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AMERICAN
GOVERNMENT & |
LATE 20th CENTURY SOCIO-POLITICAL EVENTS, REFORMS, AND LINKS
This document is a descriptive guide and glossary of terms for modern (1960-2003) attempts at reforming programs and processes of the American political and economic system with special emphasis upon events and ideas that have shaped the American sense of justice and rights. The topic of welfare is given extensive treatment, and links are provided to a wide variety of informative resources, including many of the nation's public interest groups. Criminal justice reform is only a small part of governmental reform, but the former needs to be seen in the wider context of all human service delivery systems. Other sites: {Political Science Guide to the Internet}{Criminal Justice Thinktanks}
My wish list for government reform would go as follows: (1) government should be faster, there should be no holdups because they are choking on data, nor lack of interagency action because memorandums of understanding need to be drawn up; (2) government should be highly productive, and a good benchmark would be the capability to do 60% more with 20% less; (3) government should be smarter and cleverer, attracting the best and brightest to public service, but always listening to the little guy; (4) government should expedite industry and commerce, ensuring the fastest possible start-ups for new ideas and the quickest recovery from crashes and bankruptcies; (5) government should be more trusting and sharing, as there are only a few genuine needs for secrecy, no need for civil rights abuses, and that attitude that they are better than anybody else has got to go; (6) government should be proactive and futuristic, utilizing the latest technology; (7) government should embrace hegemony, and seek standardized yet fair ways of dealing with the international media and global concerns; (8) government should be robust, constantly expanding, and seeking new laws and rules of evidence.
ABSCAM
-- In 1979, the FBI rented a house in Washington, D.C. and posed as wealthy
Middle Eastern businessmen and lured several members of Congress there and filmed them
taking money in return for political favors. Seven legislators were caught up in the
sting; four went to prison, one resigned, one was defeated in election, and one was the
first to be expelled from Congress since the Civil War. The sting served as a model for
similar operations at the state and local levels throughout the 1980s, including the Mayor
Marion Berry bust.
ADMINISTRATIVE REORGANIZATION
-- Every president since Lyndon Johnson has proposed major reorganization
of their cabinet and/or addition/elimination of agencies. Johnson created Transportation,
Education, and HEW; Nixon created OMB, Carter created OPM and Energy, and Reagan proposed
eliminating Education. Governors usually follow suit in reorganizing their cabinets, but
only 22 states grant the governor the power of reorganization, severely limiting reform
possibilities in most states.
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION -- A
concept mentioned in the 1964 and 1991 Civil Rights Acts which contends that
"proactive" policies, like quota systems, are needed to ensure employment and
education for minorities and women in response to the "vestiges" of past and
present discrimination. Counterreforms occured in the 1990s, such as California's 1995
rollback of affirmative action in education.
AFDC (Aid to Families with
Dependent Children) -- Once, the nation's largest (over 36 million
mothers) welfare program (jointly funded 50-50 by national and state governments
regardless of cost), created by the Social Security Act of 1935 and known then as ADC (Aid
to Dependent Children). Now, what's left is ACF
(Adm. for Children and Families) and TANF
(Temporary Assistance for Needy Families). Originally intended to provide support to
children whose fathers had died, but the largest number of recipients in recent years have
been divorced and never-married women (out-of-wedlock children). Counterreforms in 1994
(Contract with America) produced workfare (must work to receive benefits), phase-outs
(limitation on number of years to receive benefits), and denials (children born while
already receiving benefits are not eligible). Families with children under age 18 who are
deprived of support from one or both parents are eligible. "Deprivation" means
death, desertion, divorce, incarceration, deportation, only one legal parent or continued
absence of one parent. Some states allow payment to pregnant women and two-parent families
(under AFDC-UP, Unemployed Parent), and most states have AFDC-EA (Emergency Assistance)
which pays rent or provides in-kind shelter. AFDC pays cash benefits (about $375 a month)
and also carries Medicaid and food stamps. The states are also able to seek waivers (AFDC
waivers) of federal rules, allowing the carrying out of a "pilot" or
demonstration project that loosens or tightens AFDC eligibility requirements.
ADR (Alternative Dispute Resolution)
-- A late 1980s procedure to settle legal disputes (mostly civil cases)
without going through formal court proceedings, the most popular form of which is
mediation, in which a third-party acts as intermediary to help find a solution, but does
not have power to create a solution. Arbitration, another form in which the third party
does have power to create a solution, has been incorporated into the statutes of at least
half the states while mediation exists mainly as a voluntary option.
AGRICULTURE SPENDING LIMITS -- Various
arms of the Department of Agriculture, like the Credit Insurance Fund, have been big
spenders and have a complicated fiscal administration structure; and every year, there are
thousands of delinquent, emergency-disaster loans to farmers which are just compounded by
the refinancing of delinquent borrowers.
AMATEUR
POLITICIANS -- A recurring idea that those with NO previous political
experience would make better officeholders than professional politicians. Origins:
unknown. Popular among academics.
ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union) -- Founded in 1920 to expand the freedoms guaranteed in the Bill of Rights; involved
in lobbying for censorship, education, national security, voting, corrections issues.
AEI (American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy
Research) -- A conservative think-tank, founded in 1943 to preserve the
free enterprise system, limited government, a strong defense, and traditional values;
involved in book publication, public education, and "Election Watch" coverage of
candidates.
