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Shadow Government

November 1, 2007

This article comes from The Center for Public Integrity.

Network of 900 Advisory Panels Wield Unseen Power

Concerns raised about secrecy, industry influence and political interference

By Jim Morris and Alejandra Fernández Morera

WASHINGTON, March 29, 2007 — They counsel the Department of Defense on terrorism, help the National Institutes of Health dispense billions of dollars in grants and vet proposed food safety rules for the Department of Agriculture. They weigh in on human rights, climate change, Medicare, Social Security, sexual assault in the military, prescription drugs, national parks, child abuse and countless other subjects.

Real-Life Impact

Advisory committees influence government policy on health, safety, finance and other issues that touch Americans’ lives. See a sampling from the more than 900 panels.

At least 900 committees, boards, commissions, councils and panels give advice to federal agencies and the White House, forming a vast but largely unnoticed network that influences policy throughout the government. Collectively these bodies have some 67,000 members, meet more than 7,000 times a year and spend almost
$400 million annually.

Many do commendable work, offering expert opinions to the executive branch on topics both broad and arcane. There is evidence, however, that the open, even-handed system envisioned by Congress when it passed the Federal Advisory Committee Act of 1972 (FACA) has mutated into something less desirable.

Some panels are packed with industry representatives, ensuring that other viewpoints go unheard. Members are added or removed for what appear to be political reasons. Subcommittees – also known as subpanels or working groups – are created to discuss matters behind closed doors. Records are sealed.

“We may need to amend FACA to be more explicit about openness, about how people are selected [for panels],” said Rep. Brian Baird, D-Wash. Baird has studied the federal advisory process and spotted what he believes to be serious flaws: needless secrecy, the choosing of panelists based not on their expertise but on their loyalty to the administration or their views on issues such as abortion.

Related Stories:

The Center has covered the “Shadow Government” in the past:

Advisors of Influence: Nine Members of the Defense Policy Board Have Ties to Defense Contractors

Big GOP Contributor Advised Administration’s Energy Task Force

“If it turns out that the [panels] are intentionally biased by the selection of certain members with certain ideologies and the rejection of other members with other ideologies, we’re not getting objective information,” Baird said. “We’re getting deliberately tainted information.”

In the coming months, the Center for Public Integrity will examine the labyrinth of advisory bodies that extends from the Department of Energy (National Coal Council) to the Pentagon (Defense Policy Board), from the State Department (Advisory Committee on Democracy Promotion) to the Treasury Department (President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform).

We’ll analyze the composition of panels, looking for imbalance. We’ll investigate allegations of meddling by agencies or the White House. We’ll question the propriety of closed sessions.

There’s much to learn. These things, however, we know:

  • Crafted to ensure balance, independence and transparency on federal committees, FACA is riddled with loopholes. Court rulings have made it easier for agencies and the White House to receive advice from industry-dominated groups which are under no obligation to hold open meetings or make their records public. Experts say that legislation is needed to close the loopholes.
  • While the number of panels has remained fairly static — drifting between 900 and 1,000 — the number of people serving on these panels has increased markedly, from about 52,000 in 2000 to 67,000 last year. It’s unclear why membership has gone up. One possibility, said David Vladeck, an associate professor of law at Georgetown University, is that committee appointments in some cases have become a form of “political payback. For many people, serving on an advisory committee is not a chore. It’s a plus.”
  • Financial conflicts of interest among committee members are not uncommon. On March 21, the Food and Drug Administration announced new rules for its advisory panels, which have significant input on what drugs and medical devices enter the marketplace. The move is a tacit acknowledgment of FDA critics, who have complained for years that many scientists and physicians on the panels are linked to firms with products up for approval. From now on, anyone with $50,000 or more in financial ties, such as stock ownership, to pharmaceutical or device manufacturers during the previous 12 months will not be allowed to serve.
  • The General Services Administration, which is responsible for collecting, maintaining and making public the records of panels covered by FACA, has no way to compel agencies to report data, although it gives guidance to them and believes most follow the law. It also has no way to track panels that should fall under FACA, but aren’t complying. Because there are no penalties for noncompliance, alleged FACA violations must be addressed in the courts. Litigants may spend years trying to force a panel to open its meetings, release its records or adjust its membership.

