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The Sunlight Foundation

The Sunlight Foundation

Posted February 27, 2009 | 01:55 PM (EST)

Sign the Petition to ReadTheBill.org


If you knew where to look, you might have been able to find the massive FY 09 Omnibus Appropriations bill that was passed by the House yesterday. (Check here.) It was posted online for about 48 hours before it was debated. But is that really enough time for consideration of a bill that the House passed -- spending some $410 billion of our money? And here's the rub: It's hard to imagine but posting it online for 48 hours was actually good news.

Because the bad news is that doesn't always happen. The $789 billion Stimulus Bill, various Bailout Bills, bills restricting civil rights, bills expanding government surveillance of U.S. citizens and bills establishing safety requirements for medical devices all have been rushed through Congress in a matter of hours. Bottom line: Members of Congress vote without really knowing what they are voting on. Members of the public rarely have an opportunity for meaningful input into pending legislation.

Today, the Sunlight Foundation announces an initiative to make sure everyone has the chance to Read the Bill. ReadtheBill.org calls for legislation to be publicly available online for 72 hours before debate begins. Check it out, and sign the petition demanding your representatives Read the Bill.

ReadtheBill.org is an effort to create a more transparent government by bringing together a bipartisan collection of individuals and groups, luminaries and every day people to support and promote this commonsense idea. Instituting a 72 Hour Rule will give lawmakers and citizens alike an opportunity to consider and debate bills with full knowledge and consideration of the implications of the legislation, and with considered feedback from the public. It will also do away with the disparity and uncertainty that makes some bills available while others are cloaked in secrecy.

We like to think it might result in better legislation.

The founding fathers intended that the United States Congress be the most deliberative body of its kind. But it is axiomatic that a bill that no one has read cannot be meaningfully discussed or debated in Congress. The founding fathers also created a representative democracy. And so it follows that our elected legislators can't adequately represent their constituents' views if their constituents don't have the chance to weigh in on a bill because they have never seen it.

ReadTheBill.org is nothing short of an effort to give Congress the chance to be a truly deliberative and representative democratic institution.

 
 
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05:14 PM on 02/27/2009
Many of them prob could not read that fast anyway. If we get attacked again--nothing in that mess will do one bit of good. Where is the defense money? Our DEFENSE is #ONE item that should be supported. You can argue abortion, a mouse in San Fran Bay, who needs their tatts removed- do pigs stink---well this big bunch of pork stinks to high heaven--it does not pass any sniff test---but it will matter not if we don't protect ourselves.
05:03 PM on 02/27/2009
DownsizeDC.org has been presenting the Read the Bills Act for over three years.

And it doesn’t come in the sunlight only when it’s fashionable. DownsizeDC.org has generated nearly 150,000 messages to Congress in support of this bill.

1) It requires 7 days before the vote, instead of 72 hours.
2) During those 7 days the bill must be posted online so that watchdog groups like Heritage, talk show hosts, and the general public can read the bill too — during the very time the public is most likely to be interested in the bill.
3) It requires the bill to be read aloud, word for word, by the clerk, during business, with a quorum present. This should mean fewer and shorter bills passed because there are only so many hours in the day.
4) It requires the bill to include the language amended, instead of the standard fare, like “strike the word ‘the’ and replace it ‘a’ in line 2, subparagraph a, section 5, article C, of USC 123.45″
5) It applies to bills coming up for review and renewal under sunset.
6) It’s a law with an enforcement mechanism, instead of a mere rule, which can be waived on a vote by vote basis.

You can check it out at…
http://www.downsizedc.org/etp/campaigns/27
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03:39 PM on 02/27/2009
whatever happened to that campaign promise to post every bill for 5 days before he signed it? I guess the new Pres is just a politician after all.
03:13 PM on 02/27/2009
I agree. These two parties do this all the time. They did it with the Patriot Act and they did it with the "Stimulus Bill." President Obama made a campaign pledge to post every bill online for at least five days before he signs it. Not this time.
02:14 PM on 02/27/2009
Amen. I remember how upset people were that no one read the Patriot Act. The stimulus bill is the largest spending bill in our history and Congress couldn't get 48 hours to read it before a vote came.