April 11, 2006
Brian Schweitzer moves forward for cleaner government
Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer is no 'Brian-come-lately' in his
efforts to create a better system of checks and balances that aids in Montana
legislators and officials representing the people of the Big Sky State and not corporate interests.
In Schweitzer's mind, it's time to end, or at least limit, the 'if it's
Tuesday, I must be a corporate lobbyist but wait until Wednesday when
I'm a state representative' method of givernment.
Schweitzer was unable to get the Montana legislature to act on his
proposal during the last session so now he's taking it to the people.
Yes, this is a small step but it's a very important direction.
So, why doesn't the Democratic leadership Council or even some of the
Democratic D.C. elite push for the very same thing in Congress? Not
only is it the right and moral thing to do, in a purely and crassly
political realm, it's a sure-fire vote-getter. Oh right, Dems avoid
sure-fire vote-getters at all costs because that involves taking a
stand and becoming a vertebrate. And yes, then those comfy, sell-out,
all-I believe-in-is-me lobbyist jobs at the end of a political career
might disappear.
Governor launches lobbyist initiative
By CHARLES S. JOHNSON
Billings Gazette State Bureau
April 7, 2006
HELENA -- Gov. Brian
Schweitzer on Thursday became the first person to sign his proposed
ballot measure to require departing elected officials to wait two years
before becoming lobbyists.
Schweitzer signed
Initiative 153 in the Capitol rotunda before the bust of one of his
heroes, former Gov. Joseph Dixon, who served from 1921 to 1924. Dixon
told Montanans he would represent their interests, not those of the
Anaconda Copper Mining Co., Schweitzer said.
"I-153 will make sure
that you have a clean government," Schweitzer said at a press
conference. "Finally, the people across Montana can be assured when
they elect somebody, they will be working for the folks back home, not
the lobbyists who prowl the halls of the state Capitol."
To qualify for the
November ballot, backers need the signatures of 22,308 voters,
including 5 percent of the voters in 34 of the 100 state House
districts.
I-153 would impose a
two-year "cooling-off" period on state elected officials, including
legislators, top appointed officials such as department directors and
members of elected officials' personal staffs before they could become
lobbyists. It's aimed at closing, at least for two years, the
"revolving door" in which these officials immediately become lobbyists
after leaving public office.
Schweitzer said the
initiative would make sure that top state officials are representing
only Montanans, "not making some kind of a sweetheart deal for the job
they're going to get as a lobbyist the day after they're a lawmaker."
The 2005 Legislature
killed Schweitzer's proposal that included a cooling-off idea, so he
decided to take it directly to voters. He said he expects a groundswell
of Montanans to help gather the signatures to put I-153 on the ballot.
If voters demonstrate
they want clean government by approving I-153, Schweitzer said he will
present the 2007 Legislature with a package of bills to further toughen
ethics and lobbying laws.
Joining Schweitzer in
signing the initiative was George Harper, a retired Methodist minister,
a delegate to Montana's 1972 Constitutional Convention and father of
Hal Harper, Schweitzer's chief policy adviser.
"We've never had term
limits on lobbyists before, and this is at the right end of it," Harper
said, referring to the "cooling-off" period.
Schweitzer said his
"cooling-off" proposal would be among the toughest among the states,
matching laws in South Dakota and Iowa.
Montana Common Cause, a nonprofit that aims to hold elected officials accountable, endorsed the initiative.
To read the rest, go here.
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