“The advisory committee process makes a lot of sense,” said Vladeck, who brought at least 10 FACA lawsuits on behalf of Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group, before joining the faculty at Georgetown. “The government ought to have a way of tapping the expertise of academics, consumers and industry. But the law has not been implemented the way it was written.”

Legal wrangling over FACA began many years ago and has not let up.

A group called CREW — Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington — recently sued the Department of Education over the activities of 16 subpanels, which advised Education Secretary Margaret Spellings on how to distribute grants to states under the Reading First Initiative. The initiative has a $1 billion annual budget and was established by the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.

CREW is trying to obtain minutes and other documents from the subpanels. “They did nothing to comply with FACA,” said CREW’s chief counsel, Anne Weismann. “They were imbalanced. They had closed meetings. They had rampant conflicts of interest.”

A spokeswoman for the Education Department declined to comment. In a report last September, the department’s inspector general found that the subpanels were not properly balanced. The IG said it reviewed the resumes of 25 panelists and identified six who had “significant professional connections to a teaching methodology that requires the use of a specific reading program.” Guided by the subpanels, the department, in possible violation of the law, influenced school curricula by directing funds to states that used this program, the IG said.

Earthjustice, a non-profit environmental law firm, is in litigation against the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) over six Industry Trade Advisory Committees. The lawsuit contends that although the panels’ work on issues such as chemicals and pharmaceuticals affects public health, they are dominated by corporate interests. Suing on behalf of a coalition of five organizations, Earthjustice wants the USTR to name public health representatives to the panels.

“This lawsuit is about democracy, about making sure that when the government makes important decisions that affect the public, citizens have a voice in those decisions,” said Earthjustice lawyer Martin Wagner.

The case was dismissed by a federal judge but is being appealed. A USTR spokesman declined to comment on it. Earthjustice won a similar lawsuit against the trade representative four years ago, forcing it to comply with a previous settlement agreement and appoint an environmental representative to a chemicals panel.

A Move Toward Oversight

FACA — an attempt to slow the creation and enhance the accountability of advisory bodies that then numbered in the thousands — grew out of congressional hearings that began in 1970.

Sen. Lee Metcalf, a Montana Democrat, opened a hearing in November 1971 by observing, “Information is an important commodity in this capital. Those who get information to policymakers, or get information from them, can benefit their cause, whatever it may be. Outsiders can be adversely and unknowingly affected. And decision-makers who get information from special interest groups who are not subject to rebuttal because opposing interests do not know about meetings — and could not get in the door if they did — may not make tempered judgments.”

A law was needed, Metcalf said, to affirm “the rights of people to find out what is going on and, if they want, to do something about it.”

FACA was passed in September 1972. It decreed that advisory panels be “fairly balanced in terms of the points of view represented and the functions to be performed.” It said that committees should be created “only when they are determined to be essential,” and “terminated when they are no longer carrying out the purpose for which they were established.”

Panels should not be “inappropriately influenced” by outside interests, the law said. And meetings should be open, with certain exceptions — when sensitive national defense or foreign policy issues are being discussed, for example.

Just weeks after his inauguration in 1993, Bill Clinton concluded that the federal advisory system again had gotten out of hand. In an executive order dated February 10 of that year, Clinton instructed every department and agency to “terminate not less than one-third of the advisory committees subject to FACA” by the end of the fiscal year and provide justification for committees proposed for continuation. New panels should be created “sparingly,” Clinton said.

Clinton’s order — which was partly about saving tax dollars and partly about preventing panels from being formed to serve special interests — ended up reducing the number of “discretionary” committees created by agencies. It had no effect, however, on “non-discretionary” committees created by Congress or the White House.

The courts began chipping away at FACA even before Clinton took office, creating more and more loopholes.

In one case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit held that subcommittees with narrow mandates did not have to be balanced or otherwise comply with FACA. Today, Georgetown’s Vladeck said, the law’s disclosure and balance requirements are routinely circumvented by the creation of working groups. In some cases, he said, such groups decide matters in secret and then send their “recommendations” to full committees, which hold pro forma public meetings. “Whatever’s been decided by the working group is simply adopted,” Vladeck said.

