Common Cause Georgia

First Week of 2010 session

  

The first week of the 2010 Georgia General Assembly Session focused on Ethics Reform to a degree not seen in many years. Several bills relating to good government were dropped during the week of January 11. The legislation getting the most attention was HB 920. Primary sponsor Wendell Willard introduced HB 920, which reins in much of the loose money in the election process and imposes a gift limit on lobbyists. At last count the bill had between 35 and 40 co-sponsors, evenly split between the parties. To see the contents of HB 920, click here. Democrat Mary Margaret Oliver and freshman Independent Rusty Kidd introduced other reform bills.  Others are coming, and we are doing our best to keep up. To see more on the Oliver and Kidd proposals, click here and pull up new House bills 890, 891, 892, 893, 913, and 919.   To read press articles on the 2010 reform movement around the state, click Brunswick News, Dalton Daily Citizen, Atlanta Unfiltered, and Atlanta Journal-Constitution


Cronyism in contracting confirmed

So much anger, so little change

Primary Day is Here

Money Watch Tracks Donations To Judicial Races

Georgia Legislature - no reform, no price to pay

House Ethics Bill falls short of expectations

Early report contributions to new House Leaders reveal same pattern

Common Cause Georgia provides studied response to House Ethics Bill

2010 Ethics Reform stalls in House

Citizens United v. FEC Panel Discussion

Citizens United decision a game changer

First Week of 2010 session

Public Funding for Judicial Elections

New Speaker, New Opportunity for Reform

Linger Longer lingers no longer

Speaker steps down. Now what?

Speaker should step down

Atlanta mayoral runoff needs a real ethics focus

Atlanta candidates should support pay-to-play reform

Governor Appoints Nahmias to Supreme Court of Georgia

Georgia Needs to Improve Its Website on Stimulus Spending

Fiscal Accountability- Development Authorities

The Supreme Court rules on Caperton

Georgia's Citizenship Proof to Register Law Rejected by DOJ

2009 General Assembly session falls short

The 2009 Georgia Legislative Session ends April 3rd.

Let's get Ethics Reform passed in Georgia

Who Draw's the Lines?

Is your Sheriff a Democrat or a Republican? Do you really care?

Top ten recipients of lobbying gifts

Why pursue judicial election reform in Georgia now?

Homeowners pay for high-end tax breaks

Georgia’s run-off election drawing $3.4 million from outside groups

Georgia must ensure every vote counts