ALFRED P. MURRAH FEDERAL
BUILDING BOMBING -- A 1995 event in which 168 people were killed,
including 19 children; suspected "John Doe" terrorists turned out to be Tim
McVeigh and Terry Nichols; drew attention to dangers of domestic terrorism.
AMERICAN INDIAN GAMBLING -- The 1987 Supreme Court case (California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indians)
giving Indian tribes the right to operate tax free/regulation free casinos on their
reservations is the most recent government effort to help resolve Indian problems. The
1988 Indian Gaming Regulatory Act reestablished state regulation, but also provided for
the right of tribes not having casinos to sue states that try to block development of
gaming operations. No counterreforms, but considerable criticism from citizens.
AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT
-- A sweeping 1990 piece of legislation that requires special
accommodations be made for anyone with physical or mental disabilities; applies to all
employers and any establishment receiving public funds.
ANNEXATION -- A legal action by which governments (usually cities)
expand their physical boundaries by absorbing adjacent land; seen as a solution to many
inner-city problems and a way to revitalize downtowns by expanding central city influence
and appearing more adept at servicing needs of less complex suburbs.
BACKDOOR SPENDING RESTRICTIONS --
Backdoor spending goes outside the regular
appropriations oversight process by allowing government agencies to borrow money to
provide for contractual services, and also applies to "untouchable" entitlement
spending authorized by law. Various "pay-as-you-go" budget reforms since 1990
have attempted to restrict this major source of debt and tax increase.
BAKKE
DECISION -- The 1978 case of Regents of the University of California
v. Bakke in which Alan Bakke, a white male was twice denied admission to the
University Medical School even though his admission scores were higher than those of
minority students who were accepted into the program. Brought public attention to the
problem with racial quota systems.
BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT -- Since the early 1980s, this reform proposal to
amend the Constitution has been made repeatedly each year since 48 of the states have it
but the federal government does not. Last defeated in 1996 by two votes short of a
two-thirds majority, critics argue that it would seriously jeopardize government's ability
to respond to crises in crime, homelessness, poverty, and drug abuse. The Balanced Budge
Act of 1997 significantly changed the shape of Medicare and Medicaid.
BIG SWAP -- A Reagan 1982 proposal to allow states full control of
AFDC and food stamps in exchange for federal control of Medicaid; met with considerable
resistance from governors.
BLOCK GRANTS -- Grants which provide federal "no-strings
attached" money to state and local governments for use in job training, mental
health, crime control, and transportation projects and are seen as a way to give local
agencies more power and flexibility. Over 15 block grant programs exist as of 1998, but
are minuscule compared to the number of "strings-attached" categorical grants.
BRIDEFARE -- A type of welfare reform in which unmarried recipients
are required to become married in order to continue receiving benefits.
BROOKINGS INSTITUTION -- a
research group that publishes public policy reform treatises.
BUDGET DEFICIT -- Every year since 1969, America has spent more
money than it has brought in, compounded in 1982 by Reagan defense spending ($200
billion), the 1991 Savings & Loan bailout ($61 billion), and the 1992 Persian Gulf war
($115 billion). "Untouchable" entitlement programs (Medicare, Medicaid, Social
Security) make up two-thirds of the federal budget, and these programs have an inflation
rate of about 16% a year. Interest on the National Debt runs at about 15% a year.
Recurring deficits force more money to go towards interest payments, and with the
government having to borrow money to pay off debt, less is available to address social
problems. "Zero Freedoms" is the term used to describe what U.S. citizens will
have in the year 2000 if government debt totals $13 trillion -- $169,000 per taxpayer.
BUDGET ENFORCEMENT ACT OF 1990 -- The first effort to control
entitlement spending (except Social Security which is protected) by requiring cuts in
Medicare/Medicaid if Congress decides to create a new entitlement program or approves a
new tax break without raising other sources of revenue; incorporates the
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act which requires across-the-board cuts if the deficit reaches
certain limits.
CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM -- Since
1971 and the Watergate scandal, the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA), which has been
revised repeatedly, remains the nation's sole regulation regarding campaign financing,
requiring disclosure statements (of any receipts over $5000 and any expenses over $200)
and public funding of presidential campaigns. Also allows political action committees
(PACs) to spend unlimited amounts of money "independently" from funds spent by
their candidates and political parties to spend unlimited amounts of "soft
money" for party-building activities. Lobbyists also use "bundling" to get
around the $5000 limit by contributing numerous $4999 donations under individual names.
Various reforms have been proposed since 1971, but Congress has to date passed none, and
there are distinctive patterns in the nation's top campaign contributors.
CATO INSTITUTE -- Founded in 1977
to promote traditional American principles of limited government, individual liberty, and
peace; influential in establishing the policy of trickle-down economics (Reaganomics).
CENTER FOR LAW AND SOCIAL POLICY -- Public interest organization focusing upon the economic condition of low-income
families with children.
CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY -- Founded in 1989, a watchdog group to promote ethical behavior in government by
providing support for in-depth investigations to leading journalists.
CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES
-- Issues reports on policy initiatives affecting poor Americans, poverty
among women, and the safety net of programs helping the poor.
CENTER ON SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY AND LAW -- Conducts technical
analysis of the regulatory mechanisms in place for income maintenance and benefits
programs.