In another case, the D.C. Circuit held that an agency panel assembled by a contractor was not subject to FACA. In a third, the Supreme Court said the law did not apply to an energy task force chaired by Vice President Dick Cheney, even though Cheney was getting advice from industry representatives with a stake in energy policy.

An attempt by the Sierra Club and Judicial Watch to obtain task force documents was rebuffed by the court on the basis of executive privilege. A Sierra Club lawyer, David Bookbinder, questioned this outcome, telling the Center in an e-mailed statement, “The American public deserves to know who writes our nation’s policy before it becomes law.”

“The courts have littered the landscape with opinions unfavorable to public transparency,” said Sidney Shapiro, university distinguished chair in law at Wake Forest University. “But there’s no reason why Congress can’t identify these problems and amend FACA to take care of them.”

Congress Weighs In

In fact, Congress is sometimes part of the problem.

Several bills introduced this year include exemptions from all or parts of FACA for certain panels. Legislation designed to enhance the status of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) within the Department of Commerce, for instance, proposes a change in the NOAA science advisory board: It would no longer be subject to FACA.

Jessica Schafer, press secretary for the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Sam Farr, D-Calif., explained in an e-mail that the authors of the legislation felt that the public notification requirements of the law were “burdensome for modern boards. We did, however, want to maintain the transparency and public input portions of FACA.”

But Vladeck said that committees exempt from FACA can go astray. “Suppose they are not fairly balanced. Suppose they don’t give notice of their meetings. Suppose they do not make their records available,” he said. “There is nothing you can do about it.”

Only a few lawmakers have shown an interest in the nuances of FACA, a lesser-known cousin of the Freedom of Information Act.

One of them is Baird, who, along with Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Texas, requested a study of advisory committees by the General Accounting Office (now the Government Accountability Office) in 2004. The GAO reported that some agencies were inappropriately exempting panelists from conflict-of-interest reviews, a problem that could cause the government to receive biased advice. It also said that many agencies did not “systematically collect and evaluate information pertinent to determining the points of view of potential committee members, such as previous public positions or statements on matters being reviewed.”

Baird said he is convinced that some prospective panelists have been subjected to “political background checks,” involving research into such things as campaign contributions. Such checks should be banned, he said, and “there should be an explicit directive that advisory committees be made up of people with different perspectives.”

Asked to respond to Baird’s allegation, White House spokesman Blair Jones said, “We appoint qualified individuals to serve in administration positions.”

A few months after the GAO study came out in 2004, the Democratic staff of the House Government Reform Committee concluded in a report that the Bush administration had “acted to weaken and avoid FACA’s requirements” and had “supported legislative changes to carve out new exemptions to the law,” shrouding the work of bodies like Cheney’s energy task force, the President’s Commission on Intelligence on Weapons of Mass Destruction and the President’s Commission to Strengthen Social Security.

The report was prepared for Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., an ardent proponent of open government and scientific integrity. In 2005, Waxman introduced a bill that would have prohibited political “litmus tests” for appointees to scientific panels and strengthened protections against conflicts of interest.

The bill didn’t make it out of the House. But Waxman, chairman of what is now the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told the Center in an e-mail, “I will continue to look into the issue this Congress.”

Real-Life Impact

Advisory committees influence government policy on health, safety, finance and other issues that touch Americans’ lives. Here is a sampling from the more than 900 panels:

Marina Walker Guevara contributed to this report.

Funding for this report was provided by the Popplestone Foundation and the David B. Gold Foundation.

99% Fact Free

October 23, 2007

More bipartisan information from factcheck.org

99% Fact-Free

How to spot political ads powered only by hot air.

Summary

In this article we examine two examples of what we call “fact-free” advertising, which we see in abundance. These ads seek to associate the candidate with a string of positive words and images but are void of specifics. Voters should beware.

