Post by Moses on Dec 29, 2005 9:47:01 GMT -5
www.blackcommentator.com/164/164_cbc_monitor.html
How to demand accountability on the part of elected officials? It sounds noble enough to the point that many politicians campaign on a platform that promises they will be held accountable by the people who vote for them. Oftentimes, it is just a politically correct word, used to appease the anger of the American public long enough until their attention is distracted by something else more newsworthy. When I relocated to the nation's capitol, I intended to seek out elected officials and ask the question, "Why did they run for public office?" and analyze the responses I thought I would receive. Then, I met a group of politically active professionals, from all walks of life, and of different political affiliations, who had grown alarmed at the representation coming from the Congressional Black Caucus. I met them while having coffee at Café Mawonaj, a local coffee shop frequented by students of Howard University.
While sitting among them, I listened to what had them so upset with elected members of the House of Representatives; most notably, the members of the Congressional Black Caucus. As I listened to the dialogue, it became apparent that what had the group upset with the members of the Congressional Black Caucus was the growing trend of at least 25% of the Caucus members who consistently voted against a progressive legislative agenda that would be beneficial to the poor and working class, without fear of reprisal or discipline for breaking party lines, from both the leadership of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), or from Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. This group, known as the CBC Monitor Group, decided that some definitive action needed to be taken, and quickly, in order to send a message to the CBC that the dereliction in their representation of poor communities, would no longer go unheeded.
I asked the group how they planned to go about getting the attention of the CBC. The group's founder, Niyi Shomade, responded that "the CBC, especially those who keep crossing party lines, need to be held accountable for their performance as legislators."
Mr. Shomade listed a group of bills that passed in the Congress with the assistance of the seven to ten members of the CBC who voted in favor of the legislation.
I was invited to join CBC Monitor and accepted by offering to explore and develop a methodology that would put the voting records of the CBC members on public display and then implement a monitoring process to evaluate if the methodology was effective in getting CBC members to pay attention to the constituents they represented.
We decided that the amount of members of the CBC (42 House Members and 1 Senator) would be a large enough sample to examine their voting records and be able to manage the information provided to be placed in a comprehensive and brief public report.
Developing the Methodology
At the next meeting of the CBC Monitor, I suggested to the members that whatever methodology we used, the data collected for analysis and evaluation would have to be based solely on the voting record of the CBC member, and something other than the CBC's agenda, which usually pertained to Civil Rights and Voting Rights issues. My argument was not to focus on those issues because the NAACP evaluated the CBC members on their legislative records as pertaining to Civil Rights, and all members, even those considered "derelict" received grades of "A+" at least, so their evaluation excluded more mainstream issues that would still have serious impacts for African-American communities, such as education, environment, judicial, housing, public health, etc.
Our next step was to look at the legislation that had major significance in the past two years, on which the group believed the CBC ignored the voices of the African-American community. We narrowed down our list to include legislation that we considered "bright-line" issues (read: these were issues that any CBC member familiar with his or her district, would not have voted for because they knew the impact that the passage of such legislation would have on their districts). The following legislation came up for consideration on the floor of the House, beginning in October 2004 to September 2005:
Next, we decided we would gather the voting records of all 42 House Members and the lone Senator, Barack Obama (D-Illinois), and make accurate determinations of how they voted for the legislation we selected. We selected these bills based upon the economic, educational, environmental, mainstream effects they would have upon poor communities, especially African-American communities. Many of the lawmakers represent districts with better than 50% African-Americans residing in their districts, and since the purpose of the Congressional Black Caucus was to make sure, "to promote the public welfare through legislation designed to meet the needs of millions of neglected citizens," our group began to wonder how the Caucus was doing that, when it was discovered that voting for the above listed legislation did the exact opposite. We rationalized that a CBC Member who listened to its' constituency, would vote in accordance with the needs and best representation of said constituency. We also rationalized that a CBC Member would be "in touch" with the African-American Polity in terms of how they cast their votes on the floor of the House.
I asked the group if we could use a "grading format" by assimilating all of the votes and assigning a point value for each piece of legislation voted on. We decided to start each member with 100% point value, and the point value would decrease or remain the same, depending on how they voted for each piece of legislation.
Since I was tasked to come up with a point value of all nine pieces of legislation to add up to 100%, I asked the group to assign the point value for each piece of legislation, and to assign the point value weight based upon the significance of the legislation. Total points remaining would assign the lawmaker a letter grade, based on the grading scale of A-F (90% - 100% earned an "A"; anything below 60% received a grade of "F"). All of the legislation was considered very significant, but some legislation was considered to have more immediate and egregious effects on the African-American community than others. Therefore, with a unanimous consensus, we came up with the point values assigned as follows:
While we believed the Watt Amendment to the Federal Budget was important, given the demographics of the 109th Congress (read: Republican Majority), it was assumed that Congressman Watt's amendment would not get fair consideration because it called for more funding to social programs that were earmarked for reduction by the then current budget proposal.
