September 14, 2009
By Harvey Wasserman
While America agonizes over health care,energy and war,Justices Roberts,Scalia,Alito and Thomas could make it all moot. They may now have the 5th Supreme Court vote they need to open the final floodgates on corporate spending in political campaigns.At this point,only an irreversible ban on ALL private campaign money--corporate or otherwise--might save the ability of our common citizenry to be heard.
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Columns

September 14, 2009 http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/7/2009/1769
The
Four Courtsmen of the Apocalypse are poised to finally bury American
democracy in corporate money. The most powerful institution in human
history---the global corporation---may soon take definitive possession
of our electoral process.
It could happen very soon.
While
America agonizes over health care, energy and war, Justices John
Roberts, Antonin Scalia, Sam Alito and Clarence Thomas could make it
all moot. They may now have the fifth Supreme Court vote they need to
open the final floodgates on corporate spending in political campaigns.
In
short, the Court may be poised to shred a century of judicial and
legislative attempts to preserve even a semblance of restraint on how
Big Money buys laws and legal decisions. The ensuing tsumani of
corporate cash could turn every election hence into a series of virtual
slave auctions, with victory guaranteed only to those candidates who
most effectively grovel at the feet of the best-heeled lobbyists.
Not
that this is so different from what we have now. The barriers against
cash dominating our elections have already proven amazingly
ineffective.
But a century ago, corporations were barred from
directly contributing to political campaigns. The courts have upheld
many of the key requirements.
Meanwhile the barons of Big Money
have metastasized into all-powerful electoral juggernauts. The sum
total of all these laws, right up to the recently riddled
McCain-Feingold mandates, has been to force the corporations to hire a
few extra lawyers, accountants and talk show bloviators to run
interference for them.
Even that may be too much for the
Court's corporate core. John Roberts's Supremes may now be
fast-tracking a decision on CITIZENS UNITED v. FEDERAL ELECTION
COMMISSION, centered on a corporate-financed campaign film attacking
Hillary Clinton. According to the Washington Post's account of oral
arguments, "a majority of the court seemed impatient with an
increasingly complicated federal scheme intended to curb the role of
corporations, unions and special interest groups in elections."
Former
solicitor general Theodore B. Olson, who in 2000 "persuaded" the Court
to stop a recount of votes in Florida and put George W. Bush in the
White House, said such laws "smothered" the First Amendment and
"criminalized" free speech.
The conservative Gang of Four has
already been joined by Anthony Kennedy, the Court's swing voter, in
signaling the likely overturn of two previous decisions upholding laws
that ban direct corporate spending in elections.
When he was
confirmed as the Court's Chief, Roberts promised Congress he would be
loathe to overturn major legal precedents. But the signals of betrayal
now seem so clear that Senators John McCain and Russell Feingold have
issued personal statements warning Roberts that a radical assault on
campaign finance laws would be considered a breach of faith with the
Congress that confirmed him.
Liberal Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg did assert during oral arguments that "a corporation, after
all, is not endowed by its creator with inalienable rights."
But
since the 1880s the courts have generally granted corporations human
rights with no human responsibilities. Thom Hartmann (UNEQUAL
PROTECTION) and Ted Nace (GANGS OF AMERICA) have shown with infuriating
detail how corporate lawyers twisted the 14th Amendment, designed to
protect the rights of freed slaves, into a legal weapon used to
bludgeon the democratic process into submission.
Civil
libertarians like Floyd Abrams and the American Civil Liberties Union
have somehow argued that depriving these mega-conglomerations of cash
and greed their "right" to buy elections might somehow impinge on the
First Amendment.
But the contradiction between human rights and
corporate power is at the core of the cancer now killing our democracy.
As early as 1815 Thomas Jefferson joined Tom Paine in warning against
the power of "the moneyed aristocracy." In 1863 sometime railroad
lawyer Abraham Lincoln compared the evils of corporate power with those
of slavery. By the late 1870s Rutherford B. Hayes, himself the
beneficiary of a stolen election, mourned a government "of, by and for
the corporations."