CHILD CARE SUBSIDIES -- Programs (or more accurately, lack of
programs) that subsidize (pay for) the costs of transitional child care for AFDC mothers
and/or poor working people so that they can look for or go to work and get off welfare
faster. Recognized as a serious problem in 1988, the existence of such programs are
somewhat rare and vary dramatically from state to state.
CHILDREN'S DEFENSE FUND -- A group that monitors policy and attempts to educate government officials about
the needs of poor and minority children, including such issues as teen pregnancy, mental
health, and youth employment.
CHRISTIAN COALITION -- Conservative
organization founded in 1989 to fight back against the liberalization of American culture;
closely affiliated with televangelist Pat Robertson, the group scrutinizes textbooks used
in schools and closely monitors educational programs like sex education and social
studies.
CITIZENS FOR TAX JUSTICE -- A
coalition of labor unions and other groups, founded in 1979, that promotes fairer tax
policies for working people and the poor, fighting tax breaks that favor the rich.
CITY COMMISSION -- A form of local government that is on the verge
of disappearing where the city is run by the heads of major departments who are elected by
voters.
CIVIL JUSTICE REFORM -- A variety of reforms including court
consolidation, court administration, but most centering on types of Alternative Dispute
Resolution.
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF
1964 -- The nation's most important law protecting civil rights; also
brought African-Americans greater access to restaurants, motels, theaters, and other
accommodations (Title II); desegregated schools (Title III); and created the EEOC (Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission) (Title VII).
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1991 -- Designed
to reverse a series of Supreme Court decisions in the 1980s that weakened Affirmative
Action by requiring plaintiff in a discrimination suit to carry the burden of proof;
passage was helped by public outcry over sexual harassment hearings involving Supreme
Court nominee Clarence Thomas.
CIVIL RIGHTS LOBBY -- The term is
used to refer to the 185 different civil rights interest groups in America that form a
loose coalition; major groups include the NAACP, League of Women Voters, and the Mexican
American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT -- Refers to a time period from 1954 (Brown
v. Board of Education) to 1968 (Fair Housing Act) when a visible segment of the
American population became more radicalized and began to experiment with militant tactics
to seek more dramatic reforms. Numerous splits developed between and within civil rights
groups regarding draft resistance, student protest, black militancy, and drug policy, but
all groups cohered around the common theme of promoting equal and full participation in
U.S. society.
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM -- Federal workers accrue an enormous amount of
vacation and eligibility for time off (almost as if to cover up for the absenteeism rate).
Benefits accrue as soon as they start the job, and bringing personnel policies more in
line with the private sector could save money. One notorious practice, called Reduction in
Force (RIF) provided thousands of federal employees with higher pay than their salary
grades deserved, due to an RIF procedure allowing them to keep their previous salaries for
two years if they are reduced to a lower-level position. Also, about 6% of federal
employees a year file on-the-job injury claims, including psychological disabilities,
which is amazing given the high level of health care benefits.
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM ACT OF 1978 -- A Carter administration
accomplishment that created a Senior Executive Service where top-level bureaucrats would
receive performance pay and a Merit System where the junior grades would receive more
frequent job evaluations and step raises based on efficiency assessments.
CLINTON-LEWINSKY SCANDAL --
1997-Ongoing investigation into reported affair President Clinton had with
White House intern, Monica Lewinsky.
COMMON CAUSE -- Founded in
1970 to advocate open and accountable government, this watchdog group has been involved in
campaign finance reform, nuclear arms control, defense spending, and taxation.
CONCURRENT BUDGET RESOLUTIONS -- Started in 1982, these documents,
which do not have the force of law (because they are concurrent resolution) are drawn up
by a joint Budget Committee and contain binding spending and tax limits that the other
committees have to abide by in their appropriations hearings.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST LAWS -- Group of reforms since the early 1960s
that established fairly complicated rules on financial holdings that might create
conflicts of interest, introduced financial disclosure reports, placed restrictions on
gifts and honoraria, and established rules regulating employment (revolving door) after
government service.
CONSOLIDATION -- The merger of two or more cities into one larger
city or the merger of a county and all its cities into one governmental entity. Seen as a
way to address inner-city problems and produce one, larger centralized problem-solver.
CONSUMPTION TAX -- Seen as the most feasible alternative to the
current income tax system because it would not require much alteration in reporting
requirements. It works by not taxing any income used for savings or investment, but only
income used for consumption. Similar to state sales taxes, the most common consumption tax
in America. Supporters say it would boost the economy; critics say it's a tax haven for
the rich.
CONTRACTING FOR SERVICES -- Also referred to as the Lakewood Plan,
this approach is used by local governments to contract with one another for provision of
services, such as police protection.
CONTRACTING OUT -- The government's hiring of private companies to
provide public services, from trash pickup to prison management. One of the inefficiencies
of government is that it tries to do everything, food service, maintenance, laundry, fire
fighting, etc., and these functions consume major portions of agency budgets. Contracting
out can save billions a year.
CORPORATE INCOME TAX -- The nation's third largest source of income,
behind personal income and social security taxes. Corporate income taxes are also used in
46 states, though states rely far more heavily on sales and personal income taxes. This
revenue source has been dropping since 1980 due to repeated tax cuts and generous
depreciation allowances designed to lure business into the U.S. or a particular state.
