[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 152 (Friday, December 12, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S6767]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MORNING BUSINESS
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FOIA IMPROVEMENT ACT
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, I am deeply disappointed that last night
the House failed to pass the FOIA Improvement Act. This bipartisan bill
was reported unanimously by the Senate Judiciary Committee last month,
and it was the product of months of hard work by Senator Cornyn and me.
Our bill is supported by more than 70 public interest groups that
advocate for government transparency, and it passed out of the Senate
unanimously. I would think that Members of the House Republican
leadership, who have spent so much time on oversight of the Obama
administration, would support the goal of making government more
accountable and transparent, but instead of supporting this bill, they
have chosen secrecy over sunlight.
The FOIA Improvement Act would codify what the President laid out in
his historic Executive order in 2009 by requiring Federal agencies to
adopt a ``presumption of openness'' when considering the release of
government information under FOIA. This bill would require agencies to
find a foreseeable harm if they want to withhold information from the
public. Prioritizing the people's interest in what their government is
doing, our bill will reduce the overuse of exemptions to withhold
information. Federal agencies have been required to apply this standard
since 2009. They also used this same standard during President
Clinton's terms in office. It was only during President George W.
Bush's term of secrecy that this standard was rolled back. It appears
the House leadership wants to return to that era. It should not matter
who is in the White House, information about what their government is
doing belongs to the people.
In a political climate as divided as this, I had hoped that we could
come together in favor of something as fundamental to our democracy as
the public's right to know, that government transparency and openness
would not just be the standard applied to the Obama administration but
what is applied to every future administration. The FOIA Improvement
Act would have done just that.
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