The Dark Side of Sunlight
The Dark Side of Sunlight
The Dark Side of Sunlight
foreignaffairs.com
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Fifty years on, the results of this experiment in transparency are in.
When lawmakers are treated like minors in need of constant
supervision, it is special interests that benefit, since they are the
ones doing the supervising. And when politicians are given every
incentive to play to their base, politics grows more partisan and
dysfunctional. In order for Congress to better serve the public, it
has to be allowed to do more of its work out of public view.
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It was not always this way. It used to be that secrecy was seen as
essential to good government, especially when it came to crafting
legislation. Terrified of outside pressures, the framers of the U.S.
Constitution worked in strict privacy, boarding up the windows of
Independence Hall and stationing armed sentinels at the door. As
Alexander Hamilton later explained, “Had the deliberations been
open while going on, the clamors of faction would have prevented
any satisfactory result.” James Madison concurred, claiming, “No
Constitution would ever have been adopted by the convention if the
debates had been public.” The Founding Fathers even wrote
opacity into the Constitution, permitting legislators to withhold
publication of the parts of proceedings that “may in their Judgment
require Secrecy.”
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For 180 years, secrecy suited legislators well. It gave them the
cover they needed to say no to petitioners and shut down wasteful
programs, the ambiguity they needed to keep multiple
constituencies happy, and the privacy they needed to maintain a
working decorum. But by the late 1960s, liberals in the House of
Representatives started to sour on secrecy. Although they
represented a majority among the ruling Democrats, they lacked
power. That lay in the hands of committee chairs, who, because
they were assigned their positions on the basis of seniority, were
nearly all conservative Democrats from safe districts in the South.
These chairs worked hand in glove with the Republican minority to
quash liberal initiatives, and given their complete control of their
committees’ agendas, they were not to be crossed openly. And so
the liberal caucus, known as the Democratic Study Group,
orchestrated a backdoor attack on the power of the committee
chairs by tacking several transparency-related amendments onto a
bill intended to modernize Congress, the Legislative Reorganization
Act of 1970.
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how, by being in the room when key decisions were made, they
might benefit from transparency. Thanks in part to the support of
these lobbies, the transparency amendments were adopted, and
the Legislative Reorganization Act passed handily.
The gambit paid off immediately. For years, liberals had been trying
to defund the supersonic transport program, an aerospace venture
that they considered a boondoggle, but it was only in 1971 that they
succeeded. In a hotly contested vote in the Committee of the
Whole, the liberal caucus managed to generate a high turnout and
rally environmental groups to apply pressure. The same year, they
succeeded in forcing the House to finally take a direct vote on the
Vietnam War, something the more hawkish leaders of both parties
had tried to avoid for years. And over the next few years, Congress
passed major legislation on campaign finance, environmental
pollution, employee benefits, and consumer protection. (These wins
were aided by the uptick in liberal lobbying in the Senate, which
had followed the House’s lead in opening up committee meetings.)
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2018
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At the same time that Congress has been under assault from
moneyed interests from the outside, it has been beset by growing
political polarization from within. In both the House and the Senate,
study after study has found, the ideological gulf between the voting
patterns of Democrats and Republicans is growing and growing. As
with lobbying, multiple factors appear to be behind the trend, but
the sunshine reforms have played an important role. For one thing,
they have made it easier for party leaders to keep their members in
line, just as the liberal reformers had intended. Tip O’Neill, the
Massachusetts Democrat who served as Speaker of the House
from 1977 to 1987, owed a good deal of his power to the detailed
records he kept of how his rank and file were voting, which he
wielded to discourage members from straying from the party line.
Republicans have done the same. In 2003, as the House
considered an overhaul to Medicare, the party’s leadership issued
threats against disobedient Republicans who saw the bill as a
giveaway to pharmaceutical and insurance companies. Leaders
told one representative that they would make sure his son would
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rather than more, they would likely have done much more for their
cause.
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But study after study has shown that citizens simply do not follow
congressional actions. (Two months after the Senate confirmed him
to the Supreme Court, a Pew Research Center poll found that only
45 percent of Americans knew who Neil Gorsuch was.) The public
didn’t pay attention to Congress before the transparency reforms—
when the number of votes and hearings was more manageable—
and it certainly doesn’t now that Congress’ total output of
legislation, transcripts, and other essential documents often
exceeds one million pages per year. And if Congress went back to
its pre-1970 levels of secrecy, citizens would still have ample data
on which to judge their representatives. Before the sunshine
reforms, people could attend hearings, watch congressional
debates, read bills under consideration, and see what positions
members took on all final votes.
Others might contend that the real problem is too little transparency
in campaign fundraising. But the evidence suggests otherwise. For
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