COST OF LIVING ADJUSTMENTS (COLAs) -- Military and civil service
retirement plans are fully indexed to the consumer price index, a benefit virtually
unheard of in the private sector. As a result, federal employees could earn more from just
their pension than an equally graded employee could earn in salary.
COUNCIL-MANAGER -- The most popular form of city government in the
U.S. where formal power resides with a council, but the day-to-day operations (budget,
policy, hiring-firing) are left to a manager. Some systems also have a mayor, but this
person usually has no more power than any other council member. Designed to reduce
corruption and make government more efficient and professional.
COUNCILS OF GOVERNMENTS
(COGs) -- Regional groups formed via a 1966 recommendation of the Model
Cities Act where representatives of neighboring cities and counties get together to
coordinate policy in such areas as zoning, transportation, and criminal justice. About 600
such entities exist today.
COUNCIL OF STATE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
(COSCDA) -- A national network of state-level community development
officials who monitor federal legislation and state initiatives on housing, employment,
and economic development issues.
COURT
CENTRALIZATION -- A recurring proposal in which backlog is reduced by
giving the state's supreme court more control over the (budget, personnel, case
assignment, rules and procedures) administration of all state courts, but rarely achieved
in practice and more commonly seen is the appointment of a state court administrator to
oversee day-to-day operations of the whole system.
COURT CONSOLIDATION -- Also known as Court Unification, this recurring proposal calls for the
elimination of minor trial courts (retaining a few small specialized courts). The goal is
to reduce a four-tiered system to a two- or three-tiered system.
CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM -- A variety of reforms including harsher
penalties on criminals, the replacement of indeterminate sentencing with determinate
sentencing, mandatory minimums, "three strikes and you're out" policies,
victim's bills of rights, prison construction, community policing, and alternative
sentences such as electronic monitoring and "scared stright" boot camp
institutions.
C-SPAN -- Created in 1979, this
TV channel was established to help counter public mistrust in government by providing
unedited public television coverage of Congressional hearings and related activities.
DEFENSE DEPARTMENT SPENDING LIMITS -- Much of how the military spends its money involves questionable business
practice, such as the habit of noncompetitive bidding for procurement of spare parts,
accepting bidding underestimates that are generally 80% lower than final costs, and not
charging fees or tolls when the Corps of Engineers provide for more traffic. Another
problem is the issue of commissaries, which were established in the 1800's to provide food
to servicemen in frontier areas, but are today found in metropolitan area bases, costing
the government millions of dollars a year due to steep price discounts.
DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP COUNCIL --
A group of elected Democrats, including Sam Nunn and
Richard Gephart, created this group in 1985 to counter the leftward drift of the party due
to the existence of such groups as Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition.
DEREGULATION -- The reduction or elimination of government
regulations on a whole industry; advocated since 1970 as a way of reducing government's
role in society and countering stagflation. Telephones (1970), Airlines (1978), Savings
& Loans (1980), and Cable TV (1996) represent some of these industries.
DEVOLUTION -- The redistribution of political power from federal to
state and local governments; a regular part of the platform of every conservative policy
since 1960.
DIGITAL GOVERNMENT -- A
movement for use of the Web and other computer technologies to make government
more efficient; also see GovTech
DISASTER PLANNING REFORM -- The government funds disaster relief in
advance by making annual lump-sum appropriations that are not earmarked for specific
disasters, thus allowing the agencies to reallocate as they please. In addition,
"reactive" funding, which occurs after a major disaster, is usually not spent in
full, but is not returned back to the Treasury as it could be.
DISCRETIONARY SPENDING -- Whatever part of a budget that is
"touchable" or "controllable"; that is, excludes entitlement programs,
debt payoffs, and other expenses as mandated by law. Consists of less than 25% of the
overall federal budget, and is decreasing for most governments.
DIVIDED GOVERNMENT -- Where one political party controls the
executive branch and another party holds a majority in both houses of the legislature. The
U.S. has had a divided government every year since 1968 except for the Carter
administration and the first two years of the Clinton administration. More than half of
the states regularly have divided governments each year. Critics argue that the
President's party ought to get bonus seats in Congress to avoid divided government; and
supporters say government works just as well divided.
DOWNSIZING -- A concept that emerged around 1988 in business to make their companies more
competitive with Japanese firms; involves laying off thousands of workers in order to
bring costs down. Many state governments in 1990 announced plans to downsize, but nothing
as severe as thousands of workers. President Clinton in 1993 called for a 12% downsizing
as part of his "Reinventing Government" policy, but this is spread out until the
end of the century. Recently, many managers have talked about "rightsizing",
which is a type of downsizing that is done more selectively and strategically.
EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT (EITC)
-- Beginning in 1994, low-income, single working
parents with earned income less than $27,000 (varies every year) started receiving the
right to claim an extra tax credit (about a $4000 deduction) on their income tax forms so
that they will be guaranteed a refund check or not have as much to pay on their taxes
and/or take the extra money in advance with each paycheck using employer form W-5.. Some
14 million people claim the credit each year which is intended to offset the taxes on
Social Security and other (taxable) benefits that the poor have to report as income.
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY ACT OF 1964 -- A
13 point proposal by President Johnson to establish a "war on poverty" resulting
in passage of VISTA, the Job Corps, Head Start, community action programs, and a number of
other programs.
