Posts Tagged Ethics

Recall Democrat State Senators Wisconsin | Wisconsin Considering Record Number Of Recalls | The Daily Caller – Breaking News, Opinion, Research, and Entertainment

Recall Democrat State Senators Wisconsin | Wisconsin Considering Record Number Of Recalls | The Daily Caller – Breaking News, Opinion, Research, and Entertainment.

 

Wisconsin considering record number of recalls, time to reconsider direct democracy?

 

 

 

For Wisconsin voters on both sides of the aisle, it’s senatorial hunting season, and thanks to the organizing power of social media, it may be like shooting fish in a barrel. Embroiled in the state’s budget controversy, all 16 senators vulnerable to the state’s recall laws have had petitions launched against them.

The move — the sheer number of state lawmakers facing potential recalls — is unprecedented. And not just in Wisconsin, but in the other states that allow similar efforts.

A week after the Progressive Change Campaign Committee launched a online ad campaign against Wisconsin Republicans, it proudly announced that it had raised $500,000 against both Gov. Scott Walker and the senators vulnerable to recall. Meanwhile, there are dozens of Facebook pages dedicated to recalling every possible Wisconsin senator. The efforts are all related to the budget debate launched by Republicans who, to the disbelief of many Wisconsinites, are keeping their campaign promises.

As social media makes it easier to mobilize support and incite action, is it time states reconsider the once-infrequent use of recalls and other forms of direct democracy?

Along with Wisconsin, 17 other states allow for the recall of its officials. Nearly all of those states were once western territories that came into the union around the first Progressive Movement. Recall attempts are mostly reserved for local lawmakers and each state has its own specific requirements, though most of them list some sort of “serious malfeasance” or “misconduct” as a justifiable reason. Montana and Virginia, ensuring that they’ve covered all their bases, include the broad, (if slightly redundant) definition of lawmaker “incompetence.”

The National Conference of State Legislatures describe recalling state legislators as “unusual.” The action is also so infrequent and — at least in the past — difficult, that scholars from almost all 18 states who spoke to The Daily Caller had trouble even remembering the last time it happened.

“Yeah, I can’t think of anything,” said a California expert. For a Michigan professor, it was “further back than I can remember.”

“I can’t think of a single incident in which we’ve recalled a state legislature,” said one Georgia scholar.

“That’s a good question,” said scholar, Bob Mann, whose home state, Louisiana, might frequently elect officials already under criminal indictment but at least voters are committed to their decisions.

Gray Davis aside, initiative-crazed voter-mania in California — famous (or infamous) for its exercises in direct democracy —  has only seen 4 recalls on their ballots.

“Social media has definitely made it easier to mobilize groups of supporters or opponents for any government action,” said Rory Cooper, communications director for the Heritage Foundation. For plutocratic enthusiasts, unfortunately, he called this “a good thing.”

“It doesn’t mean mobilization wasn’t happening before social media,” he said. “It just means it happens faster.”

While social media does help enliven the recall efforts, University of Wisconsin-Madison political science professor Barry Burden said that’s no reason to change the laws. While communication tools may help people become more aware of hot-button issues or get that collective knee to jerk, it still doesn’t replace real-world efforts.

“I think social media do help recall efforts, but they do not allow you to collect signatures online,” said Burden. “You have to engage in the old fashioned shoe leather, go to shopping centers, go door-to-door to collect the signatures that are valid.”

Those lusting for a recall still have to garner at least 11,000 district voters (for Democrat Spencer Coggs) to a little more than 20,000 (Republican Mary Lazich) all in the span of 60 days. In Wisconsin, the number of required signatures is 25 percent of district voters from the previous gubernatorial election.

Apart from the on-the-ground effort needed, Burden also noted that many of California’s past recall and ballot initiatives were funded by small groups of people who also happen to pay people to collect signatures.

“At least through social media, you think ‘these are people who are really committed to the cause, and not just doing it because it’s easy to send out of their wealth and make it happen,’” said Burden. “It’s sort of loading the gun. It’s potentially making it easier to get those signatures [but] that’s no small task.”

The scholars who spoke to TheDC all seem to agree: recalls are an infrequent event and any tool — including social media — that not only spins the wheel of democracy faster but greatly encourages participation, is a positive.

“I would say it’s always a good idea to have more accountability in the system,” said Cooper. “Legislators should always know that they’re beholden to the will of the people that they represent.”

So recalls are good, for now ….

“I think in a few years, if you start seeing them more and more as the only answer of an opposition then you could debate the issue,” said Cooper, who tried to continue with “but right now …” before being cut off because TheDC’s whole argument about limiting direct democracy was falling apart.

Whatever the results of this current effort, recalling the state’s own recalling ability might not come soon enough for Gov. Walker. There’s already several Facebook pages laying the ground work for a Walker recall, whose position is safe for at least nine more months. That’s the easy part though, Walker haters will still need to collect about 500,000 signatures.

