Much has been written about the divided state of the American electorate, driven
by sharp partisan bickering and attacks. I have heard a number of explanations,
ranging from the increasing number of media outlets and bloggers to the
ineffective role of political parties. From my perspective, all of them may be
the cause, but I would also add the ever-increasing volume of primary source
Congressional documents that I have discussed in
previous articles, entitled
GW
Hot Docs.
Now before you quickly come to some conclusion that I am a one-note guy,
thinking only of these GW Hot Docs, this article is an important
continuation on the topic of GW Hot Docs as a conceptual revolution. The other
articles were merely trying to get you to understand these materials. These
documents are playing a role, arguably good and bad depending on your
perspective, in a transformation of the Republic.
Partisan bickering and invective is not new. Media interference in shaping of
the political world is not new. Congressional documents have been produced since
Congress existed. Government documents since Babylon are not new either. What is
new is the technology. Of course since you are reading this on an Internet web
site, you are not surprised. It is only in the past 20 years that such things
even existed. It is only in the past 25 years that the desktop personal computer
you are using to access the Internet has existed. In college in 1980, no one in
my fairly elite university owned a computer and all term papers were written on
the typewriter or by hand. Even the copying machine --- while older, has only
started ubiquitous use in this 25 year time period.
This new technology has pried loose many Congressional documents from their
dusty files and has created documents that never existed. A Congressional
staffer during the Carter administration could have typed something up on his or
her trusty IBM typewriter and went to some common location and made photocopies
of it. A staffer during the Nixon administration could have made a copy
somewhere, but probably used carbon paper. This is not the world for
distributing documents broadly, let alone creating new ones.
American history is full of purloined letters and documents, making it into the
newspapers or public domain. Congress has been producing reports since at least
1789. But access to these has always been limited to small groups even within
Congress itself and a few well-placed Congressional reporters. Only occasionally
did they filter out with much controversy and publicity. The historical rarity
and secrecy of these documents, now increasing available, is part of their
allure today.
I now see several hundred seemingly private letters from Members of Congress
every month. I can read an equal number of reports. I see many bills in their
draft form, continuously, every day. I read Congressional staff analysis; they
even summarize bills and committee reports for me. I read the Congressional
Research Service reports like they were box scores in the morning newspaper.
Twenty years ago I was amazed that I could read a bill online; today I can follow
the details of decision making in Congress while I lie on the beach in Bimini.
Now think about the implications of this.
Civil liberties groups, librarians and "open government" advocates are rejoicing!
Everything is in the open, open for debate, critique. Elected representatives
are watched and corrected, chastised and supported continuously. The smoke
filled rooms are now smoke free. Cronyism, corruption, back room deals are
exposed to the sunlight of public inspection. Mainline media groups are no
longer the arbiters of news; anyone whether on K Street or Boise can see what is
really happening. The American Republic is moving into one giant New England
Town Meeting. Everyone knows the others little secrets, nothing is private, and
all is seemingly known.
The other side of this coin is gridlock. Political and ideological positions are
monitored and anyone, no matter how well informed or ill-informed plays a role.
The curmudgeons of yesterday now are today's arbiters of the debate.
Decision-making in a closed document world depended strongly on interpersonal
relationships, trade-offs and even persuasion. I watched a group of Senators
debating the John Bolton (UN Ambassador) nomination react in amazement
when debate in Committee actually changed a few Senator's minds. That doesn't
happen much these days.
Whether this ever-increasing access to decision documents, such as those found
in GW Hot Docs, is good or bad is an interesting debate. Whatever
the true impact of the documents it will not affect the continued access to
them. The genie is out of the bottle.
One type of document that illustrates this point is the Congressional Research
Service (CRS) report. Several thousand of these reports are written every year on
every imaginable topic, limited only by the creative inquisitiveness of the
Members of Congress. Washington, DC insiders have long known of them and
periodically got copies from friendly sources on the Hill, but they were closely
held, accessible only from the Congress and its staff. Now, ordinary,
non-connected, non-elite individuals can read them every morning.
Librarians rejoice! At last these publicly funded documents, written by
government employees, the principal research advisors to our elected members of
Congress are available to everyone! A person in Des Moines could call CRS,
complaining of perceived errors or faulty political opinions, or slant or
outrage as frequently as they do their member of Congress. The
Congressional
Budget Office, once a venerable organ of Congress experienced a similar opening
of their reports. Now they are frequently accused of bias. Of course none of
these excellent organs of Congress include as their mission to write reports for
the general public, they write reports for Congress.
I am a bit ambivalent about this newfound availability of information. The town
meeting junkie in me rejoices, but the sober political science geek is concerned and
wonders how anything can get done in Congress. This morning I woke up in
Washington, DC, but really I am in a small town hall meeting in Maine correcting
a Senator on global nuclear proliferation treaties in Congress and the elderly lady
down the street on a new dog leash ordinance. The town meeting continues all day
long.
The American Republic is becoming more democratic, perhaps more truly
democratic. The critique of democracy going back to Plato is coming closer to
relevance than it has ever been in the past. The representative democracy in
Washington is all about trading, one vote on one topic in exchange for support
on another; the individual representatives determine the priorities. With the
new openness, these priorities are more closely and much more quickly examined.
Documents, drafts, and reports put the representative in the middle of
whirlwind. The individual citizen, particularly represented on issues by a
several thousand groups, is now the representative. It used to be we hoped our
elected representatives used wisdom and judgment when reading the documents.
Will the new citizen representatives do the same?
Primary source documents – letters, reports, drafts of bills and amendments
provide a view of the legislative process to an audience that they were
originally not intended. As a result the documents themselves have changed. In
some cases the new recipients have a better perspective than the old guard in
Washington, DC, in other cases they mobilize forces that can tie the Republic
into knots. Welcome to the American Town Meeting.