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World Corruption: The United States Falls near the Middle

November 9th, 2006 | 3 Comments | Posted in Uncategorized by Chris Pommier


It’s safe to say that corruption in the single-party cultural gulag created by Big Brother Bush and his thought police carried many of us to the polls this year, but how does the United States rank in perceived corruption around the world?

Transparency International published the 2006 Corruption Perception Index. On the map to the right, darker is more corrupt. The U.S. falls at 20 with Chile and Belgium, far below Finland (1) and Singapore (5) with Iraq (160) falling nearly dead last, an indictment of U.S. involvement with that country. According to Transparency International, poverty and corruption go hand in hand. The organization looks to the Americas here:

While there are no winners in the Americas, the index shows substantially higher scores for countries with relatively strong democratic institutions, such as Canada and the United States, but also notably for Chile, Costa Rica and Uruguay. But as recent scandals show, they too must continue to strengthen their institutions. There is, for example, a strong sense in the United States that corruption is on the rise in Congress, with special interests able to buy access and Congress doing little to police itself.

Money, The 109th Congress and Nepotism

The Sunlight Foundation, using technology to enable citizens to ensure greater accountability and transparency in government, has been following the money trails in the 109th and published their second installment in the “Is Congress a Family Business?” report. Citizen journalists working with the Foundation have found that over $635,000 have been spent from campaign moneys on businesses and consulting fees for the spouses and family members of around 19 members of the House. This practice is not necessarily illegal as the federal nepotism statute keeps members of Congress from hiring family to work in their Washington offices, but doesn’t address the issue of family working on campaigns as long as they render bona fide services to the campaign at fair market value.

The Lazy, Good-for-Nothing 109th Congress

The 109th Congress is also poised to be the least productive Congress since the late 1940s, according to this report (pdf) from the Sunlight Foundation. Don’t we all wish we could go to work for only about 129 days this upcoming year, like the Senate? And the score in the House:

This year the House of Representatives scheduled a mere 88 days in session. At least 23 of those days have votes occurring after 5:30 or 6:30 pm with one voting day ending at 2 pm for Rosh Hashanah. Twelve of these 23 postponed voting days occur on a Monday or a Tuesday following a Monday off. This allows members to come in late on Mondays or Tuesdays just in time to cast a vote. There are also 37 days with no votes on the calendar. Congress has so far failed to meet for 23 of those 37 “no vote” days with four “no vote” days remaining. Of the ten “no vote” days that the House has met, nine of them lasted for no more than 11 minutes. Fewer than one-out-of-three “no vote” days become a day in session.

The New Congress: Can Democrats Address These Issues?

What do you think? Post your comments below. Will Democrats really make a difference? How will the transition from campaigning to governing go? They have their work cut out for them. Will their watchword be transparency? How many secret meetings will they have? I’ve been hearing a lot lately about three issues:

  1. The Democrats squeaked into office and their reign is only temporary, at best.
  2. They are more centrist, less progressive these days.
  3. There are many who are new to the business

Don’t take your eyes off them. For those of us who voted them into office, we can’t sit back on our laurels and hope for the best. Let’s make sure they do their job, shall we?

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Election 2006; There’s a First Time for Everything

November 8th, 2006 | 2 Comments | Posted in Minnesota by Chris Pommier

Some of the firsts from this year’s election:

  1. Nancy Pelosi, the first woman Speaker of the House, third in line for the presidency.
  2. Keith Ellison of Minnesota, the first Muslim in Congress.
  3. Keith Ellison, the first Black person elected to the House from Minnesota.
  4. Amy Klobachar, the first woman to be elected to the Senate from Minnesota.


Update 11/09/2006 11:57 AM

C’mon people. Whatever happened to Web 2.0? Social media? I had to dig up these two firsts myself:

  1. Bernie Sanders of Vermont is the first Socialist to be elected to the U.S. Senate
  2. Deval Patrick, the first African-American Governor of Massachusetts

Update 11/09/2006 6:36 PM

  1. Ellen Young is the first Asian Assemblywoman in New York.


Please comment and add any local or national firsts you’re aware of this year, and correct me if I’m wrong on any of the above.

Thanks!

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Latest Links: Voting 2

November 7th, 2006 | No Comments | Posted in Minnesota, News by Chris Pommier

Diebold Voting Machines Jam in Vista
Two Diebold voting machines in Vista experienced paper jams on the already controversial computerized format that has been challenged on local, regional and national levels.
“What happend today in Vista is an example of the continued erosion of our democracy,” said Fredia Avalos, a communication lecturer at Cal State San
Marcos. Vista filmaker Mark Day commented “I ended up voting twice. Those machines make a lot of racket and sound like an old harvesting machine. The whole thing is very scary.”

Klobuchar wins
Democrat Amy Klobuchar sailed to an easy victory in the U.S. Senate race Tuesday, capitalizing on voter anger over the Iraq war to become Minnesota’s first elected female senator.
Klobuchar, the elected prosecutor of Hennepin County, kept an important post in Democratic hands by beating Mark Kennedy, a three-term Republican congressman from west of the Twin Cities.
Klobuchar’s win was based on a statistical analysis of the vote from voter interviews conducted for The Associated Press by Edison Media Research and Mitosfky International.