We also decided that members who were absent from voting, or present, but abstained from voting on these issues, would also lose points. After all, the Representative is, by our vote, expected to speak for his or her constituency with their legislative vote, and unless the member had a seriously important reason for their absence, (i.e. illness - their own, or a family member, or death in the family) being absent for reasons such as off campaigning for higher office, or attending fund-raisers, did not merit being absent from the Floor of the House on such important legislation.
Gathering the Data
We assigned a team of two people to access Internet resources of Congressional voting records. The most accurate were the ones found at Congress.org and Tech Politics.org. These two websites codified the voting information by Congressional Caucuses per piece of legislation. From that, we were able to produce the following chart for each member of the CBC (I am displaying one for review as an example of how we compiled the votes, the weighted values of each vote and cumulative score):
As the reader can see, this process became a voluminous process for all 43 CBC members that we were unwilling to present to the public until we could streamline or summarize the evaluations and grading charts. Additionally, we were on a deadline to produce the evaluation, named the "CBC Report Card,: in time for the opening day of the CBC's Annual Legislative Conference, which was held in late September 2005.
The reader may be wondering how we evaluated Senator Obama's voting record, given that he is a United States Senator, and not a House Member. It was decided on consensus vote to evaluate him on a higher standard because he sits in a higher level of the Congress, and has responsibility to not only vote on legislative issues, but he is responsible for voting on matters of job placement within the Executive or Judiciary level that requires Senate confirmation. Furthermore, Senator Obama is expected to vote to ratify legislation that would have to be exactly as legislation produced in the House of Representatives, and for those reasons, it was decided his point values would double, because not all the legislation we selected has been debated or passed in the Senate as of this date. So, the point value on legislation that had passed the House, but needed Senate Ratification, was assigned a double point value to Senator Obama. At the time of our analysis, only one piece of legislation, the Tort Reform Bill, was voted upon in the Senate, and Senator Obama was rated accordingly.
The purpose of the evaluation and report card was to highlight the areas where we believed the African-American members of Congress were failing in terms of providing effective representation of their districts. We also wanted to send the message that from this point on, they would be monitored as to how well they would represent the interests of African-American communities that voted them in office, and eliminate any excuse these lawmakers would provide if they were ever challenged on their voting records.
How to demand accountability on the part of elected officials? It sounds noble enough to the point that many politicians campaign on a platform that promises they will be held accountable by the people who vote for them. Oftentimes, it is just a politically correct word, used to appease the anger of the American public long enough until their attention is distracted by something else more newsworthy. When I relocated to the nation's capitol, I intended to seek out elected officials and ask the question, "Why did they run for public office?" and analyze the responses I thought I would receive. Then, I met a group of politically active professionals, from all walks of life, and of different political affiliations, who had grown alarmed at the representation coming from the Congressional Black Caucus. I met them while having coffee at Café Mawonaj, a local coffee shop frequented by students of Howard University.
While sitting among them, I listened to what had them so upset with elected members of the House of Representatives; most notably, the members of the Congressional Black Caucus. As I listened to the dialogue, it became apparent that what had the group upset with the members of the Congressional Black Caucus was the growing trend of at least 25% of the Caucus members who consistently voted against a progressive legislative agenda that would be beneficial to the poor and working class, without fear of reprisal or discipline for breaking party lines, from both the leadership of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), or from Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. This group, known as the CBC Monitor Group, decided that some definitive action needed to be taken, and quickly, in order to send a message to the CBC that the dereliction in their representation of poor communities, would no longer go unheeded.
I asked the group how they planned to go about getting the attention of the CBC. The group's founder, Niyi Shomade, responded that "the CBC, especially those who keep crossing party lines, need to be held accountable for their performance as legislators."
Mr. Shomade listed a group of bills that passed in the Congress with the assistance of the seven to ten members of the CBC who voted in favor of the legislation.
I was invited to join CBC Monitor and accepted by offering to explore and develop a methodology that would put the voting records of the CBC members on public display and then implement a monitoring process to evaluate if the methodology was effective in getting CBC members to pay attention to the constituents they represented.
We decided that the amount of members of the CBC (42 House Members and 1 Senator) would be a large enough sample to examine their voting records and be able to manage the information provided to be placed in a comprehensive and brief public report.
Developing the Methodology
At the next meeting of the CBC Monitor, I suggested to the members that whatever methodology we used, the data collected for analysis and evaluation would have to be based solely on the voting record of the CBC member, and something other than the CBC's agenda, which usually pertained to Civil Rights and Voting Rights issues. My argument was not to focus on those issues because the NAACP evaluated the CBC members on their legislative records as pertaining to Civil Rights, and all members, even those considered "derelict" received grades of "A+" at least, so their evaluation excluded more mainstream issues that would still have serious impacts for African-American communities, such as education, environment, judicial, housing, public health, etc.