EDUCATIONAL REFORM -- A variety of reforms including increased federal funding in
poorer school districts, efforts to upgrade standardized test scores (in the wake of the
1983 report A Nation at Risk which showed American students behind their foreign
counterparts), school choice policies or voucher programs where parents could choose which
schools to send their children to, and unified school districts to give more
administrative rulemaking authority to individual schools. In 1994, Clinton's Goals 2000
Educate America Act was passed by Congress, committing the nation to 8 goals by the end of
the century, including outcomes assessment, higher math/science scores, and integration of
technology. Higher education, which fell upon hard times in the 1980s as opposed to the
free-flowing federal funding of the 1970s, was forced to make cuts and raise tuition and
fees, which appear to be stabilizing in the 1990s.
ELECTION SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION -- Usually combined with alternative
systems of voting, such as cumulative voting, limited voting, and single-transferable
voting which eliminates the "winner take all" characteristic of districts
dominated by a particular party, modern technology allows consideration of computerized
electronic systems, including registration, signature validation, balloting, campaign
finance, and general record keeping; being pursued by the Federal Election Commission
since 1990.
ELECTION DAY HOLIDAY -- A way to increase voter turnout by making
Election Day a holiday.
ELECTORAL COLLEGE -- On Election Day in November, voters do not
technically cast their ballots for presidential candidates, but for slates of electors who
are pledged to support particular candidates in the electoral college. On the first Monday
after the second Wednesday in December, the electors meet in their state capitols to cast
their ballots. On January 6, Congress meets in a joint session to count the electoral
ballots. The purpose of this rather indirect method is to produce a winner even if there
is no majority of popular votes. However, a winner of the popular vote can also lose the
electoral vote (if they lost in states with a large number of electors), and this has
happened only three times in U.S. History where the popular winner was denied the
presidency (Grover Cleveland, Andrew Jackson, & Samuel Tilden).
ELECTRONIC TOWN MEETING -- A 1992
concept for revitalizing politics and government by using telecommunications equipment to
bring groups of citizens together to discuss major issues and possibly to vote directly;
sometimes referred to as "teledemocracy".
ELROD
v. BURNS (1976) -- First of a series of
Supreme Court cases in which political patronage was attacked, ruling that employees
cannot be fired because of their party affiliations; nor can any employee be hired solely
on the basis of partisan politics (Rutan v. Republican Party of Illinois 1989).
ENTERPRISE ZONES -- A 1980 idea of reducing tax rates and providing
other incentives for certain urban areas in order to attract business investments. At last
count, over 3,000 such zones existed in U.S. and in 1993, President Clinton expanded on
the idea by creating 9 separate "empowerment zones", 6 urban and 3 rural, around
the country to receive special federal assistance for housing, crime prevention, and
social programs.
ENTITLEMENT PROGRAMS -- A phrase with many connotations, and
sometimes used to describe the one out of every six households in America that receive one
or more of the following need-based benefits: food stamps, school lunch, public housing,
and Medicaid.
ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT -- Started on April 22, 1970 (the first Earth
Day) by a diverse group of public interest organizations to protect and conserve the
nation's vast natural resources, including clean air, water, endangered species, and land
subject to strip mining or toxic dumping. An area of counterreforms since the 1980s.
EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT (ERA) -- An effort to amend the Constitution
that has been a somewhat divisive topic among women's rights groups since the 1920s, but
in 1972 had its best chance by passing through Congress, but failed to be ratified by the
states, mostly due to Southern states voting it down.
ETHICS REFORM ACT OF 1989 -- Created new ethics rules for Congress
and the executive branch while at the same time raising their pay by 30%. The most notable
new rule was a ban on converting unused campaign funds to private use when stepping down
from office.
FEDERAL EMPLOYEES POLITICAL ACTIVITIES ACT -- Under the Hatch Act of 1939,
government employees were banned from participating in political activities, but this act
of 1993 liberalized those restrictions, allowing any participation outside of running
themselves and soliciting contributions from subordinates.
FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD -- Consists
of 12 banks that control the nation's money supply, interest rates, and credit, and acts
independently of either legislative or executive control.
FINE-TUNING -- In fiscal economics, the practice of making minor
adjustments to try to reduce unemployment without increasing inflation at the same time.
While used somewhat in the 1970s, the practice has long since gone out of favor.
FISCAL POLICY -- A government's use of taxes and expenditures to
influence the health of an economy; e.g., to increase spending and reduce taxes to
simulate demand whenever there is a recession; and conversely, to reduce spending and
increase taxes to reduce demand whenever there is inflation.
FLAT TAX -- Where the
same tax rate is applied to all income levels, although allowing the poor to forego paying
any taxes at all. Most flat tax proposals also call for an end to deductions and
exemptions. Most modern tax reform is in the flat tax direction, such as in 1986 when the
number of tax brackets were reduced from 15 to 3. Several politicians, including the
publisher and Presidential contender Steve Forbes, are advocates of the flat tax.
FOOD STAMPS -- A federal program aimed at helping low income people
(working or nonworking) to buy more food and improve their diets, administered by the
Agriculture Department which pays the coupons and half the states' costs in running the
program. Federal rules require that only food can be bought, and state rules determine
what kinds of places (convenient stores, restaurants) food can be purchased. The target of
counterreforms in 1996, the food stamp program will probably be phased out within 4-5
years. Critics say it has created an underground economy since $1 denominations are
allowed to be used when detached from the coupon book. The estimate of food stamp fraud is
$1 billion annually.