Doyle wins in Wisconsin governor’s race
Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, a Democrat, won a tough reelection race Tuesday over U.S. Rep. Mark Green, a Republican who focused on state spending and property taxes.
In the U.S. Senate race, Democratic incumbent Herb Kohl easily defeated Robert Gerald Lorge, a Republican lawyer from Bear Creek.
Kohl, who used to run his family’s grocery and department stores and now owns the Milwaukee Bucks, has served three terms in the Senate.
Wisconsin voters also approved Tuesday a constitutional amendment that defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman. Similar measures banning same-sex civil

Immigrants turn out to vote in California, spurred by tech-saavy and traditional registration drives, voter guides and rights cards from Mobilize the Immigrant Vote 2006.

Mapping the Movement: Washington
Heavy rain falls on election day. Shankar Narayan, director of the Hate Free Zone, hopes it won’t keep away the 11,000 immigrant voters it’s registered through canvassing and phone banking.

La Nueva Cara del Votante: Jóven y Latino

Los jóvenes latinos en San Diego conformaron más de la mitad del crecimiento del electorado latino del condado.

Black voters a poll factor
While incumbent Republican Gov. Bob Riley has a comfortable lead in polls over Democratic Lt. Gov. Lucy Baxley, political observers say the outcome of other races could depend on how many voters turn out, particularly black voters.

FBI looks into voter intimidation
The FBI is looking into possible voter intimidation in Virginia’s hard-fought U.S. Senate contest between Republican incumbent George Allen and Democrat Jim Webb.

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Latest Links: Voting

November 7th, 2006 | No Comments | Posted in Minnesota by Chris Pommier

Election problems: New machines, databases, rules

Programming errors and inexperience dealing with electronic voting machines frustrated poll workers in hundreds of precincts early today, delaying voters in Indiana, Ohio and Florida and leaving some with little choice but to use paper ballots instead.

In Cleveland, voters rolled their eyes as election workers fumbled with new touchscreen machines that they couldn’t get to start properly until about 10 minutes after polls opened.

“We got five machines one of them’s got to work,” said Willette Scullank, a trouble shooter from the Cuyahoga County, Ohio, elections board.

StarTribune.com | Politics
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 23:00:00


Voter ID Numbers

Around noon today, the DFL volunteer army made its five millionth voter identification call.Five Million. 5,000,000 calls made.

Among those, more than 1.8 million voters have been identified successfully.

That, my wonderful readers, is what we call “ridiculous.”

Minnesota Campaign Report
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 15:31:08

Despite delays, glitches,…
Despite delays, glitches, and other snafus, most polls will not extend voting hours. In Denver, where the lines are long, the Democratic candidate for governor waited nearly two hours to vote, presumably for himself.

Talking Points Memo: by Joshua Micah Marshall
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 15:25:43

In CO, Dems Allege Threats to Latino Voters
From Roll Call: In automated and live calls, Democrats allege, Latinos have been told that their ethnicity makes them ineligible to vote in today’s elections. The calls also threatened that Latinos would be arrested at polling places if they did…

TPMmuckraker
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 15:23:07

MD GOP Candidate Recruits Homeless to Pass Out Deceptive Flyers
Misleading flyers were handed out at several Maryland polling places by men and women recruited by the GOP governor’s campaign from out-of-state homeless shelters, the Washington Post reports. The flyers, given to voters in a heavily Democratic area, showed GOP…

TPMmuckraker
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 14:32:34

Northern Minnesota Report

Things are going well in the Bemidji DFL office, according to reports from the northern part of the state. A light rain is falling, but turnout appears to be high. Plenty of volunteers, and not so many in the local Republican office. Sporadic reports of voter intimidation in largely Native areas, as well as issues getting some voters in the Red Lake area to the county courthouse - they were supposed to vote by mail, and were unaware that the precinct voting location would not be open. Drivers needed - if you’re near there, go help out.

Minnesota Campaign Report
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 14:10:42

Election 2006: Penetrating The Voting Vortex
By Erin Thompson
Google the terms “hiccup” or “glitch” along with the words “electronic voting equipment” and you’ll get some interesting insight into widespread chaos that could hit polling places this November. In primaries across the nation earlier this year, problems with newly implemented computer-based voting systems, often blamed on software “glitches” or election “hiccups,” caused voting results to be delayed, tallied incorrectly or reversed entirely.

Election 2006: Resisting The Voting Rights Rollback
By Ula Kuras
Among the new voting requirements recently contested in courts are state-issued photo IDs and tight restrictions on voting registration drives. Proponents of such requirements tend to be conservative white Republicans who argue that tighter rules are essential for preventing voter fraud. However, critics say such laws will unfairly impact the poor, the elderly, the disabled, and college-age students, all of whom tend to vote more for the Democrats.

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