Cantor Hands YouCut to 'Tea Party' Freshman
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, May 11 2011
Then-Minority Leader Eric Cantor introduced the YouCut program last MayMajority Leader Eric Cantor is handing the reins of his YouCut online project over to a trio of Republican freshman, reports Politico's Marin Cogan. Reps. Austin Scott of Georgia, Renee Ellmers, and Mick Mulvaney will handle YouCut Phase II, as they're calling it, and the Daily Caller's Jonathan Strong reports that what's different now with the House GOP's citizen-driven effort in spending cuts is, well, the Republicans are running the show and can get the votes to pass this stuff:
Now, the stakes are real. The “winning” government program each week will more than likely actually get a House vote to cut its funding, sending the proposal over to the Senate, where Republicans hope public participation will spur action there.
“The biggest difference will be we’ll actually get a chance to get ‘em passed,” freshman GOP Rep. Mick Mulvaney, one of three freshman hand-picked by Majority Leader Eric Cantor to coordinate the program, told The Daily Caller.
Cantor is handing over YouCut to the freshmen, giving them a place to channel the Tea Party energy that swept Republicans into power. Highlighting government’s embarrassing excesses could also give the GOP political momentum at key moments in the more important debt ceiling and appropriations debates.
Even if you have an interest in participatory government, what you make of YouCut seems to depend on whether you lean right or left. On the one hand, YouCut pushes the edge of the envelope when it comes to actually opening up channels for citizens to engage in the legislative process. On the other hand, the House knows that these votes aren't going anywhere in the Senate, the nomination process for targeted is a black box, and the engagement is steered towards plucking from any real context obscure sounding federal spending projects and putting them up on the chopping block against similarly decontextualized projects -- which might not quite be the epitome of informed digital participation that one hopes the Internet makes possible.
Up for your consideration on YouCut at the moment: $60 million for the Ambassador's Fund for Cultural Preservation,$356 million in contributions to the Asian Development Fund, and $400 million for a United Nation's population fund.