We have chosen an example from Republican Mitt Romney that is full of words such as “families,” “values,” “patriotic,” “strength” and “innovation.” Who could be against any of those? Romney is also squarely against “waste in the federal government,” but who isn’t? And what does he consider “waste?” He doesn’t say.

Our example from Democratic candidate John Edwards also pushes the “strength” and “patriotism” buttons, showing that vacuous words are a bipartisan tactic. Edwards also speaks loftily of making America “the country of the 21st century,” whatever that means. He says he’d “lift families out of poverty” and “strengthen the middle class” but doesn’t say how, or define what he means by “middle class.” He says, “We know what needs to be done,” but doesn’t say what that is.

Analysis

These ads are examples of what propaganda experts called “glittering generalities.” They are both appealing and vague, involving the listener emotionally while allowing the speaker to remain uncommitted. We’d call them misleading, except that they really don’t make any factual statements.

The ads do contain what experts call “signaling,” giving viewers a general impression that Romney would spend more on the military and Edwards would spend more to help the poor, for example. But for specifics, citizens must look elsewhere. The ads rely on evocative images, stirring music and value-loaded but undefined words to appeal to the heart, not the head.

Update, Oct. 15: The Romney ad is a special case because the campaign chose it as the best of all those submitted by supporters in a “create your own ad” contest. The campaign adopted it as an official campaign spot and began airing it on TV stations in New Hampshire and Iowa on Oct. 3.

Romney Ad:
“Ready for Action”
Mitt Romney

Romney: The right course for America, in a world where evil still exists, is not acquiescence and weakness. It’s assertiveness and strength. We believe in a strong military. We believe in a strong economy. We believe in strong families and values. There is not one challenge that America faces that we can’t overcome with the innovation, energy and passion which has always been at the heart of America. It is time to cut out the mountains of waste and inefficiency and duplication in the federal government. I’ve done that in business, I’ve done it in the Olympics, I’ve done it in Massachusetts, and frankly I can’t wait to get my hands on Washington. Now is the time, this is the place, for us to lead a great coalition of strength. For our families, for our future, for America. I’m Mitt Romney and I approve this message.

Strong Words


The Romney ad is called “
Ready for Action,” and it uses the word “strong” or “strength” five times in the space of 60 seconds. The Edwards ad is called “Strength of America,” and it uses that phrase twice in 30 seconds.

Such positive-sounding terms can mean whatever the listener wants them to mean. The idea of a “strong military,” for instance, is deeply appealing to people who are anxious about national security (“strong” in this case would mean “protective”). It could also appeal to those who believe that the U.S. should be proactive in its military efforts (“strong” would mean “aggressive”). But voters’ interpretations of military strength may not match up with Romney’s. Generic, attractive language allows listeners to project their concerns and beliefs onto the candidate – perhaps inaccurately.

Romney’s ad also shows him lauding “a strong economy” and “strong families and values.” But what exactly would he do to make them strong? He doesn’t say.

For his part, Edwards says “the strength of America” lies in “the American people,” to whom he addresses his appeal. But this ad says nothing about how Edwards proposes to “lift families out of poverty” or “strengthen the middle class.”

Detecting a Vacuum


What’s really being advocated in these pricey TV spots? When Romney calls for a strong economy, ask: “What candidate is calling for a weak economy?” Or a weak family, weak values or a weak military, for that matter? When Edwards says he wants to “strengthen the middle class,” ask: “What candidate wants to weaken the middle class?” And how, exactly, would all these things be “strengthened?” These ads and others like them advocate in such broad generalities that they advocate nothing in particular.

Edwards Ad: “Strength of America”
John Edwards

Edwards: Will we make America the country of the 21st century? That depends on all of us. It’s not that we don’t know what needs to be done. To lift families out of poverty, to strengthen the middle class in this country. We know what needs to be done. The strength of America is not just in the Oval Office, the strength of America is in this room right now. It is the American people, and it’s time for the President of the United States to ask Americans to be patriotic about something other than war. I’m John Edwards and I approve this message.

