Clean State Legislatures

12
Clean State Legislatures Tyler Arnot Jordan Bell Kristina Connolly Andrea Tacconi

description

Clean State Legislatures. Tyler Arnot Jordan Bell Kristina Connolly Andrea Tacconi. Michigan State Legislature. Professional Legislature Size of State Legislative Staff of Michigan, 2003: Permanent Staff: 1,153 Session-Only Staff: 0 Total Staff: 1,153 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Clean State Legislatures

Page 1: Clean State Legislatures

Clean State LegislaturesTyler ArnotJordan BellKristina ConnollyAndrea Tacconi

Page 2: Clean State Legislatures

Michigan State Legislature

Professional Legislature

Size of State Legislative Staff of Michigan, 2003:Permanent Staff: 1,153Session-Only Staff: 0Total Staff: 1,153

Legislative regular sessions convenes on January 11 and meets throughout the year.

Legislator compensation, 2005: $79,650 a year$12,000 yearly expense allowance for session and interim (voucher) set by compensation commission.

Incumbent reelection rates, 1994:Senate:

Running: 27Reelected: 26Percentage: 96%

House:Running: 93Reelected: 91Percentage: 98%

Page 3: Clean State Legislatures

Michigan State LegislatureTotal state turnover, 1994-1996:

Total members: 148Total turnover: 23% Total turnover: 16%

Time demands of legislative work:80-100% time

% of women legislators: 20.3%% of African American legislators: 14%

Term limit:House: 6 yearsSenate: 8 years

Page 4: Clean State Legislatures

Iowa State LegislatureHybrid Legislature

Size of state legislative staff, 2003:Permanent staff: 172Session-only staff: 198Total staff: 370

Legislative regular sessions lasts roughly 4 to 5 months.2002- January 14-April 12, 89 days

Legislator compensation, 2005: $21,380.54 a year$86/day ($65/day for Polk County)

Incumbent reelection rates, 1994:Senate:

Running: 15Reelected: 15Percentage:

100%House:

Running: 74Reelected: 71Percentage: 96%

Page 5: Clean State Legislatures

Iowa State LegislatureTotal state turnover, 1994-1996:

Total members: 150Total turnover: 35% Total turnover: 23%

Time demands of legislative work:60-70% time

% of women legislators: 20%% of African American legislators: 2%

No term limits

Page 6: Clean State Legislatures

Minnesota State LegislatureHybrid Legislature – No Term Limits

70 – 80% of the Time Spent Working as a Legislature

1979: 641 Members – 66% Permanent Staff1988: 804 Members – 75% Permanent Staff1996: 841 Members – 76% Permanent Staff2003: 684 Members – 88% Permanent Staff

Session: 120 Legislative Days During Each Biennium- Begins On The First Tuesday in January of

Odd Years- Convenes On a Date Set By Both Bodies in

Even Years

Page 7: Clean State Legislatures

Minnesota State Legislature• Total Legislative Expenditure: $46,300,000/year

• Salary: $31,140.90/year For Legislatures• Senate: $66/day• Representatives: $66/legislative day

- Unvouchered, Set By Legislature

• Turnover Rate (’94 – ’96) – House: 20% Senate: 16% Total: 19%

• Incumbents- House: 91% Re-election Rate- Senate: No Data

• Women – 29.9%- House: 37 Senate: 23 Seats: 201

• African Americans – 1%- House: 2 Senate: 0 Seats: 201

Page 8: Clean State Legislatures

Wisconsin State LegislaturePermanent staff: 756Session only staff: 0Total Staff: 756Session length: meets throughout the year

Operating Expenditures: $60.29 million ($456,000 per legislator)

Legislative salary: $45,569/yearPer diem: maximum $88

Page 9: Clean State Legislatures

Wisconsin State LegislatureTurnover rate: (2002) Senate: 18%, House:

15%Estimated percentage of time working as a

legislator: 80-100%Percentage women legislators: 25.8%Percentage African-American legislators: 6%No term limits

Page 10: Clean State Legislatures
Page 11: Clean State Legislatures

Bitter Partisanship

• Gridlock• Intense rivalries • Deadlock • State budget

Full Time Legislature

• Inane policies

Page 12: Clean State Legislatures

Fundraising

• Competitiveness• Political bickering• “Strong-arm” tactics

Caucus Scandal

• Special interest groups• Jensen and Schultz