All PART of the Game

Click here to read an OMB Watch op-ed on the administration's Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART). The op-ed discusses that despite the existence of PART, budget decisions are guided more by politics and ideology as opposed to program results. Click here for more information on PART and the Program Assessment and Results Act.

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More on the Imperial Presidency

Be sure to check out the excellent cover story of the latest issue of National Journal, which fleshes out more details on the Bush administration's drive to consolidate as much power as possible over the executive branch and install an Imperial Presidency. The article focuses on the many ways the White House is seizing power at the expense of the long-time agency workers who have, in recent years, been the source of revelations that the administration has be

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Support for Estate Tax Shaky in Congress

Although no timetable is set for legislation yet, proponents of estate tax repeal will push this year to gather the 60 votes necessary to clear a measure repealing the tax. This is projected to happen despite widespread concerns about an exploding budget deficit; record-low levels of national revenue; very high potential future costs of Medicare liabilities, Social Security reform, and Alternative Minimum Tax reform; as well as the fact that Congress and the President are looking to further cut taxes. The House has more than enough votes to pass a permanent repeal measure, while the real fight would take place in the Senate to get a supermajority that would back repeal legislation. A new book on estate tax repeal is out, titled Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Fight Over Taxing Inherited Wealth. Written by Michael Graetz and Ian Shapiro, the book seeks to answer how the estate tax, which has been around since 1916 and is paid by less than the wealthiest two percent of Americans, was voted in 2001 to be phased out through 2010 with broad bipartisan support and almost no coordinated opposition. The authors of the book, as well as other supporters of the estate tax, believe that estate tax repeal is not only morally irresponsible (because the tax is extremely progressive) but also economically irresponsible. Len Burman, who is authoring a new report, "Options to Reform the Estate Tax," has noted that permanent repeal would result in both a static annual cost of about $50 billion in revenue, as well as a drop in charitable contributions of about $17 billion annually. He also notes in a recent Tax Policy Center Issue Brief that raising the exemption to $3.5 million would cut the number of farms and businesses liable for the tax by 75 percent, to just over 100, with only about 10 small businesses affected. Given our current deficits, Congress would be wise to consider reform options to the estate tax, as opposed to permanent repeal. When Burman's paper outlining reform options becomes available, it will be posted here.

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Public Interest Data Quality Appeal Granted by Agency

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS) will correct flawed information about the Florida panther after an agency whistleblower and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) filed requests under the federal Data Quality Act (DQA). This is one of the few cases in which a public interest group used the DQA. To date, industry has dominated the use of the DQA with challenges seeking to delay, derail and dilute information and regulations about health, safety and the environment.

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Waxman demands OIRA disclosure

A while ago we reported on OIRA's secret meetings with industry to hatch anti-regulatory plans for the 109th Congress. Now Reps. Henry Waxman and Stephen Lynch have written Graham to demand he disclose information relating to those meetings.

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Fast-track list fast producing results

The fast-track list of anti-regulatory "reforms" that OIRA released in December, urging agencies to propel to the top of their priorities, is now yielding results. The mercury rule is out, and just last week the Department of Education announced its guidance "clarifying" (that is, gutting) the standards for ensuring gender equity in higher education under Title IX.

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Texas City Refinery Explosion Verifies Need for Safer Chemicals

Statement by Working Group on Community Right to Know, OMB Watch Project Hazardous chemicals at BP Amoco’s Texas City refinery exploded early Wednesday afternoon, March 23, killing 14 and injuring over 100. The massive explosion also destroyed buildings and vehicles, and shook residents’ homes up to five miles away.

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New Lobby Disclosure Laws Dropped by Doggett

Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) introduced two bills on lobby disclosure last week. Here are the links: H.R. 1304, which ammends the IRS code to require certain lobby disclosures H.R. 1302 to amend the Lobby Disclosure Act to require certain lobby disclosures.

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FEC Proposes Draft Rules on Internet Electioneering

The FEC today proposed draft rules to govern online election-related communications that would provide individual Web logs, or blogs, with a substantial exemption from campaign finance disclosure laws. Most of the reporting requirements would instead fall upon campaigns and candidates who pay for Web advertising, National Journal's Technology Daily reported. But commission members sparred over how narrow the rules should be. "We are not the speech police," said Commissioner Ellen Weintraub. "This issue has nothing to do with private citizens on the Internet.

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New Federal Budget Policy Homepage

How Bush's FY06 Budget Will Affect Nonprofits The President's budget that was released on Feb. 7 is not just austere; it is also frighteningly bleak for nonprofit groups and the people and causes they serve. The President has manufactured a fiscal crisis with massive tax cuts, mainly targeted to the wealthy, that has resulted in federal revenues being reduced to the lowest levels since the 1950s as a percentage of our economy.

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