The Solution to the Money Problem Introduced
Today Public Citizen joined with congressional leaders from both sides of the aisle and a broad coalition of civic groups to uproot the problem of money in politics. Senators Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) and Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) announced the introduction of the Fair Elections Now Act [listen] to establish public funds for senatorial elections. This bold and important bill would transform federal elections for the U.S. Senate from a business enterprise into a contest of ideas focused on our nation's challenges.
It’s plain that the cost of campaigns for Senate (and all other offices) is out-of-sight. Over the last past three election cycles, the average cost of the 10 most expensive Senate races has more than doubled, from $16.9 million in 2002 to $34.9 million in 2006. This escalation in costs continues today, and candidates will have to spend more and more time trying to raise enough money to compete. Enough is enough. We cannot allow our government to keep spiraling out of the hands of ordinary Americans.
The Fair Elections Now Act would create a voluntary system through which participating candidates - those who establish their credibility by collecting enough qualifying contributions and who then pledge not to accept private contributions - would receive public funds for the primary and general elections. Participants would also be eligible for free media vouchers and discounted commercial advertising rates. The bill is patterned on successful efforts to reduce the impact of money on the election process in Arizona, Maine, and elsewhere.
Public funding of congressional elections is a huge break for the American taxpayer. It would cost just a fraction of one percent of the annual federal budget. But it would produce lawmakers who would not feel obligated to repay donors with costly tax loopholes, special earmarks and other boondoggles that drain billions of taxpayer dollars from the Treasury.
Last year, we fought to clean up the corruption in Washington. The public took notice, and then took action, culminating on November 7, when voters chose to put an end to the culture of corruption. The new Congress is responding to the call for change by debating a variety of worthwhile ethics and lobbying reforms.
Some of these first-line improvements are expected to pass in the coming weeks - but none of these will lower our gas prices, the cost of prescription drugs or student loans - all inflated by tax-breaks and special corporate giveaways served up by lobbyists and well-heeled contributors.
The only lasting antidote to the corrupting influence that comes with privately funded elections is to publicly fund them with a system of fair and clean elections. Thanks to Senators Durbin and Specter, we are on our way to a brighter future.
This is a great idea, but any candidate who doesn't want to participate can simply not agree to accept the public funds, and then they have the freedom to accept private or corporate contributions to their campaign war chest. I believe we've seen this before: candidates simply opt out of the public funding for their campaigns, and we're back to the same old method of collecting funds from corporate America, and owing them favors after the election.
If you can find a way to make it mandatory, you'll have something there.
Posted by: John Webb | March 20, 2007 at 07:38 PM