The original US corporations---there were
six at the time of the Revolution---were chartered by the states, and
restricted as to what kinds of business they might do and where. After
the Civil War, those restrictions were erased. As Richard Grossman and
the Project on Corporate Law & Democracy have shown, the elastic
nature of the corporate charter has birthed a mutant institution whose
unrestrained money and power has transformed the planet.
Simply
put, globalized corporations, operating solely for profit, have become
the most dominant institutions in human history, transcending ancient
emperors, feudal lords, monarchs, dictators and even the church in
their wealth, reach and ability to dominate all avenues of economic and
cultural life.
The Roberts Court now seems intent on disposing
of the feeble, flimsy McCain-Feingold campaign finance law as well as
the 1990 AUSTIN decision that upheld a state law barring corporations
from spending to defeat a specific candidate.
Scalia, Kennedy
and Thomas all voted to overturn McCain-Feingold in 2003, and nobody
doubts Roberts and Alito will join them now. The only question seems
centered on how broad the erasure will be. This, after all, is a
"conservative" wing whose intellectual leader, Antonin Scalia, recently
argued that wrongly convicted citizens can be put to death even if new
evidence confirms their innocence.
Should our worst fears be
realized, the torrent of cash into the electoral process could sweep
all else before it. With five corporations controlling the major media
and all members of the courts, Congress and the Executive at the mercy
of corporate largess, who will heed the people?
"We don't put
our First Amendment rights in the hands of Federal Election Commission
bureaucrats," said Roberts said in the oral arguments.
Instead
he may put ALL our rights in the hands of a board room barony whose
global reach and financial dominance are without precedent.
At
this point, only an irreversible ban on ALL private campaign
money---corporate or otherwise---might save the ability of our common
citizenry to be heard. Those small pockets where public financing and
enforceable restrictions have been tried DO work.
A rewrite of
all corporate charters must ban political activity and demand strict
accountability for what they do to their workers, the natural
environment and the common good.
It was the property of the
world's first global corporation---the East India Tea Company---that
our revolutionary ancestors pitched into Boston Harbor. Without a
revolution to now obliterate corporate personhood and the "right" to
buy elections, we might just as well throw in the illusion of a free
government.
This imminent, much-feared Court decision on
campaign finance is likely to make the issue of corporate money versus
real democracy as clear as it's ever been.
Likewise the consequences.
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HARVEY WASSERMAN'S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES is at www.harveywasserman.com, along with SOLARTOPIA! OUR GREEN-POWERED EARTH. This article first appeared at www.freepress.org, where he and Bob Fitrakis will soon write on the monopolization of voting machines.
Authors Bio:
Harvey is a lifelong activist who speaks, writes and organizes widely on energy, the environment, election protection, social justice, grass-roots politics and natural healing, personal and planetary.He hosts "California Solartopia" at KPFK-Pacifica and "Green Power & Wellness" atprn.fm. He editsnukefree.org,solartopia.organd has taught history, diversity and ecology studies at numerous colleges. With Pete Seeger and David Bernz, he co-wrote the Grammy-winning "Solartopia Song."
With Dan Keller, Harvey co-wrote the award-winning "Lovejoy's Nuclear War" and "Last Resort" documentary films. In 1994, he spoke (for Greenpeace) to 350,000 rock fans at Woodstock 2. He's made major media appearances on "Today," "Nightline," "Democracy Now," "Thom Hartmann," "Phil Donahue" and more. His articles have been published at The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, Nation, Progressive, Huffington Post and more.Harvey has authored or co-authored about 20 books, with introductions or endorsements from Howard Zinn, Bonnie Raitt, Dr. Benjamin Spock, Marianne Williamson, Studs Terkel, Dr. Helen Caldicott, Kurt Vonnegut, Ina Mae Gaskin, Dennis Kucinich, Lila Garrett, Ed Asner, Ralph Nader and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
He is married with five daughters and many grandchildren. His top priority is to shut all nuke reactors and help make Los Angeles the world's first Solartopian megalopolis.