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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Sun Jun 8, 2014, 07:16 AM Jun 2014

A Crisis to Address: Why the Senate's Discussing a Democracy Amendment

http://www.opednews.com/articles/A-Crisis-to-Address-Why-t-by-John-Nichols-Citizens-United_Democracy_Elections_Finance-140606-97.html



A Crisis to Address: Why the Senate's Discussing a Democracy Amendment
By John Nichols
OpEdNews Op Eds 6/6/2014 at 17:12:52

The political crisis of confidence created by an activist Supreme Court's decisions in cases such as Citizens United v. FEC and McCutcheon v. FCC is beginning -- finally -- to garner appropriate consideration from the US Senate. That's important. What's even more important is that it is focused on the proper response to the crisis: amending the US Constitution in order to restore the right of citizens and their elected representatives to organize elections where the vote matters more than the dollar.

On Tuesday, Illinois Senator Dick Durbin, the chamber's assistant majority leader, chaired what Public Citizen identifies as "the first-ever hearing by the Senate Judiciary Committee on the need to amend the Constitution to overturn egregious US Supreme Court rulings like Citizens United and McCutcheon, which gave corporations and the ultra-wealthy the green light to spend unlimited amounts of money to influence elections."

Durbin was an engaged chair of the hearing by the Constitution Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee, having already declared, "It's increasingly clear that the only way to really reform our system is to pass a constitutional amendment to regulate how we finance our elections."

The senator is right. And the American people are supportive of his position; 16 states and more than 500 communities have formally asked Congress to back an amendment to clarify that, despite what the Supreme Court might imagine, corporations are not people and money is not speech. Still, the significance of this hearing, which comes as Senate Democratic leaders are talking about scheduling an amendment vote, ought not be underestimated. Nor should the fact that the number of senators supporting a constitiutional amendment is rapidly approaching a majority.
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A Crisis to Address: Why the Senate's Discussing a Democracy Amendment (Original Post) unhappycamper Jun 2014 OP
RULE #1: One may contribute only to campaigns for which one is eligible to cast a vote Kip Humphrey Jun 2014 #1
Good start... Wounded Bear Jun 2014 #2
+1. sueh Jun 2014 #3
Tough to regulate election spending Pantagruelsmember Jun 2014 #5
Agreed btrflykng9 Jun 2014 #6
Wasted political grandstanding Indydem Jun 2014 #4

Kip Humphrey

(4,753 posts)
1. RULE #1: One may contribute only to campaigns for which one is eligible to cast a vote
Sun Jun 8, 2014, 09:11 AM
Jun 2014

eliminates outside influences
eliminates business sourced campaign contributions (business cannot cast a vote)
requires contributors be registered to vote (keyword: eligible)

Pantagruelsmember

(106 posts)
5. Tough to regulate election spending
Sun Jun 8, 2014, 10:45 AM
Jun 2014

But how do you prevent deep pockets from funneling cash thru "eligible" donors ?

What's needed are strict limits on campaign spending which will be opposed by every media outlet since they are the ultimate beneficiaries of the obscene amounts spent on annoying campaign ads.
Also useful would be independent fact checking boards who could levy immediate, substantial fines against truth distorted ads.

 

Indydem

(2,642 posts)
4. Wasted political grandstanding
Sun Jun 8, 2014, 10:22 AM
Jun 2014

Do we have a 2/3 majority in the house AND senate?

Do we control 3/4 of the state legislatures?

No?

Then quit wasting the time on this horseshit.

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