FOREIGN POLICY -- From containment of communism (1960s) to détente
(1970s) to vilification of the "evil empire" (1980s), America's foreign policy
has intimately revolved around reacting to communism. Even today's policy (1990s) is one
of getting a dialogue started about human rights with communist countries. Critics argue
that we are overinvested in our concern and resource allocations with communism.
FRANKING --The free mailing privileges that politicians receive to
mail newsletters, surveys, and other material to constituents is often a factor in
reelection rates, and critics argue this gives unfair advantage to incumbents during
election years.
FREE TRADE -- When tariffs (a variety of restrictions) on
foreign-made goods are removed in order to allow businesses to compete in the
international market without government barriers. The U.S. follows a policy of "fair
trade" instead, imposing tariffs on some countries it sees as engaging in
"unfair trade".
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT -- This 1966 act is the nation's most important and only law regarding public access
to government records; strengthened in 1974 to force greater compliance.
FRONTLOADING -- Any state's effort to schedule it's presidential
primary near the beginning of primary season in order to increase their influence on
selection of party nominees.
GAMBLING -- A way some states attempt to solve
their fiscal problems. In 1980, only 13 states held lotteries and only 2 permitted
casinos. Today, lotteries are held in 37 states and 10 states permit casinos. In addition,
other states permit video poker and other forms of legalized betting.
GENERAL ASSISTANCE (GA) -- Also known as general relief programs which have
been around since 1938, this term refers to state and county level cash assistance (about
$180 a month) programs. Only about 17 states have them now since dismantling began in
1975. People on GA also receive food stamps and medical coverage. The largest group
receiving GA are poor black single males who have never completed high school. Cuts in GA
have been associated with higher levels of hunger and homelessness.
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING -- A 1960-1986 practice that channeled a certain
amount of federal tax revenue to state and local governments with no strings attached
according to a distribution formula.
GERRYMANDERING -- The drawing of political districts to benefit a
particular incumbent, party, or race. Considered discrimination in most cases and the
subject of many lawsuits.
GINGRICH, Newt (b. 1943) -- A
congressman and former college professor from Georgia who led a landslide Republican
victory in 1994 with a "Contract with America",
criticizing welfare and liberal programs. Once his party took the majority of seats in
1995, he was quickly elected Speaker of the House where he has obstructed President
Clinton's agenda, the budgetary standoff of 1995 being one example.
GRACE COMMISSION -- A large presidential commission in 1982 that
recommended over 2500 ways to eliminate waste in government and save $400 billion a year;
by the end of his term, President Reagan claimed to have implemented 80% of these
recommendations.
GREAT SOCIETY -- The name for a package of social programs during
the Johnson administration in the 1960s to end poverty and injustice; target of
counterreforms since the 60s.
GUARANTEED MINIMUM INCOME -- A recurring idea since 1973 to provide
every person in America with a livable wage if they are willing to work; largely
associated with Daniel P. Moynihan's books.
GUN CONTROL -- A
recurring idea, but especially relevant in light of the Brady Bill going into effect
during 1998; a controversial area that doesn't seem to get beyond interpretation of the
2nd Amendment.
HAYS
SCANDAL -- A 1976 event where Rep. Wayne Hays was forced to resign when
it was revealed he kept Elizabeth Ray on his office payroll because she was his mistress.
HERITAGE FOUNDATION -- Conservative
organization, founded in 1980, that promotes studies on free enterprise, strong national
defense, welfare reform, criminal justice, and individual liberty.
HILL-THOMAS SCANDAL -- Anita Hill, a University of Oklahoma professor in
1991 claimed Clarence Thomas, Supreme Court nominee, sexually harassed her; followed by
1992 being dubbed the Year of the Woman; marked new era of attention to women's rights.
HOME RULE -- When city and county governments push for greater freedom in
adopting services and programs as they see fit by asking their state governments for home
rule; about half of the states allow home rule, severely limited the possibilities for
reform in the others.
HOUSE BANKING SCANDAL -- A 1991 event in which it was discovered that 269
House members had overdrafts (insufficient funds) in their checking accounts and were not
being penalized for it; 50 Congressmen stepped down after the scandal which also ended a
number of other free perks, such as free flowers, free medical care, and free gym
services.
HOUSE POST OFFICE SCANDAL -- A 1993 event which discovered that Congressmen
were exchanging the free stamps allocated to their office for cash at the Post Office; led
to indictment of Dan Rostenkowski, a powerful Congressmen, and the conviction of the U.S.
Postmaster General.
HUMPHREY-HAWKINS ACT OF 1978 -- Requires a five-year economic plan from
each President to seek no more than 4% unemployment and no inflation.
IMPOUNDMENT -- When a president refuses to
spend money appropriated by Congress.
INCREMENTALISM -- Name for a type of budgeting
process in which last year's expenditures are used as a baseline in developing next year's
allocations.
INCUMBENCY ADVANTAGE -- A modern trend where
90% of incumbents who seek reelection are returned to office; figure is a little lower for
Senate seats.
