Details of the 4 R's of Real Reform
The 4 R’s of REAL
REFORM |
Rules
The method for turning ideas into law is defined in
the lengthy Rules of the Assembly and Senate. These
Rules form the foundation of the legislative process
in New York State.
Here's the problem:
Under the current rules of the Assembly and Senate:
- Major barriers prevent legislation from
getting to the full Assembly or Senate for review,
debate, amendment, and vote by our elected representatives
- Two people (the Assembly Speaker and Senate Majority Leader) have absolute
control over the legislative process
- Staffing and resources are used by the leaders to reward/punish individual
Legislators - thereby controlling their votes
- Politics and powerful special interests drive the legislative agenda
- New or alternative ideas are suffocated without examination or fair consideration
- A weak and dysfunctional committee system thwarts the development of
sound legislative proposals
- Committees work without public scrutiny, input, hearings, records, or
accountability
- There is no level playing field. Minority members in both chambers are
systematically disadvantaged (staff, resources, power) and disenfranchised
in the legislative
process
- There is no requirement for conference committees to reconcile conflicting
bills.
Result = gridlock on major legislation.
-
New York gets government by "three men in a room", instead
of representative democracy
Our Solution:
The Rules of the Assembly and the Senate must be changed
to assure the legislative process is open, fair,
democratic, deliberative, transparent, effective,
and accountable to citizens. Revised Rules must:
Restore
our elected representatives to their rightful role
in the legislative process by
-
- Eliminating barriers that prevent legislation
from getting to the full Assembly or Senate
for review, debate, amendment, and vote by our elected representatives
- Eliminating rules which give the Assembly
Leader and Senate Majority Leader complete control
over the legislative agenda, calendar, and process
- Prohibiting the Ways and Means or Rules Committees
from preventing bills from being
reported out of committee
- Giving committees full authority and responsibility
to develop, evaluate, debate, draft,
and revise legislation (including solicitation of public and expert feedback)
- Requiring that standing committees vote on
all bills referred to them, and that committee
activity and votes are a matter of public record
- Requiring that all bills favorably reported
by a committee to the legislative floor be accompanied
by a detailed committee report
- Giving each committee the authority and funding
to hire its own professional staff
- Providing equal funding, resources, and staff
for all elected representatives
- Requiring that all future rules changes will
be considered by the full chamber, rather than
the
Rules Committee
Preventing gridlock by requiring the use of conference
committees to reconcile differences between bills
passed by each house by -
- Convening a conference committee at the
request of the prime sponsor from either chamber
or the Speaker
or Majority Leader
- Convening such committees for a “mark
up” session
within two weeks of such a request
- Opening such committee proceedings to the
public and providing a transcribed record
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Redistricting
"Redistricting" is the periodic process
by which State and Federal legislative districts are
drawn or changed. These districts establish the boundaries
within which candidates compete for office in the State
Assembly, State Senate, and the US House of Representatives.
In the New York legislature, the leadership controls
the drawing of district lines for each house. The Republican-controlled
Senate draws its lines and the Democrat-controlled
Assembly does the same. Both houses agree to the other's
plan, and the legislation is sent to the Governor for
his approval.
Here's the problem:
Under the current system:
- Political parties choose their voters,
instead of voters choosing their representatives
- Partisan Assembly and Senate leaders use voter registration
data to draw or change district lines
-
Districts are "gerrymandered" by the majority
party of each house to make it easy for them
to win elections and maintain power
- Voting districts make no sense (in terms of size, configuration,
compactness, communities of interest, district
population, etc.)
- Districts are uncompetitive, and incumbents are virtually
assured of lifetime employment
- It is almost impossible for minority-party candidates
to successfully contest safe-seats because the
outcome has been rigged by political leaders.
- Incumbents are often unopposed, or faced with token
or sacrificial candidates from the minority party.
- Potentially-excellent legislators are excluded from
holding office.
- Lack of real competition discourages many voters from
going to the polls.