These fluff pieces use plenty of undefined terms. What precisely is meant by “middle class,” for example? Both sides talk about protecting or benefiting the middle class, because that’s how most voters think of themselves. But it’s rare for either side to define what “middle class” means. Is a person making $100,000 a year “middle class” or not? When a politician promises to “strengthen the middle class,” listeners find it personally relevant and emotionally appealing, but that promise carries no weight – both “strengthen” and “middle class” could mean just about anything.

Edwards says he’d “lift families out of poverty,” but how? With welfare payments? By creating jobs?

“Not Completely Empty”


Even hot air has its uses. “These ads do have a lot of meaningless rhetoric but are not completely empty,” says Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a professor who teaches courses in political communication at the University of Pennsylvania. “Actually these two ads signal two different sets of priorities. Ask how you would react if Edwards spoke of a ’strong military’ or Romney said he’d ‘lift families out of poverty.’ Romney uses traditional Republican language to signal that he would spend more on defense. Edwards speaks of ‘the middle class’ to signal that although his policies will address poverty he will focus on middle class needs as well.” Prof. Jamieson is director of FactCheck.org’s parent organization, the Annenberg Public Policy Center.

Also, candidates do not run on bluster alone. Both Romney and Edwards lay out specific plans elsewhere. To strengthen the military, for example, Romney proposes to add at least 100,000 troops to U.S. military forces and to make unspecified “investments” in military “equipment, armament, weapons systems, and strategic defense.” And to fight poverty, Edwards favors raising the federal minimum wage to $9.50 per hour (currently $5.85 and scheduled to rise to $7.25 in 2009) and tripling the Earned Income Tax Credit (which provided an estimated $43 billion last year to 22 million low-income workers). But you won’t learn those specifics from these fact-free ads. Once you do, you may or may not agree with the specific means the candidates propose to reach their admirable goals.

We’re neither criticizing nor endorsing Romney or Edwards, nor anything they are proposing. Our point here is that a great deal of political rhetoric relies on language calculated to be both pleasing and empty. Cautious voters are wise to remember that candidates rely on them to fill in the blanks, sometimes interpreting their ill-defined language as specific promises they never made. If the candidates don’t define their terms, citizens shouldn’t try to do it for them. Their ideas about “strength” or “patriotism” may not match the candidate’s. Remember to read the fine print, and avoid making judgments based only on fine-sounding words that could mean anything.

Correction, Oct. 15: The name given by the Romney campaign to its 60-second ad is “Ready for Action.” We originally called it “Strength,” a name assigned to it informally by our ad-tracking service.

-by Brooks Jackson and Jessica Henig

Mitt and Rudy: It’s Hard to Find The Truth

October 22, 2007

An analysis of Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani’s argument about their history of tax increases.  Brought to you from the folks at Factcheck.org

 

Mitt and Rudy’s Cherry Orchard

Romney and Giuliani harvest figures selectively. Watch out for the pits.

Summary

During the Oct. 9 Republican debate, moderator Chris Matthews unleashed a mini-brawl between former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani over their respective fiscal records. Both men spewed statistics that sometimes seemed to contradict each other. We find that each man was cherry-picking his numbers, sometimes in misleading ways.

Among the transgressions:

  • Giuliani used a questionable calculation to make it sound as though Romney raised taxes significantly while he was governor; he didn’t.
  • Giuliani once again claimed he cut taxes 23 times in New York City, a claim that we’ve previously found to be misleading. Eight of those were cuts initiated by others, and one large cut he fought for months before deciding to support.

  • The two cited radically different, and utterly confusing, numbers when describing their spending records while in office.

Analysis

Chris Matthews posed the question to Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney at Tuesday’s GOP debate: “You’ve been having a tit for tat on tax cutting. What’s the difference between the two of you?”

The two responded with figures that would mislead many voters. In fact, the ensuing back-and-forth left heads spinning even among fiscal experts. ”I have watched campaigns for decades and, even by the standards of statistics being misused, [Tuesday] night was excessive,” said Michael Widmer, executive director of the nonpartisan Massachusetts Tax Foundation, when called by our bewildered fellow fact-checkers at washingtonpost.com. Giuliani was particularly guilty of this when he accused Romney of raising taxes significantly in Massachusetts:

Giuliani: [T]he point is that you’ve got to control taxes. But I did it; he didn’t. I controlled taxes. I brought taxes down by 17 percent. Under him, taxes went up 11 percent per capita. I led; he lagged.

