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It's
Time to Overrule the Supreme Court
by
Jeff Milchen
OpEdNews.com
I’m two states removed from
California
, and I don’t know who I’d have supported last week in
San Francisco
’s runoff election for mayor. But I know this: democracy lost.
Gavin Newsom won by a 53% to 47% margin, while his $3.8 million budget
dwarfed that of his opponent, Matt Gonzalez, by a 10 to 1 margin.
Gonzalez won about nine times as many votes per dollar spent and even
Newsom’s supporters would be hard-pressed to deny that money made the
difference.
Though the race officially was non-partisan, Newsom is a Democrat and
Gonzalez is Green. Democratic celebrities Bill Clinton and Al Gore stumped
for Newsom, and the party brought in resources that overwhelmed
Gonzalez’ volunteer-driven campaign. Ironically, Gonzalez won support
from the majority of Democratic voters, while Newsom was the clear
favorite of Republicans (and was endorsed by the Republican party
previously).
Mr. Newsom obviously was a strong candidate and his fundraising presumably
was entirely legal, but that doesn’t mitigate the damage done to
citizens whose only voice in the election was their vote. Wealthy donors
got their man into office because they were able to vote with their
dollars, too. That’s plutocracy, not democracy.
In a decision fittingly announced just hours after
San Francisco
’s election was decided, a U.S. Supreme Court majority made clear that
plutocracy was fine by them. The Court upheld the doubling of limits on
direct “hard money” contributions to candidates for federal office
authorized by the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA).
Yes, the Court upheld some limits on corruption, but the ruling also
demonstrates the justices’ blind eye to the constitutional principle of
“equal protection.” The
San Francisco
election offers compelling evidence of why BCRA fails to fundamentally
strengthen democracy.
Indeed the BCRA’s doubling of hard money limits will further segregate
Americans into distinct classes of democratic participation. One group
consists of the majority of us who can express our preferences with our
votes or volunteer time. The other class is those wielding real power--the
ability to finance the bulk of candidates' campaigns.
The BCRA does not empower average Americans to create choices or alter
this class system—it worsens the divide.
Just one in one thousand adult Americans make hard money contributions of
even $1,000, yet candidates for the 2004 presidential nomination have
raised more than 80% of their individual investments from donors of at
least $1,000. How many of them do you know?
Wealthy individuals may each invest at least $4000 in a single candidacy
by writing separate checks for $2000 contributions to a candidate’s
primary and general election warchests. The power of those .1% of citizens
making thousand-dollar investments is further amplified by their ability
to “bundle” contributions in the name of family members, co-workers or
employees to offer thousands of dollars to a candidate in a lump sum,
rendering the limits as rigid as a rubber band. Any skeptics need merely
look at the Bush 2004 reelection campaign, which requires investors to
amass a $200,000 bundle to be dubbed a “Ranger” with serious
influence.
This bundling also lends itself to intimidation, as with the recently
uncovered documents revealing the strong-arm tactics of drug giant
Bristol-Myers Squibb. Four different executives confirmed they were
pressured with thinly-veiled threats by their bosses to send $1000 checks
to George Bush--in their spouse’s name as well as their own.
And those investors are not a representative sampling of Americans.
According to a study by the Joyce Foundation, 80% are males from
households whose annual income exceeds $100,000. More than 95% are white.
It should be no surprise how closely Congress reflects those distinctly
unrepresentative demographics.
But does this really determine election outcomes?
Unquestionably. Incumbents and higher-spending candidates win almost all
federal races--and the same person usually is both. House incumbents won
97% of contests in which they ran in 2002, and the highest-spending
candidate won 95% of House races and 75% of Senate races.
So what do we do? The first step is to identify the roots of the
problem. In this case, it’s the Supreme Court. With its 1976 Buckley
v. Valeo decision, the Court leaped over logic to declare that
spending money to influence elections was a form of "free
speech" protected by the First Amendment and largely beyond
democratic control.
The remedy is daunting but simple: reversing the baseless and profoundly
anti-democratic precedent of the Buckley
ruling. This would allow the common-sense distinction between speech as
the Constitution intends--expressing one's opinion--and using economic
power to overwhelm the voices of other citizens.
Various forms of public campaign financing certainly are part of the
solution, but democracy cannot coexist with a legal precedent of money
equaling speech.
The
San Francisco
election once again demonstrated money overpowering democracy, but it was
no aberration. Citizens who value the principle of one person, one vote
should demand a Constitutional
Amendment to restore what the Supreme Court has broken—fair
elections and our democracy.
Jeff Milchen directs ReclaimDemocracy.org, an organization devoted to
realizing the promise of one person, one vote and restoring citizen
authority over corporations. If your organization would like to learn more
about joining a coalition effort to revoke the money=speech precedent,
please contact them.
© 2003 ReclaimDemocracy.org
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