In 1976, the federal Government in the Sunshine Act was passed, part of a series of acts that sought to bring into the open the business of lawmaking. The thinking was that, as the famous saying goes, sunlight is the best disinfectant, and forcing transparency upon government meetings on key pieces of legislation would curtail the ills of back room dealing. Images of well-heeled men sitting in large, brown leather chairs, the room thick with cigar smoke, filled the minds of those who pushed for those sunshine laws. They wanted more government transparency in order to keep the government accountable to the people. In practice, this came to mean lobbyists and key donors.
It should be remembered that the push for these laws occurred against the backdrop of the Vietnam War and simmering radicalism of the late 1960’s and early ’70’s. Trust in the government was at an all-time low, only to be superseded by today’s dismal approval ratings. Make the government more open, more accountable the mantra went, and the people can vote more intelligently with a view towards their candidate’s public voting record. These laws would be an echo of Federalist 49, in which James Madison wrote, “Government is and should be the servant of the people, and it should be fully accountable to them for the actions it supposedly takes on their behalf."
There was a problem, however. Much of the best government work was traditionally accomplished behind closed doors, away from the partisan lobbyists who could cajole, intimidate, and even threaten lawmakers. Being removed from those eyes allowed lawmakers to cut deals, compromise, and generally get the business of government done without anyone knowing who voted which way. In this manner, one could cross party lines, hammer out deals, and no one would lose face — or their seat.
This is not without precedent. During the meeting of the Second Continental Congress, all of the attendees agreed to keep the negotiations in the strictest confidence, going so far as to draw the curtains of the East Room of the Pennsylvania state house, the same room in which the Declaration of Independence was signed. The same concerns of activists, lobbyists, and those of “faction” were voiced, leading to the convention’s silence. The Founders understood that without this silence, undue pressure would have been placed on members to placate their “base”, and the document, outside of the convention’s mandate anyway, might never have been written.
The rampant partisan political divide in Congress is due to many things, but most importantly, the inability to meet in private to make deals. Today’s intrusive sunshine laws force lawmakers to stand their ground as lobbyists and special interests sit in on these meetings make ready to threaten withholding of funds, or to produce a challenger to their seat of they don’t vote in the lobbyists’ favor. The result is line-in-the-sand partisanship with no hope of compromise. Where once compromise was a common theme, it is now the exception to the rule, primarily due to sunshine laws and the oftentimes overt threat that accompanies the lobbyists who exert undue pressure.
The unintended consequence of sunshine laws has been to shift power away from our legislators and into the hands of the lobbyists and special interest groups. Lawmakers can no longer do their jobs in private, can no longer compromise in the quiet of the back room. They must remain beholden to those interest groups that provide the much-needed funds in order to run their campaigns. While the intention of the sunshine laws was noble, they have empowered special interests to become a problem perhaps even more insidious than the one they were supposed to eliminate. If we really want a bi-partisan government, repealing the sunshine laws is a good first step.
Michael DiMatteo has taught American, European, and world history and political science in the Illinois school system, both public and private, for over 32 years. In 2010, he was recognized as an Illinois Golden Apple Teacher of Distinction. His writings can be found at Think31.com.