Thursday, October 25, 2012
2011-2012 Common Cause Legislative Scorecard
Today Common Cause Rhode Island releases our 10th biennial Legislative Scorecard, which saw an increase from the previous all-time lows. Our scorecard rates all 113 members of the Rhode Island General Assembly based on votes on government reform. Detailed descriptions of the bills used, as well as scores for individual legislators can be found here. A more detailed list of votes for the House and Senate are also available. Common Cause creates the scorecard as a service to our members every two years.
The 2011-2012 General Assembly saw several significant advances for open government and campaign finance transparency. The legislature passed long-sought changes to the Access to Public Records Act and enacted significant campaign finance disclosure legislation. In the areas of judicial selection and ethics reform, however, we saw little progress. Notably, neither chamber took up a Common Cause initiative to let the voters decide whether lawmakers should be subject to the jurisdiction of the state's Ethics Commission.
Common Cause used 27 Senate votes, and 28 House votes in our scorecard, focusing on our core issues of campaign finance and election reform, ethics and lobbying reform, judicial selection, open government and separation of powers. The average score for members of the Senate was 66% and 68% for the House. Those averages represent a rise from all-time lows of 51% and 48% respectively in 2009-2010. A large number of small reforms resulted in the number of votes counted rising dramatically.
Common Cause never endorses candidates for any public office. The scorecard reports only how members of the General Assembly voted on particular bills of concern to Common Cause. Scoring does not constitute opposition or endorsement.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Sat Nov. 10th: Meet and greet with General Assembly members from Barrington, Warren, and Bristol
Please join Common Cause Rhode Island and General Assembly members from Barrington, Warren, and Bristol on Saturday November 10th from 10:00 am to 12:00pm at the Barrington Public Library for a discussion about issues of government transparency and accountability in Rhode Island.
This event is free and open to the public and is an opportunity for voters to meet their elected senators and representatives and listen to their plans for the upcoming legislative session. The program includes an informal meet and greet followed by an interactive question and answer section. Coffee and donuts will be served.
Common Cause Rhode Island is a nonpartisan nonprofit organization dedicated to the promotion of representative democracy by ensuring open, ethical, accountable and effective government processes at the local, state and national levels by educating and mobilizing the citizens of Rhode Island.
In addition to being the only good government group in the state with a full time lobbyist at the State House to monitor fair and open political processes, we support community and State House-based educational programs to expand the capacity of citizen lobbyists and keep the public informed about issues of process in government. In 2012, two of our bills passed that expand the public's access to government records and strengthen our state's campaign finance disclosure. Our top policy priority for 2013 is ethics reform, a constitutional amendment to bring the General Assembly back under the jurisdiction of the Ethics Commission.
We look forward to seeing you on November 10th. If you have any questions or request additional information, please contact our office at (401) 861-2322 or contact@commoncauseri.org.
This event is free and open to the public and is an opportunity for voters to meet their elected senators and representatives and listen to their plans for the upcoming legislative session. The program includes an informal meet and greet followed by an interactive question and answer section. Coffee and donuts will be served.
Common Cause Rhode Island is a nonpartisan nonprofit organization dedicated to the promotion of representative democracy by ensuring open, ethical, accountable and effective government processes at the local, state and national levels by educating and mobilizing the citizens of Rhode Island.
In addition to being the only good government group in the state with a full time lobbyist at the State House to monitor fair and open political processes, we support community and State House-based educational programs to expand the capacity of citizen lobbyists and keep the public informed about issues of process in government. In 2012, two of our bills passed that expand the public's access to government records and strengthen our state's campaign finance disclosure. Our top policy priority for 2013 is ethics reform, a constitutional amendment to bring the General Assembly back under the jurisdiction of the Ethics Commission.
We look forward to seeing you on November 10th. If you have any questions or request additional information, please contact our office at (401) 861-2322 or contact@commoncauseri.org.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Common Cause Rhode Island Welcomes Rev. James C. Miller as Organization's 6th-ever John Gardner Fellow
The John Gardner Fellowship is a lifetime appointment to honor and recognize longstanding, exemplary supporters of Common Cause Rhode Island; those who follow in the footsteps of John Gardner, founder of Common Cause, who demonstrate extraordinary and unwavering devotion to the organization, and who further its mission and best interests wherever and however it is within their power to do so.
Rev. James C. Miller |
Jim
Miller has served the fight for holding power accountable for more than fifty
years in his ministry career as a community organizer and church pastor, and
joins Alan Hassenfeld, Natalie Joslin, John Sapinsley*, Lila Sapinsley, and
Henry Sharpe.
