[Mb-civic] USA Today: Once again,
big donors find new ways to skirt the rules
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Fri Oct 29 21:57:23 PDT 2004
OUCH! -- How Money In Politics Hurts You
#134: WE COULDN'T HAVE SAID IT BETTER OURSELVES!
October 28, 2004
Yesterday, USA Today published an editorial on the role big money is playing
in American politics. They also talked about the "Clean Money, Clean
Elections" campaign finance systems that have been successfully
implemented in several states across the country--most notably Arizona and
Maine. Below is yesterday's article. Please have a read and then pass it onto
others!
USA Today
October 27, 2004
Once again, big donors find new ways to skirt the
rules
Trying to control the flow of money corrupting politics is a lot like trying to
contain flooding on the Mississippi. Dikes can channel the torrent. But when
there's a downpour, the river will keep on coming, breaking through at the
point of least resistance.
So it has gone in this presidential campaign. The walls erected by the last set
of political engineers, Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Russ Feingold, D-
Wis., will largely have achieved their purpose: slowing the flow of illegal
contributions sometimes seven-figure checks to political parties. But by
the time the last vote is counted, a record $3.9 billion will have been
showered on this year's campaigns for president and Congress, delivered
through diverted means.
That number, projected last Thursday by the Center for Responsive Politics,
a non-partisan monitoring group, is up 30% from four years ago. And that's
conservative. Lax disclosure rules mask the scale of special-interest
involvement.
What are beleaguered taxpayers to do? No doubt, they'll pay plenty when the
recipients of that cash repay with government largesse.
Putting more dams in the river isn't going to help. Donors intent on buying
influence can always find new legal channels. Candidates, lacking any other
way to make their campaigns competitive, will take what's offered. In fact,
they're forced to grovel for it.
There is a better option: Give honest candidates an alternative and, at the
same time, expose the gifts taken by the rest.
Four states Maine, Arizona, Vermont and North Carolina already are
offering the clean money option of public financing to candidates for some
state offices. New Jersey will launch a similar program next year, and New
Mexico in 2006.
This works. In Maine, where the movement started, nearly 80% of this year's
legislature candidates rejected private money.
Defenders of the status quo deride public financing as welfare for politicians.
Catchy. But also hooey. Even the highest estimate of the cost of Maine-style
public financing at the federal level is only $10 per taxpayer trivial
compared with the cost of payoffs to special interests.
As for disclosure, the current system is a carefully constructed mirage.
All contributions over $200 to presidential and congressional candidates and
national party committees must be disclosed. But reporting runs weeks or
months late. Voters may not find out until after an election. Further, many
non-profit groups with their own parallel campaigns don't have to report at all.
"The states' approach also avoids the problem inherent in all attempts to limit
political donations: They undercut free speech.
Donations often pay for campaign commercials by candidates or independent
groups. Can any government arbiter be trusted to say who can speak and
how loudly particularly if that speech is unpopular? Certainly not the
Federal Election Commission, which tries to do the job now. Virtually every
independent political observer agrees that its members are chosen by
Congress to be ineffective. And if they were effective, free-speech problems
would quickly sprout.
Giving candidates a chance to be honest and voters a way to watch the rest
is a better option. It won't stop the flood of corrupt money. No system can.
But it would protect voters and taxpayers far better than the patchwork
system of levees in place now.
OUCH! is a regular e-mail bulletin on how private money in politics hurts
average citizens, published by Public Campaign, a non-partisan, non-profit
organization devoted to comprehensive campaign finance reform. Every day,
we pay more as consumers and taxpayers for special interest subsidies and
boondoggles because of our system of privately financed elections. It's time
for a change.
You can also help support our work by making a credit card contribution on
our website. This bulletin may be reposted to newsgroups as long as it is
printed in its entirety.
If you received this message from a friend, you can sign up for Public
Campaign: http://ga3.org/publicampaign/join.html?r=5daGQA11AjYhE
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Action is the antidote to despair. ----Joan Baez
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