
Americans for Prosperity's sister organization, Americans for Prosperity Foundation, works alongside partners to make it easier for Americans to get information about their government. That knowledge empowers people to hold those in power to account. And this Sunshine Week we're publishing a collection of essays to highlight how different organizations are approaching the need for more government transparency.
Solving the most challenging problems our country faces will take collaboration and innovation. That's true for government transparency too. That means working with people who share our concerns but approach it from different perspectives.
Differing views are a good thing. They allow us to challenge our partners' assumptions as well as our own and identify new solutions in the process. You'll see that in the voices included here. They're different from ours. And though we may not agree on everything, we're better off for having those ideas included in the discussion.
The essays this week are written by respected thought leaders with years of practical experience working toward greater government accountability and transparency:
- Monday: James Valvo, chief policy counsel, and Ryan P. Mulvey, policy counsel at Americans for Prosperity Foundation, explore the foundations of why government transparency is essential to the continuance of government by and for the people.
- Monday: Steve Delie, director of labor policy and Workers for Opportunity at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, explains what transparency laws were designed to do, and how well they've lived up to their purpose throughout history.
- Monday: Ginger McCall, legal director at Demand Progress, describes the promise of public records and their potential to bring about reform.
- Tuesday: Liz Hempowicz, director of public policy at the Project on Government Oversight, details how transparency laws enable accountability.
- Wednesday: Patrick G. Eddington, research fellow in homeland security and civil liberties at the Cato Institute, analyzes a stark example of the brokenness within the FOIA process.
- Thursday: Chris Krug, president and publisher of the Franklin News Foundation, shares how difficult it is to hold government officials accountable, even with the transparency tools at journalists' disposal.
- Friday: Emily Manna, director of policy at Open the Government, closes out the week with a call to reckoning with national security secrecy.
Government transparency is fundamental – by James Valvo and Ryan P. Mulvey: America's political system is founded on consent of the governed, and transparency is essential for citizens to hold their elected officials accountable for how they create and administer laws. But is the dramatic growth of administrative lawmaking hindering our ability to know what decisions are being made and whom to hold accountable for them? Read more.
Transparency laws are designed to keep the government accountable. But do they? – by Steve Delie: Freedom of information laws are some of the most powerful tools used by journalists and ordinary citizens to gain information about the inner workings of government. Yet government has a history of repeatedly resisting the openness requested by the public. Read more.
The importance of public records – by Ginger McCall: Citizens cannot engage meaningfully with government or make informed choices about their democracy if they do not know what their government is doing. Public records are key to gaining this knowledge — and to holding officials accountable for wrongdoing and vindicating our rights. Read more.
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Americans for Prosperity (AFP).
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