CDR: Wired News tech scorecard for U.S. House of Representatives
Declan McCullagh
declan at well.com
Tue Oct 24 09:15:03 PDT 2000
At Wired News, we've compiled a list of the technology voting records of
each member of the U.S. House of Representatives.
That meant picking seven tech bills and grading all 435 legislators -- at
least the ones who showed up those days -- on their floor votes. If they
chose to take a hands-off approach, they got a "1", while regulatory votes
got a "0." (If you disagree with us, flip the scale around.)
Here's the list sorted by last name (scoll down to find your legislator):
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,39637,00.html
Sorted by score, with the two California reps with 100 percent at the top:
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,39636,00.html
And a summary of the results, with some methodology:
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,39625,00.html
Some interesting results: Purported privacy advocates like Democrat Ed
Markey didn't score well, getting a 33% of 100%, in part because of his
opposition to financial privacy legislation. Republican Bob Goodlatte,
Internet caucus co-chair, got just 43% because of his support for speech
and gambling restrictions.
-Declan
The floor votes scored:
HR2031: A vote to restrict online sales of alcohol. (No is 1)
HR3615: A vote to create a new federal agency to spend $1.25 billion on
rural TV service. (No is 1)
HR3709: A vote to extend a temporary federal ban on Internet taxes. (Yes is 1)
HR3125: A vote to prohibit Internet gambling. (No is 1)
HR1501: A vote on an amendment to restrict the sale of violent material
such as videogames to anyone under the age of 18. (No is 1)
HR10: A vote on an amendment to protect financial privacy by restricting
government monitoring of bank accounts. (Yes is 1)
HR1714: A vote to allow the use of electronic signatures. (Yes is 1)
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