Press Center

Common Cause Florida:  In the News

 

  • House to ask voters to kill public campaign finance
  • Tallahassee Democrat, March 26, 2008
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    Florida's 22-year tradition of public campaign financing, one of the oldest in the nation, edged closer to extinction Tuesday when a powerful House panel agreed to ask voters to kill it.

     

    The House Policy and Budget Council passed the measure (HJR-281) on a mostly party-line vote, with Democrats harshly critical. If three-fifths of the full House and Senate agree, voters would be asked in November to repeal a system that uses state tax dollars to help fund statewide campaigns.

  • Senator's side job a conflict question
  • St. Petersburg Times, March 21, 2008

  • TALLAHASSEE - At a time when Florida's universities are facing millions of dollars in budget cuts, Florida State University has hired a prominent state senator to coordinate a new reading program in her home county.

     

    Sen. Evelyn Lynn, R-Ormond Beach, is being paid $120,000 a year to work on a program she helped create and fund.

  • Lobbyists take in $200M
  • St. Petersburg Times, February 21, 2008
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    TALLAHASSEE - The price tag for influencing state government in Florida: More than $200-million.

     

    In the second year that lobbyists have had to disclose how much they made peddling their clients' wishes to lawmakers, state agencies and the governor, a St. Petersburg Times analysis found one of the nation's largest lobbying corps earned roughly five times the payroll of the Tampa Bay Rays in 2007.

     

    Among the biggest spenders were utility companies, health care firms, gambling concerns and a low-cost cigarette maker.

  • Mutual respect can be a potent weapon
  • Tallahassee Democrat, January 20, 2008
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    At a time when America is trying to spread democracy, shouldn't we be trying to work on our own democracy?

     

    This was the question posed at a high-brow dinner speech Tuesday night by former Iowa Republican Congressman Jim Leach. His audience included many Tallahasseeans (current and former; Republican and Democrat; 99-percent brilliant, minus your scribe) who have studied at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard or earned degrees at Harvard University.

  • Airport contractors big YMCA donors
  • The Miami Herald, January 14, 2008
  • When the YMCA of Greater Miami held its annual black-tie fundraiser, contractors building Miami International Airport's North Terminal kicked in $110,000 -- more than a fourth of all donations.

     

    The YMCA's vice president? Miami-Dade County Commissioner Natacha Seijas, whose votes have helped the same contractors bankrolling the fundraiser. The commissioner's daughter recently took a job at MIA -- reviewing construction budgets.

  • Capital One Bowl tickets not tough to come by for local officials
  • McClatchy-Tribune Business News, January 1, 2008
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    They're the most expensive tickets in town -- and the hardest to find -- but elected officials got fistfuls of them at discounts the public could never get.

     

    Rabid fans snapped up all available tickets for today's Capital One Bowl between the Florida Gators and the Michigan Wolverines in just 13 hours.

  • Catching a buzz at internet speed
  • St. Petersburg Times, December 23, 2007
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    Highlight: Blogs enable watchdog journalism and help papers target readers in an era of shrinking news space.

     

    For decades in the state capital, governors, legislators, staff members and lobbyists began the day with a cup of coffee in one hand and "the clips" in the other.

  • Fines sought for tardy disclosure; Ethics panel needs legislative approval to levy late fees
  • Florida Times-Union, December 23, 2007
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    ATLANTA -- Elected officials who don't promptly tell voters how they make a living could soon end up paying a late fee to the State Ethics Commission if the watchdog agency can get the General Assembly to sign onto the change.

     

    The commission is looking into the possibility of adding the fines -- and possibly stiffening some already in place -- to try to get elected officials to follow the law.

  • Bush post raises eyebrows
  • St. Petersburg Times, December 5, 2007
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    When an Orlando bank appointed former Gov. Jeb Bush to its board last month , it heralded his eight years in the governor's mansion.

     

    Bush would bring "tremendous talent, leadership and vision" to CNL Bancshares Inc., stated a news release quoting its board chairman, James Seneff.


  • Group blasts secret tax talks
  • St. Petersburg Times, June 6, 2007
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    The Coalition for Fair and Comprehensive Tax Reform, made up of social and consumer advocates, labor unions and government watchdogs, sharply criticized the tax talks during a news conference this morning.

    The coalition said the cuts are going to hurt critical services for the poor, lead to layoffs of public employees and provide unnecessary help to those who already get relief. Coalition members also blasted behind-the-scenes negotiations.

    "While it's not technically a violation of the Sunshine Law, it's a violation of the spirit of the Sunshine Law," said Ben Wilcox of Common Cause. "... when things are done in secret, the public loses confidence in what the end product of what those deliberations are."

  • Lawmaker: Scrap public financing; Calling it a misuse of public money, a GOP lawmaker wants to repeal Florida's public campaign finance law
  • The Miami Herald, November 27, 2007
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    Saying it is a ''frivolous'' use of taxpayer money, a GOP legislator wants to end Florida's public financing of campaigns.

     

    Florida taxpayers paid more than $11 million in 2006 to the campaigns of Gov. Charlie Crist, Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, Attorney General Bill McCollum and other candidates seeking statewide office.

     

    But Rep. Alan Hays, a retired dentist from Umatilla, says during a time of budget shortfalls the state should be spending money on education, public safety and helping take care of children instead of bankrolling political campaigns.