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Assignment to the House Science Committee correlates with a -$46,000 drop in fundraising relative to all other committees in the House. Though Science has oversight over important agencies, like NOAA and NASA, they aren't a lobbying target. The result is that the best & brightest in Congress avoid Science, and adverse selection produces the worst possible Committee.

What's particularly aggravating about this is that there are agencies properly in the purview of Science & Technology that are lobbyist targets, but that aren't managed by House Science. FCC, for instance, is overseen by House Commerce; DARPA, obviously, is House Defense.

The fact of Congress is that if you don't play the game, and get the best committee assignments you can, you lose your seat. Each Congressperson can only have 2 committee assignments. Principled pursuit of the right assignments is thus a bit of a stag hunt.




Planet Money did an excellent podcast on committee assignments and fundraising:

http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2012/04/06/149714908/the-most...

I figured that's where Thomas got his 46k figure but it doesn't seem to be on their graph.


Nope, The Sunlight Foundation.


I think we agreed. It's clear that you didn't get your number from Planet Money since it's not there.

It is good to get the source though. So thanks for your reply.

For those who are interested, the sunlight foundation post is here: http://sunlightfoundation.com/blog/2012/04/02/housecommittee...

According to that post, the numbers were calculated at Planet Money's request, so there you go.


Call me a pessimist. When I see guys like Akin and Broun on a science committee, I assume that it didn't happen by accident, and that they probably have an axe to grind. At best, they may be looking to have their ethics represented on subjects like the ethics or morality of subjects like stem-cell research.


It's not an accident. It is exactly what tptacek described. Every other smarter/better representative wanted, and got committees which pay them more. And that forced these losers to end up on the science committee.

No accident, but also no "axe grinding" conspiracy. Just simply money.


Perhaps we should be encouraged that even the Republican House leadership views these clowns as deserving of exile?

Just trying to find some glimmer of hope in this sad story...


Off-topic: How do you remember your username?


I don't. I don't give a damn about karma. This is like my 3rd HN account. Not that I had any reason to create new accounts, besides logged out for some reason and didn't remember credentials.

Now watch everyone else in horror down-vote this, and for someone to post the link to the HN change your password page.


If that second h was 3 then you'd simply have 4 triples of inline keys on a qwerty keyboard. Doesn't seem especially hard to remember.

fgh-345-sdf-hr3 : bet that's someone's password.


God damn it now I'm going to remember the name of some guy's throwaway account until the day I die.


He could also use something like Lastpass to store/track it all.


That key bit of information puts the article in a completely different light. Without this information it is not unreasonable to interpret it as an anti-science stance from the Republicans. Ars Technica's reporting is usually excellent, but this is a serious omission.


Some committees collect members that senior leadership do not want on other, more important, committees. You can pretty much tell how low that committee is by the amount of vacant seats. It sounds important to us, but as tptacek points out, much business in this area is handled elsewhere.


<pedantry> You're confusing pessimism with cynicism.

Pessimism is about what is going to happen; like its opposite, it deals entirely in possible futures. A pessimist can say, "Call me a pessimist, but Akin is going to join the Science committee because he's got an axe to grind." Or "Call me an optimist, but Akin was false flagging all this time and when he joins the Science committee, he'll do great things on behalf of science."

</pedantry>




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