Watcher: May 3, 2005

Federal Budget
  • Congress Passes Irresponsible Budget Resolution
  • Despite Public Disdain, Private Accounts Will Not Die
  • Bush Criticized for Continuing 'Dishonest' War Budgeting
  • Senate Passes Emergency Supplemental; Bill Held Up in Conference
  • Economy and Jobs Watch: Economic Recovery Still Shortchanging Workers

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Latest Watcher

Be sure to check out the latest issue of our biweekly newsletter, The Watcher. Reg policy articles this time: UMRA, Results Proposals Advance in Budget Resolution Anti-Regulatory Hit List Debated in House Hearing

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Anti-Regulatory Hit List Debated in House Hearing

The Bush administration again defended its anti-regulatory hit list to Congress, this time presenting the initiative as a boon to small manufacturers in a hearing before the House Small Business Committee that also featured renewed calls for regulatory sunsets. The committee's Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform and Oversight held a hearing on April 28 to discuss the White House's hit list of regulatory protections to be weakened or eliminated supposedly for the benefit of the manufacturing sector.

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UMRA, Results Proposals Advance in Budget Resolution

The budget resolution Congress finally agreed upon last week incorporated language that endorses the establishment of a results commission and marks the first steps in the direction of turning the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) into an insurmountable obstacle for new protections of the public interest.

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House Ways and Means Committee Holds Hearing on the Tax-Exempt Sector

More law school seminar than hearing, on April 20, the House Ways and Means Committee examined the "legal history of the tax-exempt sector; its size, scope and impact on the economy; the need for congressional oversight; Internal Revenue Service (IRS) oversight of the sector; and what the IRS is doing to improve compliance with the law." According to Chairman Bill Thomas (R-CA), the hearing, was not meant to parallel a recent hearing by the Senate Finance Committee reviewing specific reforms.

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GAO Finds Bush's Social Security Campaign Not Illegal Lobbying

On April 27, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) sent a letter to eight Democratic senators finding that the Bush administration's program to promote its Social Security plan to the public does not constitute illegal use of government funds for grassroots lobbying. The senators had asked for an assessment of whether the overall context and message of the administration's Social Security campaign amounted to a clear appeal to the public to contact members of Congress. The GAO disagreed, saying that no violation occurs unless there is an express request to the public to contact Congress.

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IRS Describes Increased Enforcement of Nonprofit Sector

Mark Everson, commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), told attorneys at the Georgetown Law Center's Tax-Exempt Seminar that the sector must act to head off a "gathering storm" resulting from use of the sector as a vehicle for tax avoidance. Other IRS officials at the April 28 training described new and increased enforcement activities.

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Senate Committee Passes Amended 527 Bill

An attempt by Sens. John McCain (R-AZ) and Russell Feingold (D-WI) to extend federal campaign finance regulation to independent political groups has backfired in the Senate Rules Committee, which amended the 527 Reform Act of 2005 (S. 271), to repeal portions of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA). The vastly altered version of S. 271 passed by the committee on April 27 is a crazy quilt of amendments that restricts independent groups while lifting limits on business groups and PACs run by members of Congress.

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Journalists Teach Communities to Access Government Information

On the heels of Sunshine Week, during which journalists highlighted the importance of open government, several newspapers have taken an extra step and begun training local communities to use freedom of information laws. Though freedom of information laws grant the general public rights to access government information, many citizens do not know how to use them and often journalists act as intermediaries between the public and the government. However, journalists can never fully represent a community's range of concerns, so it is important to inform and empower the public.

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Kentucky Attorney General Caps Copying Fees

Kentucky Attorney General Greg Stumbo (D) recently limited the amount the state agencies could charge citizens for copies of government documents. The prices the government charges for searches and copies are often cited by groups as a major obstacle to obtaining more information through the Freedom of Information laws. In an April 25 opinion, Stumbo capped fees on copies of public records at 10 cents per page. The opinion came after Beaver Dam resident Mike Nance contacted the attorney general's office complaining about the 50 cents per page the Hartford, KY, county government charged him.

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