INITIATIVE -- A type of direct democracy in
which citizens circulate petitions to put proposed laws on the ballot; 24 states allow the
use of initiatives; the most famous of which are California's Proposition 13 (1978) which
spurred a tax revolt across the state and Proposition 187 (1994) which denied state social
services to illegal immigrants. Most notable reform proposal is a National Initiative, but
this has not been taken seriously.
INSPECTOR GENERALS -- Positions
created in 1978 in about a dozen federal agencies to investigate bureaucratic wrongdoings
and report to the heads of agencies and directly to Congress.
INTERSTATE COMPACTS -- The working together to resolve mutual problems;
over 170 compacts exist today involving regional associations and the passage of uniform
state laws.
IRAN-CONTRA
AFFAIR -- In 1986, National Security Adviser Assistant, Lt. Col. Oliver
North was convicted, then found not guilty, of illegally selling arms to Iran to try to
gain release of American hostages in Lebanon and then channeling the profits from the arms
sale to Contra rebels in Nicaragua. Monitoring of Arms Sales
is now done by watchdog groups.
JACKSON, Jesse (b. 1941) -- Civil rights
leader and advocate of social reform to benefit the poor and minorities; worked with
Martin Luther King, Jr. in Operation Breadbasket and SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership
Council); founded PUSH (People United to Serve Humanity), and the "Rainbow
Coalition" (1984).
JOB CORPS -- Established in 1964 to provide eductional and vocational
services to disadvantaged young people aged 14 to 24. Similar in function to VISTA and
Co-op programs which were cut in 1997; similar to the older ACTION agency which was costly
to administer but disbursed billions of dollars a year for volunteer activities.
JOB OPPORTUNITIES AND BASIC SKILLS PROGRAM (JOBS) -- A federal program
created in 1988 (replacing the Work Incentives Program-WIN) that requires all AFDC
recipients, unless too ill to participate, to be evaluated by a state official with regard
to their educational, child care, and supportive service needs and agree to an
individually-developed employment plan based on their skills, job readiness, and
employability. States have been slow in implementing this because tight state budgets
prohibited the development of a bureacracy of "caseworkers" in each county. Most
states have resorted to a statewide version where they try to meet enrollment targets of
11% off welfare each year to qualify for increased federal funding.
JOB TRAINING PARTNERSHIP ACT (JTPA) -- Federal block grant program
established in 1982 (and now mostly gone) which provided funds to the states for training
low-income youth, adults, and displaced workers. Recipients tended to be predominantly
white males while the Jobs Corp tended to be predominantly black males.
JUDICIAL ACCESS -- A variety of efforts to ensure greater access and
availability to the judicial system, from assistance programs to those with disabilities
to translators for those who do not speak English.
JUDICIAL ACTIVISM -- When judges actively use judicial review to overturn
existing laws and reinterpret policy according to their personal beliefs about social
change and protecting individual rights; most notable example was the Warren Court in
1960s which produced the Miranda and Exclusionary Rules.
JUDICIAL CONDUCT COMMISSIONS -- 1990s development, now in effect in all 50
states, to create independent commissions to help resolve charges of judicial misconduct
and remove unfit judges.
JUDICIAL SELECTION REFORM -- In the wake of 1987's defeat of nominee,
Robert Bork to the Supreme Court which was orchestrated by the intense lobbying efforts of
various interest groups, the Senate has created ad hoc commissions to screen potential
nominees and work with the President in smoothing the selection/approval process. States
have also instituted a variety of appointment commissions, eliminated some elected
positions, and established merit plans.
JURY REFORM -- The 1992 Rodney King case
raised expert attention once again to the problems with jury trials, most notably that
amateur jurors are irrational and inconsistent, and jury trials are long and expensive.
Reform proposals range from juror education programs to eliminating juries. The Kenneth
Starr investigation of President Clinton raised attention to the problem of Grand Juries and their misuse.
KEATING FIVE -- Five U.S. senators in the
1980s who were charged with ethics violations for trying to influence federal regulators
over an ailing Savings & Loan owned by a wealthy campaign contributer; only Senator
Alan Cranston was reprimanded, the others were Dennis CeConcini, John Glenn, John McCain,
and Donald Riegle.
KEMP-ROTH TAX CUT -- A defeated tax reform proposal of 1978 which called
for a 10% reduction per year tax cut for three successive years.
KERNER COMMISSION -- A 1968 investigation into the causes of riots in
America which found "police brutality" the spark for most, if not all, riots,
and also pronounced the failure of civil rights efforts to improve the quality of life for
poor urban black people.
KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS -- Ideas associated with early 20th Century economist,
John Maynard Keynes that the capitalist system does not automatically move toward
equilibrium and requires government intervention in fiscal and monetary policies.
KOREAGATE -- 1977 scandal in which 115 Congressmen were reported to have
accepted money, trips, and honorary degrees from South Korean officials and universities
for supporting South Korea's interests; only one Congressman, Richard Hanna, was found
guilty.
LAFFER
CURVE -- 1974 brainstorm behind supply-side economics where
Arthur Laffer (b. Aug, 14, 1990), economics professor, drew a curve on a napkin at a
meeting which showed when taxes are too high, the government will actually lose money.
LEARNFARE -- A type of welfare reform devised in Wisconsin during
1987 that requires teenage children of welfare families to attend school in order for
their family to receive benefits.
