Archive for October, 2011

Co-authored by Democracy is for People Intern Sami G"trick or treat democracy"reen and Senior Organizer Aquene Freechild

As ghosts and goblins emerged this Halloween evening, the halls of Congress seem more spooky than ever. Corporate power has penetrated our political process and threatens our democracy. Politicians have become more responsive to the corporations that write big checks than to the people who elect them.

As children across the nation prepare to get dressed up this Oct. 31 and participate in the age-old tradition, we can’t help but feel that with Super PACs popping up everywhere and growing national frustration with corporations spending unlimited secret amounts in elections, the trick seems to be on us.  But who gets the treat?

Let’s consider…

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Earlier today, Allison Fisher, outreach director of Public Citizen’s Energy Program, and other advocates had a scream at the Beyond Nuclear rally outside the Department of Energy headquarters. "public citizen pumpkin"

Meanwhile, policy advocates and media folks alike are on alert with news today that Public Citizen, the Consumer Federation of America and Consumers Union are asking a federal court to deny a company’s motion to seal all papers filed in its lawsuit against the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). In the underlying case, the company is trying to block the CPSC from posting on a publicly accessible database a consumer’s report of harm apparently caused by one of the company’s products.

Also today, an Atomic Safety and Licensing Board (ASLB) panel conducts an evidentiary hearing in Rockville, Md., in the South Texas Project Combined License (COL) proceeding. The ASLB granted intervenor standing to Public Citizen, the Sustainable Energy and Economic Development Coalition, and the South Texas Association for Responsible Energy, and found they had submitted admissible contentions that challenge the COL application. The contention that will be addressed today involves the question of whether the application and NRC review properly accounts for energy-efficient building code rules in assessing the need for power.

Thursday morning at 9:15 a.m., Public Citizen and other good government groups will hold a press conference in advance of a hearing on the Federal Election Commission. We will highlight the failures of the FEC and call on President Barack Obama to fill the vacancies on the FEC so the agency can adequately enforce campaign finance laws. This is particularly important as candidates gear up for the presidential and congressional elections that are widely expected to be the most expensive ever.

On Thursday at 11:30 a.m., our president, Robert Weissman, is scheduled to give the key address to a coalition of unions gathering at Lafayette Square for an International Day of Action “Make Wall Street Pay.” In his address, he will make the case for a much needed financial transaction tax.

We’re not done with Thursday yet! On that day, the House Judiciary Committee will mark up the Regulatory Accountability Act, another bad regulatory bill. For more information on this please see the Coalition for Sensible Safeguards.

Finally, at some point this week, we will weigh in on our concerns about the proposed testing of the anthrax vaccine in children.

Of course, we cannot do all this work without a little fun from time to time– see the third place winner of our pumpkin carving contest to the right AND, look at what a great time we had at our 40th Anniversary Gala last week here.

To listen to the cries from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other Big Business groups, you’d think that the nation’s system of public safeguards is ripping through the very fabric of our society. GOP presidential candidate Rick Perry recently said it was government regulators who were the cause of the Great Recession of 2008 (gotta love his completely backwards take on what caused America’s financial crisis in its complete absurdity).

photo by spacebirddesigns via flickr

The Big Business noise machine has attempted to establish the notion that regulations are killing job growth and claiming that small businesses can’t hire anyone because of an unduly burden that public safeguards supposedly are placed upon them. That’s what they’re saying.

Funny thing is, when you talk to small business owners, you almost never hear them complain about regulations. A few days ago, I got to spend some time with a diverse group of small business owners and had a chance to talk with them about their businesses, their communities and what they think about Big Business using them as an excuse to give major corporations a free pass on following the rules. It was an interesting afternoon.

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Stunning Statistics of the Week:

  • $100 million: The 2011 fundraising goal set by Priorities USA, an outside group formed by a former aide to President Barack Obama to raise cash and elect Democrats
  • $5.2 million: The amount Priorities USA raised in the first half of the year

Watchdogs criticize insider influence-peddling over Keystone oil pipeline project
Campaign finance watchdogs are criticizing the Obama campaign for hiring a former lobbyist for the Keystone XL pipeline while the administration is finalizing its decision on the project. “The Obama campaign’s decision to hire a former lobbyist for TransCanada highlights again the troubling connections between government officials and the company seeking to build the Keystone XL pipeline, currently under consideration at the State Department,” said a statement from the groups, which included Public Campaign Action Fund, Common Cause, Public Citizen and US PIRG.

We the People campaign launches

A coalition of progressive groups, including Public Citizen, is launching a combined effort to remove corporate money from elections. The We the People campaign is led by The Nation editor Katrina vanden Heuvel, former Texas Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower (a Public Citizen board member) and former Mother Jones publisher Jay Harris.

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By Aquene Freechild, Senior Organizer with the Democracy Is For People campaign.

Americans are taking to the streets and standing up to corporate greed and injustice. This is a moment to make our voices heard. As we are protesting the forces that are consolidating economic and political power, we should not lose sight of what we’re fighting for.

Despite deep and trying struggles for a better society, most people can look around and have much to be thankful for. I hold a degree from an affordable public college; I enjoy safe and healthy food; I recovered from asthma thanks to cleaner air; I love our public transportation systems and bike lanes in Boston, New York and Washington, D.C.; and I love my neighbors, family, and the community we have built and are building.

To express my love of these things and to defend my rights and the rights of those I care for, I love to vote.

Yet according to a Brennan Center report, in the coming election more than 5 million voters may see that right taken away from them due to changes in voting laws. For all but a few of these 5 million people the right to vote was fought for and won, as once only the wealthy, white and male could vote. It is a right some are still fighting for, and for which many more will have to fight now.

How is this tied into money and politics? According to the Brennan Center for Justice, 34 states saw Voter ID laws introduced in the last year. Voter ID laws disproportionately impact, and effectively disenfranchise, senior citizens, students, people of color, and lower-income Americans. And they, and other disenfranchisement measures, are being written and promoted by a corporate-state legislative body called the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)ALEC drafts model laws and promotes them to state legislatures for passage.

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