlight’s Political Ad Sleuth—candidates enjoy an average markdown of $364 off their typical $946 price tag for a thirty second spot, which constitutes a 38.5 percent price cut. This helps to explain why, as Ezra Klein has pointed out, ads from Obama and his allies have been more frequent than ads from Romney and his allies. Because more money on the Republican side has been flowing into the election through super PACs and other outside groups, the GOP’s purchasing power is diminished.

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CFC (Combined Federal Campaign) Today 59063

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