Our next step was to look at the legislation that had major significance in the past two years, on which the group believed the CBC ignored the voices of the African-American community. We narrowed down our list to include legislation that we considered "bright-line" issues (read: these were issues that any CBC member familiar with his or her district, would not have voted for because they knew the impact that the passage of such legislation would have on their districts). The following legislation came up for consideration on the floor of the House, beginning in October 2004 to September 2005:
Next, we decided we would gather the voting records of all 42 House Members and the lone Senator, Barack Obama (D-Illinois), and make accurate determinations of how they voted for the legislation we selected. We selected these bills based upon the economic, educational, environmental, mainstream effects they would have upon poor communities, especially African-American communities. Many of the lawmakers represent districts with better than 50% African-Americans residing in their districts, and since the purpose of the Congressional Black Caucus was to make sure, "to promote the public welfare through legislation designed to meet the needs of millions of neglected citizens," our group began to wonder how the Caucus was doing that, when it was discovered that voting for the above listed legislation did the exact opposite. We rationalized that a CBC Member who listened to its' constituency, would vote in accordance with the needs and best representation of said constituency. We also rationalized that a CBC Member would be "in touch" with the African-American Polity in terms of how they cast their votes on the floor of the House.
I asked the group if we could use a "grading format" by assimilating all of the votes and assigning a point value for each piece of legislation voted on. We decided to start each member with 100% point value, and the point value would decrease or remain the same, depending on how they voted for each piece of legislation.
Since I was tasked to come up with a point value of all nine pieces of legislation to add up to 100%, I asked the group to assign the point value for each piece of legislation, and to assign the point value weight based upon the significance of the legislation. Total points remaining would assign the lawmaker a letter grade, based on the grading scale of A-F (90% - 100% earned an "A"; anything below 60% received a grade of "F"). All of the legislation was considered very significant, but some legislation was considered to have more immediate and egregious effects on the African-American community than others. Therefore, with a unanimous consensus, we came up with the point values assigned as follows:
While we believed the Watt Amendment to the Federal Budget was important, given the demographics of the 109th Congress (read: Republican Majority), it was assumed that Congressman Watt's amendment would not get fair consideration because it called for more funding to social programs that were earmarked for reduction by the then current budget proposal.
We also decided that members who were absent from voting, or present, but abstained from voting on these issues, would also lose points. After all, the Representative is, by our vote, expected to speak for his or her constituency with their legislative vote, and unless the member had a seriously important reason for their absence, (i.e. illness - their own, or a family member, or death in the family) being absent for reasons such as off campaigning for higher office, or attending fund-raisers, did not merit being absent from the Floor of the House on such important legislation.
Gathering the Data
We assigned a team of two people to access Internet resources of Congressional voting records. The most accurate were the ones found at Congress.org and Tech Politics.org. These two websites codified the voting information by Congressional Caucuses per piece of legislation. From that, we were able to produce the following chart for each member of the CBC (I am displaying one for review as an example of how we compiled the votes, the weighted values of each vote and cumulative score):
As the reader can see, this process became a voluminous process for all 43 CBC members that we were unwilling to present to the public until we could streamline or summarize the evaluations and grading charts. Additionally, we were on a deadline to produce the evaluation, named the "CBC Report Card,: in time for the opening day of the CBC's Annual Legislative Conference, which was held in late September 2005.
The reader may be wondering how we evaluated Senator Obama's voting record, given that he is a United States Senator, and not a House Member. It was decided on consensus vote to evaluate him on a higher standard because he sits in a higher level of the Congress, and has responsibility to not only vote on legislative issues, but he is responsible for voting on matters of job placement within the Executive or Judiciary level that requires Senate confirmation. Furthermore, Senator Obama is expected to vote to ratify legislation that would have to be exactly as legislation produced in the House of Representatives, and for those reasons, it was decided his point values would double, because not all the legislation we selected has been debated or passed in the Senate as of this date. So, the point value on legislation that had passed the House, but needed Senate Ratification, was assigned a double point value to Senator Obama. At the time of our analysis, only one piece of legislation, the Tort Reform Bill, was voted upon in the Senate, and Senator Obama was rated accordingly.
The purpose of the evaluation and report card was to highlight the areas where we believed the African-American members of Congress were failing in terms of providing effective representation of their districts. We also wanted to send the message that from this point on, they would be monitored as to how well they would represent the interests of African-American communities that voted them in office, and eliminate any excuse these lawmakers would provide if they were ever challenged on their voting records.