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May 19, 2013
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A Chance for Supreme Court Damage ControlPosted on Sep 12, 2010Imagine that your neighbors started getting letters describing all sorts of horrific deeds you had allegedly performed. Wouldn’t you feel you had the right to know who was spreading this sleaze—especially if the charges were untrue? Now imagine a member of Congress telling a lobbyist from Consolidated Megacorp Inc. that she would do all she could to block an extra $2 billion in an appropriations bill to purchase the company’s flawed widgets for the federal government. A week later, television advertisements start appearing in the representative’s district portraying her as corrupt, out of touch and in league with lobbyists. It turns out they are being paid for by Consolidated Megacorp through contributions to a front group called Americans for Clean Government. Shouldn’t the voters be able to know who is behind the ads? This hypothetical tale is not fantasyland, thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s hideous decision earlier this year in the Citizens United case. But with Congress coming back this week, there’s a chance to limit the damage the court has caused—if three moderate Senate Republicans are willing to act. In a decision that was either the most Machiavellian in American history or the most naive, a 5-4 conservative majority broke with decades of precedent and said Congress had no right to ban corporate or labor union spending to influence the outcome of elections. The court ruled that corporations such as Consolidated Megacorp have to be treated the same as living, breathing “persons.” Advertisement Sponsors want to bring back a Senate bill that would let voters in on the game by requiring corporations and unions to disclose their political spending, even if it is laundered through third-party groups. Voters in my beleaguered representative’s district would get to know who was trashing her. A disclosure bill has already passed the House, and the Senate version, sponsored by Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., got 58 votes, with 60 needed for passage. The key to its defeat was three Republican senators—Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine and Scott Brown of Massachusetts—who say they support reform and disclosure in principle but objected to particular aspects of the bill. One of their objections, that the bill would alter the playing field for this year’s midterm elections, is now irrelevant since it’s too late to change the law for the campaign leading up to November’s contests. The threesome raised other issues, including supposed imbalances in the way corporations and labor unions are treated under the measure. But Schumer has signaled he would be happy to negotiate, and the simplest solution may be a clean disclosure bill that would strip out some of the provisions that the three Republicans don’t like. This, however, presumes the three would-be GOP reformers are willing to put their votes where their public declarations are, in the face of enormous pressure to side with the Consolidated Megacorps of the world. If Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has a central cause, it is the principle that money should slosh around freely in our political system. If the members of the threesome vote for disclosure, they will infuriate McConnell. But if they side with McConnell, they’ll be tossing away their reformist credentials. The matter is especially poignant for the two Maine senators, who have a history of sympathy for campaign finance reform. Earlier this year, tea party favorite Paul LePage won the Republican gubernatorial primary in Maine, defeating a large field that included Collins’ former chief of staff. As moderate Republicans, Snowe and Collins are undoubtedly looking over their right shoulders, fearful that they may go the way of Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Bob Bennett. This helps explain why they went south during negotiations over the health care bill. But repairing Citizens United is not an ideological question, although some cast it that way. Fiscal conservatives should be as worried as anyone about corporations using their newfound power to extract expensive special benefits from the government. Even conservatives who opposed campaign reform in the past have always insisted that they favor disclosure of campaign contributions. Disclosure is now more important than ever. Snowe, Collins and Brown have made their careers by touting their independence. But that claim doesn’t come cheap. This is the issue on which their promissory note is due. E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com. Previous item: Rabid Dog Briefly Mistaken for Tea Party Candidate Next item: Google Android Cheat Sheet for Normal Humans New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By tedmurphy41, September 15, 2010 at 2:01 am Link to this comment
I was always under the impression that the Supreme Court was created to protect your ‘democracy’.
Report thisBy don knutsen, September 14, 2010 at 10:30 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
This supreme court is hopelessly politicised and has been going that way for a few administrations. The 2000 election was a huge wake-up call and since, with the appointments made by the Bush administration is completely partisan. Judge Thomas’s wife is a big shaker in the tea party movement and a frequent counceler or contributor to the right wing Heritage foundation. Since these individuals are there as long as they want to be we need to impose a limit to their tenure. These judges should not be treated as though they were omnipotent, they are not elected by the people, they appear to answer to no one and they are used by whatever admin. in power to further that administration’s political ends. That is not what the supreme court is there for, yet their decisions can and do, as we are seeing, play a large part in the dismantling of what used to be a democracy in this country. Relationships like Thomas’s wifes Heritage foundation work need to be dealt with. To so blatantly politicise the highest court in the land flys in the face of what the supreme court was created for in the first place.
Report thisBy Maani, September 13, 2010 at 8:50 pm Link to this comment
Big B:
ROFLMAO!!!!!!!!!!
Actually, all I can say is: what planet is Dionne living on?! He can’t REALLY believe that Congress has either the backbone or even inclination to do this, can he? He;s been drinking the Kool-Aid again…
Peace.
Report thisBy gerard, September 13, 2010 at 8:08 pm Link to this comment
It seems to me that the point isn’t that we will benefit from knowing the names of who contributed, or of even how much because it’s only dealing with a fait accompli. That’s all after-the-fact and nothing we ca do about it.
Report thisThe injustice and the crime is in allowing such contributions in the first place, from organizations and agencies who have far more money than any other source to buy advertising and propaganda in favor of candidates of their choice, or against candidates who oppose their point of view.
By Big B, September 13, 2010 at 6:35 pm Link to this comment
While I am a big believer in the teachings of Ghandi, I think that the only way to reform the supreme court would be for about a million angry americans with torches to show up at the steps of SCOTUS and burn the fucking place to the ground.
Change we can believe in.
Report thisBy felicity, September 13, 2010 at 9:30 am Link to this comment
Supreme Court damage control. Plessy v Ferguson
decided that separate was equal and we had decades of
Jim Crow laws, the results of which we’re still
suffering from in spite of the fact that the decision
was overturned decades later by Brown v. Board of
Education.
Will it also take decades to ‘overturn’ this recent
Report thisMachiavellian decision by the Court? Given the
probability, if the Senate doesn’t take the ‘teeth’
out of the disastrous decision, we may not have even
a semblance of a democracy left by the time, if ever,
the Court overturns the decision - not that I think
that would bother the entrenched flotsam and jetsam
that presently call themselves senators.
By AmiBlue, September 13, 2010 at 8:20 am Link to this comment
It’s going to take many more than 2 senators after the November elections. Lawrence Lessig has initiated a web site for the “Fair Elections” act. This might be the best way to proceed. http://www.fixcongressfirst.org/
Report thisBy par4, September 13, 2010 at 5:04 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
E.J. still thinks we’re living in a democracy(LOL).All
Report thiswe have are elections, but so did the Soviet Union.
By Mike789, September 13, 2010 at 4:34 am Link to this comment
The SCOTUS might do well to keep in mind that fundamentally, speech, by it’s nature is public, if not then it is gossip or even subterfuge. The concept of “free speech” is bound irrevocably with the idea of the public forum.
Imagine a dumb show portraying shadow figures or people with their faces masked to the eyes of the populace making their pronouncements on issues affecting that same populace. Such a forum is therein subplanted by a guessing game not dissimilar to a Bob Barker production.
Report thisBy ofersince72, September 13, 2010 at 12:24 am Link to this comment
A disclosure law, now thats fix.
If Chucky is sponsering this, you HAVE to be impressed.
Everyone inside the beltway knew the Supreme Court
docket. Everyone knew what the decision was going to be.
Everyone has known the McCain/Feingold was a farce.
Everyone has known we needed real campaign finance reform
Report thisfor forty years…......why is anyone suprised?