Common Cause Georgia provides studied response to House Ethics Bill
We regret to report that the ethics bill presented by new Speaker of the House David Ralston (SB17 substitute) doesn’t do nearly enough to set a new climate for ethics at the State Capitol. Common Cause Georgia has been pushing hard for strong reform of Georgia’s ethics and campaign finance laws, and Georgians have been expecting strong reforms in the wake of the scandal surrounding former House Speaker Glenn Richardson. While the bill has some improvements in reporting and increased fines, it fails to address substantive areas, including all of the reforms of HB920, sponsored by Judiciary Committee Chairman Wendell Willard and forty other bipartisan legislators. The new Speaker unfortunately fell back into the patterns of the past and crafted a new bill, which was purportedly to promote transparency, in the secrecy of his office. While the Speaker presented the bill himself, there was no debate on the contents of the bill, and all amendments, including a proposal to limit lobbyist gifts, failed on a party line vote. Floor amendments will likely also be disallowed. In addition to concerns about what is not in the bill, Common Cause’s analysis of the bill has uncovered several changes that actually weaken the current law. As we read it, the bill would: 1) Remove the requirement for members of boards and authorities to submit financial disclosures; 2) Exempt from disclosure lobbyist gifts for travel, meals, and accommodations by legislators attending meetings; and 3) Eliminate dependent children information on disclosure statements. Common Cause Georgia Executive Director Bil Bozarth asks how this bill can be presented as increasing transparency when it has at least three areas where we seem to be cutting back on reporting requirements? Common Cause had high hopes that a turnover in leadership at the Capitol would result in a new attitude about lobbying and use of campaign funds. While the general climate is definitely better, strong ethics legislation hasn't been produced yet. Common Cause will be working hard to get Senate support for strengthening the bill.
A copy of the full analysis report on SB17 substitute is available here.
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