MEMO FOR THE MOVEMENT
Democrat Congressional leaders undermine transparency and bipartisanship
RE: Amending the Rules of Congress to require that legislation is available on the Internet for 72 hours before consideration by the House: The House and Senate Democratic Leadership apparently do not want colleagues and the public to see legislation before they vote on it.
ACTION: We urge you to call your Congressman and ask that he or she sign the Discharge Petition in favor of passing a mandatory 72-hour reading period for all non-emergency legislation. Past and future bills, such as the stimulus package and healthcare legislation, should never be passed without Congressmen and citizens being able to read such bills in their entirety.
ISSUE-IN-BRIEF: A Bipartisan bill that would require major legislation to be posted on the web for public review for 72 hours before coming to a vote on the floor of the House of Representatives is stalled. Unless Members of Congress from both parties hear from their constituents that they want it passed, it is likely that Speaker Nancy Pelosi will have her way and the bill will be buried.
· A Polling Company survey conducted last month found that 95% of Americans agree that members of Congress should not vote on any bill they haven’t read in full.
· A new Zogby poll commissioned by Let Freedom Ring, found that 91percent of those participating want all non-emergency legislation to be posted on the Internet for at least 72 hours before Congress votes on it (see attached news release)
· But the Democrat leaders disagree. They think that if people know what is actually being proposed, they will oppose it, and they say that giving the public and their colleagues a 72 hour “reading period” will slow bills down too much – bills like the massive healthcare reform bill now winding its way through Congress.
· Barack Obama campaigned last year for transparency and openness in government. Yet the House bill, sponsored by 67 Republicans and 31 Democrats, has not only not been brought to a floor vote by Speaker Nancy Pelosi, but the Democrat Leadership is doing its best to keep more Democrats from joining a discharge petition to force the bill to the floor.
· In the Senate, a proposed amendment to the Baucus Healthcare bill that would have required a 72 hour “reading period” was defeated last week by a largely party-line vote of 12-11, with only one Democrat, Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, voting for it.
· The massive $787 billion stimulus billed passed in February appeared at midnight one night, giving members just 12 hours to read it before a final vote. In June, the $1870 per household global warming tax bill came to the floor just 16 hours after a 316 page amendment was introduced.
· Democrats are not the only offenders. In 2003, when Republicans controlled the Congress they jammed through the huge prescription drug entitlement bill late at night when most members had not had a chance to read it.
· The discharge petition, which will force the bill to the floor of the House over the objections of Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her inner circle, needs 218 signatures or a majority of members; it now has 178 signatures, but only five of the 31 Democratic co-sponsors have signed.
According to Rep. Brian Baird, a Democrat and one of the original sponsors of the bill, “If Americans contact their representatives and encourage them to sign this discharge petition, I am confident it will become law.”
And that is what we urge you to do!