Wisconsin legislators give selves a ‘bizarre’ loophole in public records law

A photo of the Wisconsin Capitol Building.
The Wisconsin Capitol Building. Photo by Molly Liebergall.
State Sen. Chris Larson (D-Milwaukee)
Bill Lueders, president of the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council

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4 responses to “Wisconsin legislators give selves a ‘bizarre’ loophole in public records law”

  1. drpaxis Avatar

    All Animals Are Equal. But “Elected” Officials are more equal. I remember teaching that book to undergraduates at the University 50 years ago. Golly, almost all of the rest of us could be slammed with all sorts of penalties for destroying evidence. Sadly, the Republican Party I knew as a young man no longer exists. Honorable people like Gerry Ford, Paul Findley, and Bob Dole (who I knew well) were WWII vets, and pretty upstanding. I worked in the Republican Cloak Room, and knew all the foibles of the Republican members. There were a few who were creepy or lost causes, but today there is basically a lack of honor with few exceptions. This is a great loss to civil and clean government. Now, it is to win by any means “necessary” to preserve personal power over a working, fair republic. And yes, parties go in an out of power by the Will of the People. That is the point of a Democracy. Increasingly, the Trumpcratic party is behaving more like a former Soviet block state, or they are writing a new sequel to Animal Farm.

  2. […] article first appeared on The Badger Project and is republished here under a Creative Commons […]

  3. […] According to the state’s Open Records Law, every public official in Wisconsin must keep their records should anyone from the public want to see them. Except for state legislators. The politicians who wrote the law carved in an exemption for themselves. So state legislators can destroy their records, such as deleting emails, to protect themselves from the Open Records Law. Read The Badger Project’s story on this issue here. […]

  4. […] article first appeared on The Badger Project and is republished here under a Creative Commons […]

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