July 5, 2007
This morning, several groups working for greater integrity in
state government held a news conference to commemorate the
second anniversary of the pay raise on July 7.
The groups included The Rock the Capital, Commonwealth
Foundation, Young Conservatives of Pennsylvania, PA Clean Sweep
and Democracy Rising PA.
Following are remarks by Democracy Rising PA Co-Founder
Tim Potts:
Here we are. It's July 5th. We just observed the birthday
of American independence in the birthplace of American
independence.
But we don't have an operating budget for the government
that serves 12.5 million citizens. Thousands of public and
private sector employees are threatened with furloughs.
Artificial crises, false choices and fictional deadlines take on
the appearance of divine mandates, delaying and complicating the
single most important task of the year - apart from conductin! g
elections that are honest and fair.
So it's a good time for a reality check on how well our
public servants are doing at reforming themselves. In two days
it will be two years since the event that stirred Pennsylvania's
political conscience.
In each of the past four elections, our citizens have
stood up for their political conscience. They said, "We want our
government back. We want our government to operate with
integrity, to give us value for our taxes, to be as transparent
as possible and to earn our confidence."
In short, citizens want public officials who are dedicated
to giving Pennsylvania the best state government in America, not
the worst.
Our political leaders have told us again and again that
they got the message. But if they weren't saying it so loud and
so often - and using our tax dollars to do it - it would be hard
to detect.
It's been 728 days since the pay raise, enough time for a
family t! o have two children. Yet the box score on new laws is:
- 1 very poor law enacted to improve integrity in state
government.
- 0 "best-in-America" laws enacted.
That's the bottom line. What have they actually done in
law to improve integrity, value, transparency and citizen
confidence. And the answer is, virtually nothing.
Meanwhile, what else have they done in the past two years?
They have:
- Ignored at least two-thirds of citizens who want to
prohibit lobbyists from giving public officials gifts,
meals, entertainment, travel and all the other forms of
legalized bribery that wash over the capitol like rain at
this time of year.
- Ignored the clear will of 82% of us who want to
prohibit lame-duck session like two-thirds of the other
states in America.
- Suspended one of the key reform rules adopted earlier
this year, depriving citizens of the chance to comment on a
last-minute! proposal for $1.6 billion in capital projects
for Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Luzerne County.
- The General Assembly, Supreme Court and governor
continue to spend millions of dollars defending the pay
raise in court, even though it was repealed, parts of it
were declared unconstitutional and a former Speaker of the
House called it "indefensible."
- Lawmakers and Gov. Rendell continue to debate tax and
fee increases while the legislature sits on a slush fund of
at least $215 million.
- Attorney General Tom Corbett has gone to a grand jury
with an investigation into whether millions of dollars paid
to legislative staffers were intended to reward them for
political work, which is illegal.
- Federal prosecutors have filed 139 indictments alleging
various forms of public corruption by a state senator.
- Lawmakers ! spent $6 million of taxpayer funds on
so-called public service ads tha t featured incumbent
lawmakers during the 2006 election year.
- The Supreme Court, without stating its authority or
reasons, twice prohibited the citizens of Philadelphia from
holding a referendum. City Council had the sense to ask
whether citizens want to have slots parlors within 1,500
feet of homes, schools, playgrounds and houses of worship.
Two dissenting justices claim the Court has no authority to
issue the orders. The Court majority simply says, "Do it
because we say so."
- On the last day of lame-duck session - without public
hearings, public debate, or even public knowledge -
lawmakers passed a law providing unlimited free alcohol to
slots players. No wonder 82% of Pennsylvania voters want to
ban lame-duck session.
- Finally, we pay top dollar for this lousy performance
with arguably the most bloated and expensive legislature in
America.
And there's more at
www.democracyrisingpa.com .
Citizens are not letting their political leaders off the hook
any longer. Our leaders have not earned our trust. We will not
give them the benefit of the doubt. We will hold them
accountable for the quality of their deeds, not the quantity of
their words.
This time, the citizens will have their way.