Posts Tagged ‘Transparency’

This is a post from Public Citizen’s Democracy is For People Campaign, get involved here and follow @RuleByUs for more information.

Another “Black Friday” blitz of sales and shopping, some of it sadly of the violently “competitive” variety, has passed us by. Consumer spending for the “holiday” was at record levels, with online sales by major retailers leading the way and expected to continue with today’s “Cyber Monday” discounts.

Consumers camped out in front of a Best Buy in Bakersfield, CA on Thanksgiving Day 2010. Flickr image from Bill Ward's Brickpile.

This is ostensibly good for the economy, but a number of voices have been questioning the creeping commercialization of Thanksgiving. From employees of “big box” stores forced to give up their family holiday plans in order to open at midnight or earlier, to activists and business leaders who doubt the long-term sustainability of our present consumer culture, some important critiques have been leveled.

In terms of both the broader public good and big-picture economics, however, an important piece has been missing: the fact that an increasing share of some major corporations’ profits from consumer events like “Black Friday” aren’t going toward job creation or investing, but to attempts to influence and distort our democratic politics.

As Charles Kolb, President of the Committee for Economic Development (CED), an esteemed non-partisan organization of business leaders, recently told Dylan Ratigan, this political spending is basically a form of “rent-seeking” that isn’t good for business or for our democracy. Rather than competing in the marketplace or investing in economic growth, corporations seek a narrow advantage by garnering favored access to politicians and obtaining favorable policy outcomes—often at the expense of investing in long-term national priorities like education and infrastructure.

A landmark study of corporate governance released this month by the Investor Responsibility Research Center highlighted deeply problematic trends in this regard. The study, which looked at campaign-related spending and investor transparency among the S&P 500 companies, is fairly long and detailed, but some key findings highlighted at the report release (which I attended) are illuminating.

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Today, Americans headed to the polls for a variety of local and statewide elections, exercising the franchise that is at the heart of American democracy.  Many media accounts have detailed how a last-minute flood of secret outside money fueled campaigns in states like Ohio and Iowa. Some of it comes from the very organization for which the Supreme Court’s decision to allow unlimited corporate contributions is named, Citizens United v Federal Election Commission.

Aside: if you’ve read this far and the mere mention of that case makes you apoplectic, then RSVP right now for one of tomorrow night’s organizing parties geared at overturning it. Or sign up to host one! It’s definitely not too late; we’re at well over 200 gatherings and growing!

Flickr image by steakpinball

One thing that doesn’t get covered as much in that conversation, and which I’ll now briefly spotlight: how Citizens United has changed the playing field when it comes to judicial elections. It’s a trend that fuels the very corrosion of our democracy that the Supreme Court in Citizens United brushed aside, something that “We, the People” now must rectify.

The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law documented how this has played out in a report, The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2009-2010. The report was published last month, in partnership with the Justice at Stake Campaign and the National Institute of Money in State Politics. Essentially, the report boils down to this: in states where the judiciary is subject to popular election or to “retention” votes, a flood of special-interest money has increasingly politicized what the Framers envisioned as our least political branch of government.

As the report details, judicial retention elections in places like Iowa, rarely the site of pitched battles in the past, have moved toward becoming high-dollar battlegrounds flush with outside special-interest money. More broadly, 2009-2010 became the highest-spending cycle in history, by far, on all judicial election campaigns.  The Brennan Center carefully and persuasively traces this all to a “coalescing national campaign that seeks to intimidate America’s state judges into becoming accountable to money and ideologies instead of the constitution and the law.”

In his keynote address at Public Citizen’s 40th Anniversary Gala last month, journalist Bill Moyers quoted an eminent historian of the American Revolution, Gordon Wood, about how American democracy paved the way for others after it “by creating a prosperous free society belonging to obscure people with their workaday concerns and their pecuniary pursuits of happiness.” (Those words speak me in particular because I had the privilege of taking two of Professor Wood’s lecture courses when I was in college.)

Wood’s words also speak to me, as they did to Moyers, because they sum up the notion that “We the People” are the fundamental creators and beneficiaries of American democracy, with judges serving as the trusted mechanism for honestly interpreting our laws and Constitution. It’s that theme that animates the Brennan Center’s criticism of post-Citizens-United spending on judicial elections, and of just what that means for our democracy.

I’m currently reading Professor Wood’s latest book, a collection of essays and speeches titled The Idea of Liberty: Reflections on the Birth of the United States. In his essay on “The Making of American Democracy,” Wood notes that in our recent history “Many Americans became concerned with large and unequal campaign contributions precisely because they seemed to negate the effects of equal suffrage and violate the equality of participation in the political process.”

We can now add to that list of concern, sadly, the undermining of the very judiciary that so often serves as a critical backstop on behalf of the Constitution and the law. Judges are subject to the same troubling leverage as members of the other two branches of government under the post-Citizens-United regime. The threats of spending on their opponents, their non-retention in office, and even politically-motivated calls to impeach them—all of the above are documented in this latest report, and undermine the independent judiciary’s vital role.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Our democratic society, rooted in the people, remains despite this corrosion on elections and on the judiciary, and it has an essential mechanism by which to reassert itself: amending the Constitution to prevent corporate control of our elections.

So read the full report on judicial elections if you’ve got a few minutes. Reflect on what this means for the vote you may have just cast today. And then dry your eyes, and join a house party tomorrow.

Sean Siperstein is a Legal Fellow with the Democracy is For People campaign.

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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Campaign finance watchdogs criticized the Obama campaign today for hiring a former lobbyist for the Keystone XL pipeline while the administration is finalizing its decision on the project.

Statement from Common Cause,  Public Campaign Action Fund, Public Citizen and US PIRG:

“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.

“The final decision on whether or not to allow the pipeline to move forward should be based on sound science and the impact it will have on the American people and free of undue influence from industry lobbyists or their campaign contributions.

“President Barack Obama should explain to the public how he will ensure that the decision making process on the pipeline is insulated from the undue influence of the parties that would benefit from it.”

In early October, emails between TransCanada lobbyists and various State Department lobbyists have showed “cozy” ties between the company and the department. On Monday, the Obama campaign announced it had hired Broderick Johnson to be a senior adviser to the campaign. Prior to the announcement, he served as a lobbyist for Bryan Cave LLP, representing TransCanada and working on the Keystone XL pipeline.

The Keystone Pipeline System would be a 1,700-mile pipeline sending tar sands crude oil across six U.S. states to the Gulf Coast.

 

FEC chair Cynthia Bauerly speaks to a packed house at Public Citizen

With a record amount of money being poured into our elections, the Federal Election Commission, the agency in charge of monitoring and enforcing campaign finance and other huge election issues, must work harder than ever.

Luckily, Cynthia Bauerly, the chair of the agency, was able to spare a bit of her Thursday and spoke to a packed audience at Public Citizen. She talked about the need to disclose on campaign contributions (something Public Citizen strongly supports), how voters and consumers can weigh in on election-related matters, and the deadlocked nature of the bipartisan agency.

Robert Weissman, Public Citizen’s president, was sure to probe Bauerly on the U.S. Supreme Court’s damaging decision in Citizens United v. FEC, which gave corporations the green light to spend unlimited amount of money to influence elections. Bauerly said that she won’t discuss her personal views on the case while she holds her position, but that her role is not to advocate one way or another, but rather to abide by and enforce SCOTUS’ decision. Well, fine. Just know we’re coming back to ask you again after you leave the commission.

Similarly, Bauerly said that it is up to Congress to issue legislation on public financing and increased disclosure, as well as to decide the role of the Election Assistance Commission.

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