[Congressional Record: December 13, 2007 (Senate)]
[Page S15456-S15457]
LAUNCH OF USASPENDING.GOV
Mr. OBAMA. Mr. President, I am very pleased to celebrate today's
launch of USAspending.gov. This is an important day, an important
milestone on the path to greater openness and transparency in the
Federal Government. This site helps us to achieve a very simple and
powerful vision: a vision that, in a democracy, the people ought to
know what their Government is doing: how the Government is raising and
spending money, how it is making and enforcing law, how it is
supporting projects, how decisions are being made, and how results are
being evaluated.
It is not a Democratic vision or a Republican vision. It is a
commonsense vision of Government transparency and accessibility. It is
a vision that rejects the idea that Government actions and decisions
should be kept secret or classified. It is a vision that believes that
information is at the heart of democracy and that we all must resist
the dangerous trend of withholding or classifying or burying
information that the American people have a right to know and need to
know if they are to hold their leaders accountable.
I have been very troubled by the extent to which America has become a
nation of government secrets. More and more information is kept secret
or made intolerably complicated and inaccessible. More and more
decisions are made behind closed doors with access limited to insiders
and lobbyists.
USAspending.gov along with watchdog groups will give us all tools to
help buck that trend. It will help by opening Government processes up
to public view. It will provide a window into the Federal budget so all
Americans can see how their tax dollars are being spent--how their
Nation's resources are being used and obligated, where money is going
as well as where it is not going. We will be able to see which grantees
and contractors are receiving
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money and the congressional district where the contract's services are
performed. We will see which agencies are purchasing what, from whom,
and where. Technology makes it possible for every American to know what
is happening and to hold elected officials accountable.
If Government spending can't withstand public scrutiny, then the
money shouldn't be spent. If a Government agency isn't willing to be
held accountable for the grants or contracts it awards, then that
agency shouldn't have control over Federal resources. Whether you
believe the Government ought to spend more money or spend less, you
should certainly be able to agree that the Government ought to spend
every penny efficiently and transparently. Democrats and Republicans
can all agree that wasteful spending is unacceptable, whether it is by
FEMA, HUD, DOD, or any other Federal agency.
Transparency by itself is not enough, but transparency is the first
step to holding Government accountable for its actions. Transparency is
a prerequisite to oversight and financial control. We can't reduce
waste, fraud, and abuse without knowing how, where, and why Federal
money is flowing out the door.
USAspending.gov is a very good beginning. The Web site does not yet
deliver everything that it is required to under the law, but its
limitations and shortcomings are transparent, and it will get better
and more complete week after week. I am also confident that people will
use the site and will provide feedback directly on the site's community
``Wiki'' function for collecting and sharing public comments. This will
raise the expectations of all Americans for greater transparency,
access, and accountability. Now it will be up to us elected officials
to meet those expectations.
It is important to point out that this site would not have been
possible without the grassroots efforts of watchdog groups across the
political spectrum who lobbied for passage of the Federal Funding
Accountability and Transparency Act, which Senator Coburn and I like to
call the Transparency Act. The story behind the Transparency Act
embodies the best of our democratic traditions--a bipartisan effort
fueled by ordinary people who refused to accept that the Government
couldn't make public information freely and simply available.
Throughout this process, it has been an honor to work with Senator
Coburn and to witness the dedicated work of the staff at OMB.
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