- Legislators have no accountability to the people they
are supposed to represent
- Party bosses and powerful special interests have far
more influence on legislators than the citizens
they represent
Our Solution:
Enact legislation that would ideally amend the State
Constitution or otherwise require an independent
non-partisan commission to carry out redistricting for the US Congress, State Senate, and State Assembly
with specific rules to
- Prohibit the use of voter
registration data, voting patterns, or location of
incumbents to establish
or change voting districts
- Maximize the number of competitive districts
- Configure districts to be compact and contiguous
- Prohibit district populations to deviate more
than +/- 0.5% from the mean district population
- Ensure that districts comply with the federal
Voting Rights Act
- Respect communities of interest
- Place prisoners in their home districts
- Require public disclosure of and access to
the competing redistricting plans,
the data used,
and the software used to derive those
plans
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Referendum and Initiative
What is Referendum and Initiative?
Referendum refers to the power of the people to place
on the ballot laws that already have been enacted
by the Legislature and either accept or reject them
in whole or in part.
Initiative is a proposed change in State Law or the
Constitution that is placed on the ballot for a popular
vote.
To be placed on the ballot, both Referendum and Initiative
require gathering the signatures of a specified number
of registered voters on a petition.
About half the states have Referendum and/or Initiative.
New York does not.
There is nothing to fear from a well-designed, responsible
R&I process. Only petitions with broad support
would make it to the ballot for public vote.
Here's the problem:
Without Referendum and Initiative,
- The Legislature can ignore or sidestep
major issues facing the state, with no consequence
- Citizens have no check or balance against concentration
or abuse of power
- Citizens have no recourse if the Legislature fails
to act or acts irresponsibly
- Citizens have no opportunity to influence public policy,
improve government, or put new ideas into
the political debate
- There is less incentive for lawmakers to be responsive
and responsible to the people
- The people
have no direct voice in the process of government
Our Solution:
Enact a constitutional amendment to provide Referendum
and Initiative in order to:
- Make government more responsive;
- Counterbalance the power of special interests;
- Stimulate public involvement in the political process;
- Provide for a greater system of checks and balances;
and
- Enhance direct democracy.
CBGNY's Ten
Key Principles for R&I
While it is the responsibility of the Legislature
to craft the details of R&I legislation, Citizens
for Better Government in New York (CBGNY) believes
any responsible R&I process should incorporate
the following principles:
- The right of R&I should be adequately defined,
with a clear statement of what it can and cannot
be used for.
Rationale: Clarity of purpose and scope will promote
understanding and effective use of R&I by citizens,
while reducing unnecessary challenges or invalid
petition drives.
- R&I should be embedded in
the State Constitution.
Rationale: One of the purposes of R&I is to give
citizens a remedy against an ineffective, negligent,
or irresponsible Legislature. Embedding the citizens'
right to R&I in the Constitution provides durability
and shelter from arbitrary reversal by the Legislature
- Petition process should be simple, accessible, and
designed for intrinsic integrity.
Rationale: An effective petition process is required
to give voters genuine "voice" while preventing
process dysfunction.
- To appear on the ballot, initiative
petitions should meet standards which provide evidence
of a reasonable
threshold of support among statewide voters.
Rationale: Voters and State government should not
have to deal with propositions which have little
or no support
among the general citizenry.
- Initiatives on the
ballot in any given year should be limited in number
(e.g., four)
Rationale: To prevent ballot clutter, confusion,
and chaos.
- There should be strict time and action
requirements for any State agency (for example,
Attorney General,
Legislative Bill Drafting Commission, State Board
of Elections, Courts, etc.) that may participate
in the
petition review process.
Rationale: To assure an efficient process, not hampered
by governmental inefficiency or politics.
- Initiatives
to amend the Constitution should have a higher
standard for passage (for example, require
to be passed in two successive elections in which
there are candidates for the State Senate and Assembly).
Rationale: Constitutional amendments should be few,
carefully-considered, and reflect ongoing support
by the citizens.
- Initiatives approved by the voters
should have reasonable protection from Legislative
repeal or amendment,
including: 1) a waiting period (at least two years)
before the Legislature can propose to repeal or amend,
and 2) a requirement for voter approval of any such
proposal.
Rationale: An effective R&I process requires stability,
durability, and protection from Legislative attack.
- The R&I Constitutional amendment should reserve
the power of R&I to the citizens of all cities,
towns, counties and villages
Rationale: Citizens should have expanded voice at
all levels of government.
- Adequate checks. balances,
and safeguards should be built into the R&I process.
Rationale: To prevent against misuse or abuse.
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