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Center For Constitutional Rights Project: ALEC Attacks
On December of 2019, the Center for Constitutional Rights, the CCR, sued in Arizona a number of Arizona lawmakers who are participating in a closed meetings of the American Legislative Exchange Council known as ALEC. ALEC brings together legislators, corporate leaders, conservative activists, and lobbyists to draft and promote model legislation across the country.
On December 4, 2019 the date the suit was filed, ALEC was holding its annual States and Nations Policy Summit in Scottsdale, Arizona, an elite suburb outside of Phoenix.
The complaint asks the court to find that attendance at the closed door meetings for the purpose of deliberation on legislation with corporations and lobbyists by lawmakers from Arizona violates that states’ open meeting law and asks that all notes and materials from the secretive meetings be made accessible to the public and for legislators to be enjoined from attending these meetings in the future.
Dominic Renfrey of the Center for Constitutional Rights said “ALEC’s pay-to- play model strikes at the very heart of democratic lawmaking. And not surprisingly it is people of color and those on the margins that suffer the most from ALEC’s attacks.”
Guest – Dominic Renfrey who helped organize the lawsuit. He’s the Advocacy Program Manager at the Center for Constitutional Rights. Dominic focuses on the intersection of corporate abuses in various activity areas, including international human rights law, the Occupied Palestinian Territories, the operations of private military corporations, and the interference of corporations in the operations of state agencies and decision-making bodies.
Guest – Jacinta Gonzalez is the Senior Campaign Organizer of Mijente, a plaintiff in the lawsuit, and a part of the National Immigrants Rights movement.
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The Report Movie And CIA OIG Torture Report
Hosts Heidi Boghosian and Michael Smith talk about the recent film titled The Report where one of the film’s characters plays the Senate investigator who uncovered and documented America’s extensive use of torture.
In the summer of 2009 attorney General Eric Holder appointed special Justice Department prosecutor John Durham to conduct a preliminary investigation into whether federal laws were violated in connection with the interrogation of certain detainees in U.S. custody. In this August 31, 2009 lively first half hour discussion, hosts Michael Ratner, Heidi Boghosian and Michael Smith discuss and detail why the investigation does not go after higher-ups within the US torture program, how tortured confessions are used to support war and that interrogators did not act alone.
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