Lawmakers should be able to appropriate a limited amount of funds for public construction projects because they understand the needs of their constituencies better, a group of independent legislators said yesterday.
The proposal came under heavy fire from colleagues of all stripes, who suspected proponents of the measure of using the issue as a bargaining chip to boost their own interests during negotiations over the government budget.
The Non-partisan Alliance, consisting of eight independent lawmakers, told a news conference that the Cabinet should reinstate lawmakers' power to recommend public works projects.
"As popularly elected representatives, lawmakers know the needs of their constituents," independent lawmaker Lin Pin-kuan (林炳坤) said.
"With frequent access to Cabinet officials, they emerge as ideal candidates to communicate between the grassroots and the government."
Chen Chin-ting (
To dismiss concerns about conflicts of interest and other malfeasance, he said the Cabinet could publish information about the projects and their values suggested by lawmakers each year.
Independent Legislator Kao Meng-ting (
"We just want to make the practices more transparent. That's all," he said.
But DPP legislative whip Wang Tuoh (
He said that during the KMT administration, some lawmakers were able to make the Cabinet build public construction projects such as parking lots in their constituencies.
They then awarded contracts for those projects to companies owned by their friends, relatives or themselves, Wang said, adding the practice no longer existed after the transfer of power in May 2000.
Going a step further, TSU legislative leader Su Ying-kwei (
He urged independent colleagues to give up on the scheme, saying it had no chance of success.
Both the KMT and PFP legislative caucuses agreed.



