The post–Citizens United drive for secret campaign money has now become an arms race. As a New York Times editorial recently noted, former White House deputy press secretary
Bill Burton will be leading a group called Priorities USA to “raise
unlimited money from undisclosed sources to aid in the president’s
re-election campaign.”
We acknowledge the strong case made by many that Democrats cannot
afford to cede ground in these exorbitant, no-holds-barred campaigns
(see Eric Alterman on page 8). But this isn’t news to be welcomed by
pro-democracy reformers. If Democrats seek the same kind of opaque
funding they have been arguing against, their case for reform becomes
morally ambiguous, at best. Instead, they should act on the overwhelming
bipartisan sentiment in favor of curbing the influence of money in
elections—even 62 percent of GOP voters and 60 percent of Tea Partiers
agree. Democrats are already on record—unlike nearly every Republican—in
support of the DISCLOSE Act, the Fair Elections Now Act and state Clean
Election laws. Some are even backing a constitutional amendment to
overturn the Citizens United decision, which allows corporations to spend any amount of money on campaigns.
President Obama’s rhetoric on money in politics has been splendid at times—during the 2008 campaign and when criticizing Citizens United and
supporting the DISCLOSE Act. But he could push harder for the Fair
Elections Now Act, a presidential public financing fix, and renew his
support for the DISCLOSE Act, blocked last year by a GOP filibuster.
Obama should draw a stark contrast between the parties by signing a
draft executive order requiring any company seeking a government
contract to disclose its political giving. Not surprisingly, the GOP and
its gravy train (aka the Chamber of Commerce) have retreated,
vampirelike, from this little bit of sunlight, as have a few Dems. But
that provides a huge opening for Obama to renew his 2008 call to change
the culture of Washington. Indeed, it’s not only good policy but good
politics. “The bottom line is that people want a political system that
is responsive to their needs,” observes Nick Nyhart, president and CEO
of Public Campaign. “Elected officials who stand in the way of that
could pay a price down the line.”
Despite clear public support for reform, conservative courts,
Republican legislatures and corporate front groups are attempting to
reverse hard-won gains. In Arizona GOP legislators and the Chamber of
Commerce are pressing to repeal that state’s effective Clean Election
law, even though 77 percent of Arizonans support it. In Maine Republican
Governor Paul LePage has attempted to defund his state’s Clean Election
law and repeal its use in governors’ races, even as he has more than
tripled the private contribution limit for gubernatorial candidates.
Let’s hope the 82 percent of Mainers who support the law have the last
word.
The fight for campaign finance reform can’t be separated from the
fight to preserve collective bargaining rights, prevent restrictive
voter ID laws and protect our tattered social safety net from deeper
budget cuts. These struggles are all about power and voice in our
democracy. “Our country’s biggest problems won’t be solved for the many
if the process is fixed by the money,” says Nyhart.
Instead of heading into the ditch of pay-to-play politics with the
Republicans, Democrats—led by President Obama—should continue along the
high road. Most Americans are already there waiting for them.