Speaker of the House John Boehner
said on Sunday, “I don’t think anyone quite understands” how to resolve the
current U.S. federal budget crisis.
Well, here’s an idea.
In
his new book, Citizenship: How to Take the Town Square Digital and
Reinvent Government (Penguin, 2013), Gavin Newsom argues that, in the
Information Society, we need to connect citizens to government in new ways, by
giving them access to government data so that they can better participate in
solving public problems. The
result is more of a bottoms-up than top-down approach to governance. The problem with today’s federal
government is that it is paralyzed by radical ideology and conflicting
loyalties. There is no
constructive conversation, making good top-down government decisions almost
impossible around important issues.
So, let’s try a bottoms-up approach.
A
first step is to have transparent data.
What, in detail, is the problem?
What, in detail, have the various parties—the Administration,
Congressional Republications, Congressional Democrats, various non-governmental
interest groups—proposed? We
need to be able to put all of the different solutions side by side with each
other and with the budget itself to understand the options. Then, we—and by “we” I mean the
citizenry—need to be able to look at the impact of different options and,
perhaps, suggest our own solutions.
The
problem is that we are not, at this point, getting good information, either
from government directly or from the news media. Or, at minimum, dependable information is not easy to
find. Confirming and organizing
the data so that people can attempt their own understanding of the problem,
evaluate the various solutions that have been proposed, and suggest their own
improvements would be a great contribution that any one of the national news
outlets could make. It would go
much further toward creating public understanding than the constant
point-counterpoint panels of political hacks and hired guns.
The
Fall 2012 update of The Federal Government’s
Long-Term Fiscal Outlook makes clear that simple solutions—the kind
we’ve been hearing about in the press—are not going to work. It notes, for example: “Discretionary spending
limits alone do not address the fundamental imbalance between estimated revenue
and spending, which is driven largely by the aging of the population and rising
health care costs” (GAO-13-148SP).
As a public, we
need to develop an expectation that the solution will be complex, but that we
will need to understand that complexity so that we can evaluate what our
elected representatives propose as solutions. Having the data and some structure for thinking about
options—and then being encouraged to delve into the material to find possible
solutions—could be very helpful in the long run.
This
would make a great project for CNN or another of the major national news
outlets that lays claim to objectivity.
What a way to empower voters to help their government.
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