Published
5 years agoon
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OpinionGov. Gavin Newsom promised greater transparency in California government. Jerry Brown was elected secretary of state 50 years ago on a transparency platform. While serving one of his terms in what nearly turned out to be a “governor-for-life” political career, Brown said he was “committed to keeping state government open and transparent.” Arnold Schwarzenegger also pledged a commitment to transparency.
Lawsuits worked in Illinois and Wyoming. So Andrzejewski is confident “we’re going to win” in California.
“We’re on great legal footing,” he says.
So why is California resisting? What might it be hiding?
Andrzejewski says that through the records, the public can confirm that state Controller Betty Yee is “actually doing her job,” that every payment is made without “waste, fraud, corruption or abuse.”
According to Andrzejewski, Yee’s website says that “since she took office in 2015, she’s actually flagged about $4 billion worth of payments,” which, he said, “sounds like a lot of money until you consider the fact that during that period, the state of California … paid $1.5 trillion worth of bills. Betty Yee is probably the only one out of 40 million Californians who believes that 99.7% of all state spending has been proper.
“Nobody believes that.”
Unlocking the books will also give voters a clear look into the murky world of politics, where influence is often bought and sold.
“One of the first things we would do with the California state checkbook, and this probably sends shivers up their spine, we would take the state vendor list, who received how much money last year, and we would run that against Gov. Newsom’s campaign donor disclosures,” says Andrzejewski.
Open The Books did exactly that in 2018 when Oregon Gov. Kate Brown was running for reelection. It “found that she had a pattern of soliciting state vendors for campaign cash,” he says.
There have been efforts to force transparency on California before. One recent attempt in the Assembly, the Budget Transparency Act of 2017, would have opened the spending records line-item by line-item in an online database.
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