Jim
has been involved with Common Cause ever since his divinity school professor of
social ethics admonished students to choose key social justice and political
reform organizations to support and align their ministries. Jim’s twenty-one years of dedication to
Common Cause Rhode Island began in 1991 when he began his post as Executive
Minister of The Rhode Island State Council of Churches. Before moving to RI, Jim had The Providence Journal mailed to his
Rochester, NY residency. News articles sharpened his awareness for the need of
religious leaders to become involved in RI governmental reform. As soon as Jim set foot in RI, he convened RI
interfaith leaders to join business and civic leaders and Common Cause RI to
form the RIght Now! statewide
coalition calling for ethic and political reform of RI state and city
government.
During
his twenty-year tenure with Common Cause Rhode Island, many of which he served
as President of the Governing Board, our citizen lobby pioneered the decade-long
fight for Separation of Powers, which was won in an epoch 2004 Supreme Court
decision. Jim has been at the forefront
of our organization’s efforts to enact Judicial Reform and General Assembly openness
to citizens’ response for campaign finance reform measures and other key issues
of governmental accountability.
Jim
retired as the 35th minister successor to Roger Williams as Minister
of The First Baptist Church in America, the first church to be established in
Rhode Island and the first Baptist congregation to be founded in America in
1638. Jim currently serves as Pastor of
the Emmanuel Baptist Church in Providence, the first Italian Baptist Church in
RI organized in 1893. Jim’s ministry
career has centered on racial justice and equality, international peace-making,
revitalization of cities, development of affordable housing projects, youth
ministries, and college chaplaincy.
Today, Jim serves as a board member of the Institute for the Study and
Practice of Nonviolence, the Governor’s appointee to the RI Commission on
Prejudice & Bias, and a Common Cause Advisory Council member.
*deceased
Labels:
Annual Meeting,
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Monday, October 1, 2012
Win a lunch with your favorite scholars of Rhode Island Politics
Need one more reason to join Common Cause Rhode Island this Thursday for our 42nd Annual Meeting?
Win lunch with one of Rhode Island's top political minds!
Join
your favorite on campus for a fancy
box lunch, dynamic conversation, and get
one of their publications in the bargain!
1 ticket for $5 - 5 tickets for $20
Prof. Carl T.
Bogus, Roger Williams University School of Law
Publication: Buckley: William F. Buckley, Jr. and the Rise of American Conservativism (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2011)
Brief bio: Professor Bogus’ interests include: modern American political ideology and how it affects public policy and law; torts and product liability; and gun control and the Second Amendment. Professor Bogus has testified before Congress and spoken about these topics across the country. In addition to books and law reviews, his writings appear in opinion journals and newspapers, including The Nation, American Prospect, USA Today, Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, Washington Times, and the Providence Journal. Read more.
Prof. Corey
Brettschneider, Brown University
Publication: When the State Speaks, What Should it Say? How Democracies Can Protect Expression and Promote Equality (Princeton University Press, 2012)
Brief bio: Professor Corey Brettschneider teaches political theory and public law. Brettschneider received a PhD in politics from Princeton University and a JD from Stanford University. He is the author of When the State Speaks, What Should it Say? How Democracies Can Protect Expression and Promote Equality, (Princeton University Press, 2012) and Democratic Rights: The Substance of Self-Government (Princeton University Press, 2007). Read more.
Prof. Maureen Moakley, University of Rhode Island
Publication: Rhode Island Politics and Government (University of Nebraska Press, 2001)
Brief bio: Maureen Moakley (Ph.D. - Rutgers - 1984) is a Professor of Political Science and teaches American Government, State Politics and Media and Politics. She writes extensively on state politics; her books include: The Political Life of the American States, Party Alignment and State Politics, and Rhode Island Politics and Government with Elmer Cornwell. In addition to her academic work, she does regular political commentary on state politics on Rhode Island PBS and Rhode Island NPR. Read more.
Prof. Michael
Yelnosky, Roger Williams University School of Law
Publication: The Impact of “Merit Selection” on the Characteristics of Rhode Island Judges (Roger Williams University Law Review, Fall 2010)
Brief bio: Professor Michael Yelnosky brings an extensive background in employment law. He is active in the legal community and recently served as a neutral arbitrator in the case RIBCO v. State of Rhode Island. As President of the RI Chapter of the Labor and Employment Relations Association, Yelnosky has moderated a program on the Roberts’s Court’s treatment of labor and employment law issues. He has also written on Judicial Selection in RI. Read more.
It's not too late to purchase your tickets to the Annual Meeting. Please contact us at 401-861-2322 to reserve your seat.
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