Email Jeff Winkler and follow him on Twitter


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Wisconsin vote spurs death threat, protests, legal questions – Political Hotsheet – CBS News

Madison, Wisconsin

Image via Wikipedia

Wisconsin vote spurs death threat, protests, legal questions – Political Hotsheet – CBS News.

Wisconsin vote spurs death threat, protests, legal questions

 

 

Republican state senators in Wisconsin last night pulled a legislative maneuver that allowed them to pass a controversial anti-union measure — but the battle over union rights appears far from over.

Protesters are still flooding the Madison capitol battle in protest of the bill. Democratic lawmakers are questioning the legality of the Republicans’ move. Recall efforts against several politicians are underway. And political groups are all the while raising money off of the events.

And the conflict is taking a dangerous turn — Republican Wisconsin Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzergerald’s office announced that the GOP leader received a death threat in an e-mail today, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinelreports. Below is an excerpt from the e-mail:

“This is how it’s going to happen: I as well as many others know where you and your family live, it’s a matter of public records. We have all planned to assult (sic) you by arriving at your house and putting a nice little bullet in your head. However, this isn’t enough. We also have decided that this may not be enough to send the message. So we have built several bombs that we have placed in various locations around the areas in which we know that you frequent…”

 

A spokesperson for Fitzgerald told the Journal Sentinel that the e-mail was turned over to state’s capitol police, and that the GOP leader has been the target of other threats in recent weeks, including protesters who banged on the windows of Fitzgerald’s house at 6 a.m.

Protesters have been demonstrating in Madison and elsewhere in the state since mid-February, when the state legislature first took up Republican Gov. Scott Walker’s so-called “budget repair bill.” The measure was intended to help close the state’s budget gap but included controversial elements, like a provision to scale back public workers’ benefits and dramatically limit their collective bargaining rights.

http://cnettv.cnet.com/av/video/cbsnews/atlantis2/cbsnews_player_embed.swf

Democratic state senators fled the state to deprive the state Senate the quorum needed to pass any spending-related bill. In a press conference today, Walker called the senator’s departure a “dirty trick.” (Watch at left.)

In order to proceed without them, Republicans last night removed the more overt spending elements and passed a pared-down bill.

The newly-approved legislation includes elements that would seem to impact the budget, such as the provision requiring public workers to pay more for health care and pensions, though the bill is ostensibly not budget-related. It also included the limits on collective bargaining rights — the part of the bill that has drawn the loudest outcry.

The bill was expected to pass in the state Assembly today, but protesters packed the capitol building this morning and blocked access to the Assembly vestibule, Wispolitics.com reports. The Assembly was slated to take up business at 11 a.m. and had been expected to quickly pass the new bill. However, Assembly Republican leader Jeff Fitzgerald released a statement saying the session would be delayed until the building was properly secured.

Walker said this morning he would sign the bill into law “as quickly as I can legally.”

Democrats are questioning whether the bill was passed legally in the state Senate, however. Last night, as state Senate Republicans voted on the bill, Democrats present screamed that the Republicans were violating the state’s open meetings law, which requires 24 hours notice for a public meeting of the conference committee.

“This is a violation of law!” Assembly Minority Leader Peter Barca screamed as Republicans ignored him, the Journal Sentinel reported.

http://cnettv.cnet.com/av/video/cbsnews/atlantis2/cbsnews_player_embed.swf

Assistant senate minority leader David Hansen told CBS’ “The Early Show” this morning that Democrats are “going to move forward. We’re going to continue the fight.”

Meanwhile, liberal groups are mobilizing their supporters against Republicans in the state. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee and Democracy for America raised $200,000 since last night alone (and a total $750,000) to air a television commercial in support of the unions. The commercial also goes after Republican state senators facing recall elections. All eight Senate Republicans vulnerable to recall efforts as well as six Senate Democrats are facing recalls.

MoveOn.org also announced this morning that they raised more than $325,000 overnight to support the recall efforts and have raised more than $825,000 overall.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee also sent out an e-mail to its supporters that says, “This is a blatant attack on Wisconsin’s middle class workers, and Democrats will NOT stand by silently as it happens.” The e-mail asks supporters to sign a petition and includes a link soliciting contributions.

 

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Charlie Rangel Gets Away With It

Charles B. Rangel

Image via Wikipedia

 

 

This is the story of the day. Charlie Rangel has been censured by the House for his ethics violations. This is the man who walked out of his own trial because he didn’t have the time to get a proper defense together, then spent the next week waxing long and poetic about how he wasn’t guilty. Why could he not simply have done that at the trial instead of making it into a mockery?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censure#Explanation_and_use

Based on Rangel’s rather serious breaches of ethics (who forgets to pay almost a million dollars in income taxes over several years?), do you agree with this treatment? As a further question, do you believe he should be held to the same standard as Wesley Snipes, who was recently sentenced to 3 years in prison for almost the exact same thing?

Tell me in the comments!

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