Hearing this, one could be forgiven for thinking that Romney had raised tax rates substantially during his four-year term as Massachusetts governor. Not true – he tried to lower state income-tax rates three times but was stopped by the Democratic-controlled Legislature.

rudy What the mayor is actually talking about is his own calculation of “tax burden,” which he defines as the percentage of total personal income paid to the government. New York’s total revenues amounted to 8.73 percent of all personal income in the city during the year Giuliani took office, and that figure declined to 7.24 percent in his final year. In Massachusetts, the tax burden figure went up under Romney, from 5.93 percent to 6.57 percent.

The New York decline amounted to just under 1.5 percent of total income, and the Massachusetts increase was a bit more than 0.6 percent of income. Giuliani gets his double-digit figures by calculating the percentage change in the tax-burden figure, which itself is a percentage. Figured that way, the Massachusetts rate did increase by 11 percent under Romney and the New York rate decreased by 17 percent under Giuliani. But journalists generally avoid using such figures because they are confusing and easily misunderstood.

Tax burdens, of course, are going to vary significantly depending on what’s happening to average incomes, which are in turn dependent on the general state of the economy. The good times rolled for most of Giuliani’s tenure: He took office in January 1993, just as the longest economic boom in U.S. history was gathering steam. Romney, who became governor in January 2003, wasn’t so fortunate. Personal income grew 49 percent under Giuliani, 23 percent under Romney.

So when Giuliani talks about leading and lagging, he might also mention a third “l”: luck.

Giuliani’s selective use of statistics threw fuel on the fire as far as Romney was concerned, but he then also made a misleading claim:

Romney: It’s baloney. Mayor, you’ve got to check your facts. No taxes – I did not increase taxes in Massachusetts. I lowered taxes.

Romney is correct, as we noted above, that he did not raise anything he called a tax. But as we have pointed out numerous times now, Romney in fact increased fees and “closed loopholes.”

Now for the spending side of the equation:

Giuliani: I mean, the difference is that under Governor Romney, spending went up in Massachusetts, per capita, by 8 percent. Under me, spending went down by 7 percent. 

As it turns out, Giuliani isn’t really talking about actual spending here, but instead he’s referring to budget proposals. To figure that out we had to call the Giuliani campaign, which is a step most citizens shouldn’t have to venture. Looking just at the proposed numbers (adjusted for inflation) Giuliani increased total spending by 2.6 percent, while Romney increased spending by 8.1 percent. Meanwhile the population of New York City grew by around 700,000 over the course of Giuliani’s term, whereas the population of Massachusetts remained almost unchanged under Romney. Relative to the number of people using government services, Giuliani did indeed propose less spending, while Romney proposed more.

Given that both men faced Democratic-controlled legislative bodies, we think it’s reasonable to compare proposals. But Giuliani’s wording was inaccurate. He would have been correct to say, “Governor Romney proposed 8 percent higher spending per person in Massachusetts and I proposed 7 percent less.”

Romney came back with this:

Romney: [T]he Club for Growth looked at our respect to spending record. They said my spending grew 2.2 percent a year. Yours grew 2.8 percent a year.

mittThat sure sounds different from the spending numbers Giuliani mentioned just moments earlier. How can they both be right? Here’s how: The Club for Growth’s assessment of the two spending records measures actual spending as enacted by the Legislature, in Romney’s case, and the city council, in Giuliani’s. And the assessment is also based on total spending, not on spending per person.

Romney leaves out something else the Club for Growth noted: that much of his own fiscal discipline took place during the first half of his term as governor, when the state was facing budget deficits. In 2006, with state coffers once again flush, Romney proposed a 10 percent increase in spending.

As for the other claims in their furious exchange, we’ll take them in turn:

Giuliani: I cut taxes 23 times when I was mayor of New York City. I believe in tax cuts. I believe in being a supply sider. I cut the income tax I think it was 24 percent. We got 42 percent more revenues.… I cut taxes by over $9 billion.