LEGISLATIVE REFORM MOVEMENT -- A variety of attempts to modernize and
professionalize the staffing and policy research capabilities of legislators through
improved office space, better equipment, computers, and the addition of staff.
LEGISLATIVE VETO -- When a legislature gives an executive the power to make
an independent decision but reserves the right to overturn any specific decision that it
disagrees with by a simple majority vote.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR ELECTIONS -- Recurring proposal that the expanded role
of lieutenant governor today requires a separate election from the governor's post.
LINE-ITEM VETO -- A power held by many governors (but not by Presidents) to
deny passage of specific portions of appropriations bills; believed to help curtail
legislative riders, better control spending, and reduce deficits.
LITERACY TESTS -- Prior to 1975, some states, particularly in the South,
required literacy tests before voters were allowed to vote. Banned today along with poll
taxes.
LOBBYING -- The
organized and well-orchestrated distribution of gifts and campaign contributions in
attempts to influence the behavior of politicians. All states today require the
registration of lobbyists and most call for financial disclosure by lobbyists, and the lobbyists themselves advocate ethical behavior.
LOSER PAYS RULE -- Proposal in which losers in civil cases must pay court
costs.
LOTTERIES -- Trend from 1980 to create state lottery systems, now in effect
in 37 states, from scratch cards to lottos in order to bolster state finances.
LULUs (Locally Unwanted Land Uses) -- Development projects, waste dumps,
prisons, and low-cost housing projects that are viewed as undesirable (NIMBY - Not in My
Backyard) by residents in the area where they are planned.
MAJORITY-MINORITY DISTRICTS -- A 1982
development in which voting districts are redrawn to ensure the election of minority group
members.
MANAGEMENT BY OBJECTIVES -- A 1970s budgeting technique in which staff are
asked to help identify specific tasks for which they will be held accountable.
MANDATES -- When the federal government (or state) requires states (or
cities) to perform some particular task. Usually unfunded, such mandates only provide a
new law, but do not make available any money to cover the costs. Subject of mandate reform
in 1994 limiting the number every year.
MEANS-TESTED PROGRAMS -- Each year, Health and Human Services (HHS)
releases Consumer Price Index-adusted Poverty-level eligibility guidelines for welfare
programs (such as AFDC) that require recipients to fall somewhere within 33% of these
poverty levels in order to receive benefits. These so-called "poverty levels"
are reported by size of family unit, such as these 1996 figures:
Size of family: Poverty level: |
|
1 |
$7,740 |
2 |
$10,360 |
3 |
$12,980 |
4 |
$15, 600 |
5 |
$18,220 |
6 |
$20,840 |
7 |
$23,460 |
8 |
$26,080 |
MEDICAID
-- Federal program created in 1965 that provides health insurance to the poor (low-income people). Increasingly costly (37 million people; $156 billion), and the target of many reform proposals, including managed health care, rationing, and waivers. Costs are picked up by both state and federal governments (with the federal share usually the larger). It is available to anyone who meets the fairly loose eligibility criteria (anyone receiving GA or SSI or having children when income and assets are low), and covers inpatient, outpatient, office visits, lab tests, x-ray, home health, screenings, family planning, prenatal care, rural health clinics, and all treatment for children under age 21.Some items in this glossary were adapted and modified from the Encyclopedia of American Political Reform (1996) by Richard Clucas; from Welfare Reform: A Reference Handbook (1996) by Mary Hombs, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO; or from the following books:
| Berkowitz, E. & K. McQuaid (1992) Creating the Welfare State. Lawrence, KS: Univ. Press |
Bremmer, R. (1992) The Discovery of Poverty in the U.S. NJ: Transaction Publishers |
Gaylin, W. (ed.) (1978) Doing Good: The Limits of Benevolence. NY: Pantheon |
| Handler, J. (1991) The Moral Construction of Poverty, Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications | In the Shadow of the Poorhouse (1986) NY: Basic Books | Jencks, C. (1992) Rethinking Social Policy. NY: Harper |
| Johnson, B. (1988) The Reluctant Welfare State. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Press. | Katz, M. (1989) The Undeserving Poor. NY: Pantheon Books. | Liebow, E. (1993) Tell Them Who I Am: The Lives of Homeless Women. NY: Free. |
| Mead, L. (1986) Beyond Entitlement: The Social
Obligations of Citizenship NY: Basic Books. |
Moynihan, D. (1986) Family and Nation, San Diego: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich. | Murray, C. (1984) Losing Ground. NY: Basic Books. |
| Patterson, J. (1994) America's Struggle
against Poverty 1900-1994. Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press. |
Pechman, J. (ed.) (1992) Fulfilling America's Promise. Ithaca, NY: Cornell Univ. Press. | Phillips, K. (1990) The Politics of Rich and Poor. NY: Random. |
| Piven, F. & R. Cloward (1993) Regulating the Poor. NY: Vintage Books. | Reiman, J. (1995) The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison. NY: Wiley. | Wilson, W. (1987) The Truly Disadvantaged. Chicago: Univ. Press. |
Also see:
Kahn, L. (2003). Results at the Edge: The Ten Rules of Government Reform.
Lanham, MD: Univ. Press of America.
Trattner, W. (1984) From Poor Law to Welfare State: A History of Social
Welfare in America
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