Posted on 12/17/2016 10:53:16 AM PST by Kaslin
Incoming Florida House Speaker Richard Corcoran cut his teeth on the Florida house appropriations committee, but he's got bigger aspirations than merely appropriations as he assumes his leadership position: he wants to make the Florida legislature the most transparent in the country, and hes willing to take on his own party to do it.
Legislators around the country could learn from Corcorans ambitious agenda.
While Florida has a reputation for a hard-partying coastal vacation destination, its state capitols politics may take more cues from the notorious good ol boys network that other more traditionally Southern states have. Reformers have targeted Tallahassee, claiming that handouts and corporate welfare permeate the way the state government does business.
Handing out corporate welfare checks is not something we should be engaged in, Corcoran told the Naples Daily News earlier this year.
Fighting earmarks and corporate welfare is one way that Corcoran and other Republicans are proposing that Floridas budget be kept under control. The state is projecting a minuscule surplus for next year but a more than $1 billion deficit in 2018, and fighting grift in Tallahassee could be a good way to make that a little more comfortable.
State Sen. Tom Lee said, by every reasonable metric, Floridas economy is growing. Were just struggling to balance our spending with improved revenue streams. Every year, Floridians spend hundreds of millions of dollars on pet earmark projects for legislators. One of the big reforms Corcoran has pushed? Requiring legislators to put their names on pet projects, rather than push them through anonymously.
Disclosure when it comes to earmarks isnt the only kind of sunlight that the Florida legislature will see. Corcoran has supported a broad slate of reforms to lobbying in the state that put a big emphasis on disclosure. Lobbyists would be required to file what issues theyre lobbying on, would be prohibited from communicating with legislators while theyre in active sessions and committees, and require more disclosure from the legislators themselves when theyre working with lobbyists.
Not all lobbying reform is unquestionably good, but Corcorans focus on disclosure could make a difference - with Floridians, and as an example for other states - and for his own. The Corcoran reforms will apply to the Florida House, but not the Senate. As legislators get down to hammering out an over-$80 billion state budget, the tension between good-government reforms on the House side and the business-as-usual lawmaking on the Senate side may come to a head.
The Florida House, in adopting these rules, Corcoran said, will take a transformational leap into a new era of accountability, professionalism, transparency, and fairness. Itll remain to be seen if Corcorans ambitious agenda works, but battling that good-ol-boys network perception is a hugely important issue in Florida.
Maybe a few more alligators roaming the streets is all.
Is that all gator country?
citizens are lobbyists too.
seems more about isolating / protecting back room deals.
there is nothing other than the capital building in tallahasee.
Cattle.
Orange groves and gators.
No not gator county, but farmlands. The Mormon Church owns 5,000 square miles of Florida land for cattle ranching and farming.
Danged if I know. Never been to Florida.
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