Goat Hill Confidential

Your home for Alabama politics coverage from the news organizations that make up Bama Fact Check.

'We're not Republicans.' Or are they?
Apr 17, 2011 | 3695 views |  0 comments | 14 14 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Tea Party activists gathered at the Lee County Courthouse to "show their concern about what is going in in Washington and Montgomery," The Opelika-Auburn News reports. Yes, this report is from April 2011, not April 2010. Even though conservatives swept last year's elections, the Lee County activists still see themselves as outsiders. "We want people to gather together and realize that we’re not Republicans," said the event's organizer. "We’re not Democrats. We’re not Libertarians. We’re Americans." Well, they're definitely not Democrats. Headliners at the event were Supreme Court Justice Tom Parker and former state Senate candidate Kim West. Parker won his court seat as the GOP nominee last year. And according to her website, West is president of Republican Women of East Alabama and a member of the Lee County Republican Executive Committee. Though one of her campaign ads did feature West hugging a donkey. Oh, and Abraham Lincoln was also there.
Whistleblower protection bill reintroduced; either Sessions or Kyl killed earlier measure
Apr 11, 2011 | 5260 views |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act has been reintroduced in U.S. Congress, according to the public radio station WNYC. The bill, which is designed to protect government workers who expose fraud, waste and wrongdoing, earned a majority of votes in both houses of Congress last year. However, under special Senate voting rules, one senator was able to halt the bill by putting a hold on the bill. A secret hold. A few weeks ago, WNYC began working with the public and with media organizations -- including Bama Fact Check -- to get members of the Senate to go on the record, either confirming or denying that they were the source of the secret hold. The effort has narrowed down the list of possible secret holders to two -- either Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Alabama, or Sen. John Kyl, R-Arizona. Weeks ago, Sessions' spokeswoman told Bama Fact Check that the senator doesn't comment on holds. Kyl has sent constituents a letter saying senators "did not have sufficient time to review" changes to the House version of the bill. To learn more about the bill and the WNYC effort, go to the radio station's website.
The biggest story you didn’t hear this week
Apr 08, 2011 | 1637 views |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A lot happened in Montgomery over the last few days. An Arizona-style immigration bill, limits on abortion, and Gov. Bentley’s 2012 budget all advanced in the Legislature –- and those were just the headline items. But perhaps the biggest story on Goat Hill –- biggest long-term, anyway –- moved ahead this week, though it was with much less fanfare. Dana Beyerle, of The Tuscaloosa News and other associated newspapers, was on hand as legisla-tors began their discussions about reapportionment. Remember reapportionment? It’s the process, undertaken every 10 years, to make legislative districts match the new census numbers, so that every voter gets more or less equal representation. As any high school civics student knows, the way you draw the districts can determine the outcome of elections in those districts for years to come. In reap-portionment hearings, legislators are dealing with the raw stuff of political power, and they behave accordingly. In other words, it’s brass-knuckle time. So far, the Reapportionment Committee hasn’t produced any epic battles. But the first meeting didn’t go all that well. The Tuscaloosa News – Confusion reigns over committee
Immigration, ethics laws changes... and a tougher 2013?
Apr 05, 2011 | 1483 views |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Lots going on in Montgomery today. Here's a quick rundown of just a few items being discussed: * An Arizona-style immigration bill, which some say may prompt a lawsuit * Changes to teacher tenure rules. * A "clarification" of the word "corruptly" in ethics laws, which most experts say is a watering-down of a December ethics bill. And then, of course, there's Gov. Bentley's proposed budget. By the way, in a speech in Lee County, the governor said the 2013 budget situation could be worse.
Perry: State to close $75 million in corporate tax loopholes
Apr 02, 2011 | 1409 views |  0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Finance director David Perry has spent the last week pitching Gov. Robert Bentley's budget plan. When Bentley unveiled the plan earlier this month, a few people noted that, despite lots of talk about cuts, the proposed 2012 General Fund budget is $143 million dollars bigger than the 2011 budget. Now the other shoe has finally dropped. This week in Montgomery, Perry announced a plan to raise $30 million in revenue by closing corporate tax loopholes. A couple of days later, Perry told the editors of The Anniston Star about about a plan to generate another $75 million in corporate tax revenue. Perry also announced an effort to tap into earmarked funds -- the huge pool of tax revenue that goes straight to various agencies without appearing in either the General Fund or the Education Trust Fund budget. In addition, Perry made a a fairly striking statement about CEOs and the good they do for the state's poor. Read to the bottom of the story to see it.
Confederate park untouched despite budget hardship
Mar 31, 2011 | 1526 views |  0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Here’s a story that began as a fact check. A few days ago, someone wrote to The Anniston Star to protest a rumored proposal to close Confederate Memorial Park in Marbury. The park, the letter-writer said, is funded by the state’s fund for Confederate widows. A Confederate widows’ fund in 2011? Really? The Star just had to check that one out. And what they found was a story that shows just how complicated a state budget can be. You won’t believe how recently the state has been paying Confederate widows’ pensions. Read the story to find out. From The Anniston Star – Confederate park unscathed in budget battle
'Show your license' bill irks civil liberties advocates
Mar 26, 2011 | 1032 views |  1 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A few days ago, The Decatur Daily featured an eye-opening story about a bill that would allow police to demand that you show them your license if there is "reasonable cause" to believe that you've been driving. No need to be behind the wheel -- the officer simply needs to suspect that you've driven at, well, some point. Opponents are calling it a "show me your papers" law. Supporters point out that driving without a license is a significant safety issue, and say the measure would help police catch repeat traffic offenders. The Anniston Star followed up with its own story.This time, the bill's sponsor, Rep. Kerry Rich, R-Albertville, was asked if the bill would allow a police officer to demand licenses from people at, say, a movie theater, on the assumption that they had to drive to get there. "Now you're just being stupid," Rich replied. Stupid or not, supporters and opponents of the bill are meeting next week to hammer out compromise wording -- wording that may keep this from becoming a "papers please" bill.
We still don't know effect of Bentley's old jobs plan
Mar 24, 2011 | 1765 views |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print
This week, Gov. Robert Bentley proposed a jobs plan that would offer a $1,000 tax credit to small businesses for every new employee they hire. The plan even defines "small business," something one rarely sees in political rhetoric. (For purposes of the bill, a small business is one with fewer than 50 employees.) Bentley's proposal, the Full Employment Act of 2011, is based the Alabama Reemployment Act of 2010, which Bentley sponsored last year. Bentley made much use of the 2010 act during his gubernatorial campaign, saying his bill brought 5,000 jobs to the state. Here's the kicker: we still don't know if that 5,000-job estimate is correct. Bama Fact Check looked into the claim last year. Tuscaloosa News reporter Brian Reynolds found that Bentley's numbers were based on a good estimate -- 4,600 jobs were created in Alabama by a similar federal program -- but noted that we won't really know the full impact until businesses file their tax returns this year. Well, those returns are still not in, as The Anniston Star noted today. And, by extension, we don't know how much the program has cost the state, in terms of lost revenue. Mind you, no one is saying Bentley's tax credits won't create jobs. In fact, the business community has welcomed both the 2010 and 2011 bills. But it turns out to be fairly hard to quantify just how much good any one reform has done.


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