From the Peoria Journal Star (Editorial):
Sunday, October 28, 2007
EDITORIAL
Spotlight on pay-to-play politics
In Illinois, political favors and campaign contributions are traded like baseball
cards. Sometimes it's hard to follow who gave money to whom, or which company
scored what state contract.
Thanks to Comptroller Dan Hynes, keeping track just got a lot easier.
Hynes' office recently unveiled a Web site dubbed "Open Book," which
lives up to its name. The site (www.OpenBook.ioc.state.il.us.) lists individuals
and firms that do business with the state alongside their donations to elected
officials' campaigns. Visitors can search for a company - say, XYZ Construction
Co. - and see whether it gave money to a politician - say, Public Official A.
Also viewable, down to the penny, are the amounts of a firm's state contracts.
"It's a really terrific system that I think has the potential of unleashing
thousands of ants all over the state to crawl over the problem of pay-to-play
contracting," said David Morrison of the Illinois Campaign for Political
Reform.
Indeed, the Open Book database, updated daily, makes great use of the Internet
as an interactive, investigative medium. It's a must-click, not only for government
wonks and journalists but for any taxpayer who's curious how his or her money
is being spent.
Furthermore, the database is a ray of sunshine concentrated on state government.
While visitors should not just assume that any business they see on the site earned
a state contract because it gave money to the right people, they should appreciate
this heightened transparency. So should elected officials - particularly the Senate
president and governor, who've stalled on introducing ethics reforms to curb the
kind of pay-to-play practices that have made Illinois infamous.
Consider Open Book a trust-building exercise between voters and businesses and
the people who wouldn't be in office without them.