We’ve seen and panned this film before. As we’ve written, eight of the 23 cuts he takes credit for were initiated at the state level, not by him at all, and a ninth, pushed by the city council, was resisted by Giuliani for some time before he acquiesced. It was the largest income tax cut in history for city residents. So Giuliani can claim personal credit for cutting either 14 or 15 taxes for a total of either $5.4 billion or $8 billion, depending on whether you give him credit for the council-sponsored cut described above not 23 cuts totaling $9 billion.

During Romney’s next at-bat, he said this:

Romney: But if you want to cut taxes, you’re going to have to cut spending. … Mayor Giuliani took the line item veto that the president had all the way to the Supreme Court and took it away from the president of the United States. … I’m in favor of the line-item veto. I exercised it 844 times.

Giuliani did challenge President Bill Clinton on the line-item veto after he used it to cut a provision that could have helped NYC’s bottom line. It was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1998. Romney is also correct to say that he exercised his state-level line-item veto power 844 times. But as we have reported before, Romney doesn’t note that more than 700 of those vetoes were overridden by the overwhelmingly Democratic-controlled Legislature.

The former governor had much more to say:

Romney: He also fought to keep the commuter tax, which was a very substantial tax, a almost $400 million tax on commuters coming into New York.
And when it’s all said and done, if you’re a New York taxpayer, city taxpayer, your state and city tax combined can reach as high as 10 percent. And in our state, if you’re a Boston worker, it’s going to be more like 5.3 percent.

Giuliani indeed fought like a wolverine when state officials moved to eliminate the city’s non-resident income tax. He lost that battle. During 1999, the last year it was in effect, it brought in close to $400 million, according to an estimate by the city’s nonpartisan Independent Budget Office, as Romney says. Romney’s also correct about New York City taxes in fact, at the end of Giuliani’s term, combined city and state taxes went as high as 10.5 percent for some residents. Of course, as mayor, Giuliani was only responsible for part of that number.

Romney’s figure for Boston is right as well. It’s worth noting that Boston does not have a city tax, so the Boston worker pays only the state’s flat 5.3 percent rate. The top New York City personal income tax rate, by contrast, was 3.648 percent at the end of Giuliani’s term.

We’re going to go pick some apples. After this exchange, the cherry orchard is bare.

by Viveca Novak and Joe Miller

Mitt Romney Campaign Funding

October 16, 2007

Note:  I’ve been missing in action for a while, but now I’m back.  Since my previous two posts focused on Democrats, I now, in the interests of fairness, introduce you to Republican funding.  All information here is from http:www.opensecrets.org

P R E S I D E N T I A L   C A N D I D A T E
Mitt Romney (R)
Former governor

Romney emerged from the first quarter as not only a fundraising powerhouse but as a real Republican competitor to Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Romney slipped a little in the second quarter, however, as Republican opponent Rudy Giuliani pulled ahead in the money race and Romney was forced to dip into his personal wealth to help fund the campaign. As one-term governor of Massachusetts from 2003 until 2007, Romney raised about $15.6 million. The Boston venture capitalist has amassed a fortune as former CEO of a management consulting firm and co-founder of a private equity investment firm.

Total Receipts: $62,829,069
Total Spent: $53,612,552
Cash on Hand: $9,216,517
Debts: $17,350,000
Date of last report: September 30, 2007
Totals may include compliance fund receipts

Source of Funds:
(How to read this chart / methodology)

legend

Individual contributions

$44,485,017

71%

legend

PAC contributions

$298,700

0%

legend

Candidate self-financing

$17,413,736

28%

legend

Federal Funds

$0

0%

legend

Other

$631,616

1%

PAC Contribution Breakdown:
(How to read this chart / methodology)

legend

Business

$59,250

45%

legend

Labor

$0

0%

legend

Ideological/Single Issue

$73,690

55%


How complete are this candidate’s campaign finance reports?


legend

Full Disclosure

$30,312,236

(92.8%)

legend

Incomplete

$0

legend

No Disclosure

$2,348,704

(7.2%)