The same distinctions that exist in research, advocacy, and legislation exist in the realms of political influence. Since committees are the real seat of specialized congressional knowledge and power, it's exciting to see CRP sort fundraising information by congressional committee, as currently highlighted on their Capital Eye blog.
Since this is often the way tht fundraisers are advertised (For $1500, see the chair of the ____ Committee, who controls ____ issue!!!!), public scutiny of this money should be organized in the same way. Advertising committee positions for fundraising seems only a few steps from the wanton corruption of Duke Cunningham's bribery menu; tracking fundraising by committee is a small step toward dispelling monied interests' undue policy influence.
WASHINGTON - Sen. Bob Corker's average net worth plummeted from $78.1 million in 2005 to a negative $1.8 million in 2006, according to a report compiled by the nonpartisan Sunlight Foundation, a government transparency watchdog.
WASHINGTON - Sen. Bob Corker's average net worth plummeted from $78.1 million in 2005 to a negative $1.8 million in 2006, according to a report compiled by the nonpartisan Sunlight Foundation, a government transparency watchdog.
Foundation, a government transparency watchdog.
Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Petaluma, has come a long way financially from her days as a single mother on welfare in the late 1960s, with a net worth of $681,511 in 2006, a watchdog group reported.
WASHINGTON - Rep. Wally Herger is the 43rd wealthiest member of Congress, according to a study released Tuesday.
The Sunlight Foundation , a group dedicated to pulling back the curtain on how government operates, launched a new website that lets voters sneak a peek at how well members of Congress have done for themselves in the past 11 years.
That's how long personal financial data has been available. Sunlight is putting it online on its new site, Fortune 535 .
The site also lets viewers compare the net worth of each lawmaker to that of the average American family and will list the wealthiest lawmakers.
Ellen Miller, executive director of Sunlight, said the information may surprise some people.
"Even though popular stereotypes tell us that lawmakers are all millionaires and get more wealthy the longer they serve in Congress, we found that every lawmaker profile is different," Miller said in a release.Ars Technica has an article up about the "hyperconnected"--defined by the Interactive Data Corporation as those people for whom the line between work and personal has been blurred to the point that they're "willing to communicate with work on vacation, in restaurants, from bed, and even in places of worship."
The article offers some criticism of the purportedly overworked, suggesting offhandly that the hyperconnected will pose new challenges for IT departments, and possibly have questionable effects on workers' personal lives.
While these concerns over productivity and relaxation are certainly valid, there's another side of merging personal and workplace that's ignored by the commentary: the same breakdown that leads to work email being written in bed also leads to the breakdown of the limitations on the role of the "professional". Just as communications technology leads to more work being done at home, the Internet allows for the intellectual entrepeneurship of the online volunteer researcher, the blog-based organizer, the midnight advocate. As Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody makes clear, individuals who can organize without centralized leadershp form a new, powerful, agile force, harnessing what has been dubbed the "cognigitive surplus" to redefine the way we organize our ideas and ultimately ourselves.
While this may have some effect on the modes of our relaxation, the effects on business, government, and society will more than make up for them.
(full disclosure: I often work in the middle of the night.)