Contacts: Margaret Edwards (Miller Center) (804) 924-7889; [email protected] Lisa-Joy Zgorski (The Century Foundation) (202) 745-5471; [email protected]
Former Presidents Carter and Ford to Oversee Bipartisan
National Commission on Federal Election Reform
Howard Baker and Lloyd Cutler will co-chair National Commission
organized
by the University of Virginia's Miller Center and The Century Foundation
Charlottesville and New York City - Former U.S. presidents Jimmy
Carter and Gerald Ford have agreed to serve as active honorary bipartisan co-chairs
of the newly established National Commission on Federal Election Reform. The
Commission will be co-chaired by Howard Baker and Lloyd Cutler. Former U.S.
Senator Howard Baker served both as Senate Majority Leader and as Chief of Staff
to President Reagan. Washington attorney Lloyd Cutler served as the White House
Counsel both to President Carter and to President Clinton.
The Commission is being organized by the Miller Center of Public Affairs of
the University of Virginia and The Century Foundation. The Commission will receive
no public funds. Its work will be made possible by a group of foundations, led
by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the David and Lucile Packard
Foundation.
The National Commission on Federal Election Reform will recommend ways to improve
the process used for electing federal officials, namely the President, Vice
President, and Members of Congress. Former presidents Carter and Ford stressed
that the Commission will adopt a forward-looking perspective. Its initial focus
will be on improving and standardizing the processes now being used to cast
and count ballots for elected federal offices. "This is not a Commission
to rewrite the Constitution or refight the contest in Florida," they said.
"Instead, we hope to bring together thoughtful people from across the political
spectrum to think about how our democratic institutions can improve the way
our nation elects the leaders of our federal government, including the use of
state-of-the-art technology."
Philip Zelikow, Director of the Miller Center and White Burkett Miller Professor
of History at Virginia, will be executive director of the Commission. He will
work in cooperation with Richard C. Leone, President of The Century Foundation.
The Commission will be the ninth in a series of national commissions organized
by the Miller Center on issues confronting the presidency. The Century Foundation,
formerly known as the Twentieth Century Fund, has a long history of establishing
highly regarded bipartisan task forces and commissions to examine and suggest
reform in political processes and public policy.
Other members of the Commission will be named soon. The Commission will convene
meetings and public hearings throughout the country. It will be supported by
an interactive website that will provide citizens with the opportunity to stay
informed about its work and offer their suggestions. The Commission plans to
release its report in 2001, in time to help inform the ongoing legislative efforts
of the 107th Congress. "We applaud the attention White House and Congressional
leaders are giving to election reform," former presidents Carter and Ford
said. "We plan to prepare a report and sponsor research that will be of
real use to the Congress and the Administration as they move forward."
The Commission will sponsor task forces to support its work on such subjects
as the "best practices" being developed by state and local election
officials, the evolution of the federal electoral process, and legal issues
to be considered - including the appropriate role of the federal government.
One of these groups, on "best practices," already has begun its work,
organized by Harvard University professor David King.
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To learn more about the Miller Center and The Century Foundation, visit their
websites.
http://millercenter.virginia.edu
www.tcf.org
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