Parisi has voted well on the issues that concern his constituents, such as ethics, campaign and health care reform.
| Incumbent | Incumbent Web Page | Personal Web Page | Who funds the incumbent? |
Joe Parisi (D) |
Joe Parisi | Follow the Money |
A+ - Public funding of judicial campaigns |
A+ Healthy Wisconsin |
A+ Ethics Reform |
Many politicians refuse to answer the questions in the Project Vote-Smart solicitation because they don't want voters knowing where they stand on the issues! They like being able to fudge and evade when being asked about an issue, and having it on record and posted on the web is the last thing they want. Especially when it can be compared to their voting record while in session.
Project Vote-Smart Rating |
INCUMBENT
REPEATEDLY REFUSED TO
PROVIDE ANY RESPONSES TO CITIZENS ON ISSUES THROUGH THE 2004 NATIONAL
POLITICAL AWARENESS TEST Ratings by Interest Groups: http://www.vote-smart.org/issue_rating_category.php?can_id=MWI78595 Votes by Category: |
Wisconsin Conservation VotersRated Incumbent at HIGH acceptance |
Conservation Scorecard on your state
assembly representative
at:
Vote Tracker -- SB1 Ethics Bill Past Scorecards: |
2006 record below |
(Many of those who did not reply simply do not want to go on record as supporting reforms they know they will vote against, and do not want to be held to their word. Others will say Yes and not mean it, or will vote as dictated by their party. It is up to constituents to hold their representatives to their word.)
| Assembly, District 48 | Question 1 | Question 2 | Question 3 | Question 4 | Question 5 | Question 6 |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Parisi:
1. Yes. During the past legislative session, the Governor urged the legislature to pass SB 1 so that he could sign it into law. I, along with every other assembly Democrat, voted to bring SB 1 (ethics reform) up for a vote by the full assembly. Unfortunately, despite the fact that it passed the senate by a wide bi-partisan margin, our motions to bring SB 1 up for a vote in the assembly were thwarted by majority Republicans who voted against it.
2. Yes. During the past legislative session, I co-sponsored Assembly Bill 392 which would have provided for comprehensive campaign finance reform including spending limits and a public financing grant equal to 45% of the spending limit. 6 League of Women Voters of Wisconsin Education Fund
3. Yes. All political advertising, and that is what issue ads are, should carry a disclaimer, and the source of funding for the ads should be made public.
4. Yes.
5. Yes. The make up of legislative and congressional districts should not be determined by the people who currently occupy those seats. An independent commission is an excellent idea.
6. Yes. Absolutely.
7. I believe we have a responsibility to leave our children a legacy of opportunity and hope. We need to build on our strengths by investing in our K12, college and university systems, and by working to guarantee that a college education is affordable and available to every young person in our state. We need to enact ethics and campaign finance reform, and to refocus the political agenda on addressing issues such as healthcare, fairer tax policies, and smarter corrections policies.
A+ Universal Health Care |
Incumbent has been supportive of universal health care (Miller's AB 807) |
A+ Campaign Finance Reform |
Incumbent has supported campaign finance reform (Pocan's AB626 and Risser's SB479). |
A+ Ethics Reform |
Incumbent voted to pass an Ethics Reform bill (SB1). |
| Bill - SB1 (5/2/06 Sequence 662) aD+ | The Issue | How Assembly Voted | Your Representative |
Senate Bill 1 - Establish a Government Accountability BoardIntroduced by Mike Ellis (R) in the Senate and
It was killed by the Assembly Republicans. This was a vote on whether to bring the ethics bill to the floor and allow a complete up-or-down vote. By voting against an open floor vote the legislators effectively killed the bill and did not have to go on record as officially opposing ethics reform. Media coverage at MSP, Milwaukee, Madison, Madison Caveat: Some Republicans were allowed to vote in favor of this reform bill because their vote was not needed to kill it and they were in unsafe seats with a challenger. |
Proponents claim: This bill would establish an independent ethics commission to oversee the state legislature and governor.
See www.wisdc.org
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Defeated by a vote of 51 to 45 Voting for reform:
Voting to block reform:
See entire assembly roll call vote here and the senate roll call here. |
+ + + + + + + * Incumbent voted FOR bringing SB1 to the floor for a vote (this was the vote preferred by reform advocates) + + + + + + + |
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Opponents claim: It is too intrusive, requiring the disclosure of personal finances.
(Isn't that what ethics is all about? How can they legitimately vote on an issue without disclosing any conflicts of interest?)
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Republicans voting to pass to the floor for a vote: Almers, Davis, Hines, Lasee, McCormick (sponsor), Ott, and Pettis
From WDC: What's most notable about the three roll call votes is that several Republican members – including two considered politically vulnerable and likely facing tough reelection fights, Brett Davis of Monroe and Mark Pettis of Hertel, who originally voted to take up SB 1 – voted three times against making SB 1 part of the GOP "ethics reform" bills. Pettis is one of the Jensen 10 who were implicated during the former Assembly speaker's trial. All of the Jensen 10 voted consistently to block approval of SB 1.