The arguments opponents use against campaign reform:
I
don’t want my tax money
spent on political campaigns.
Guess
what. folks? Your tax dollars already are used to fund
political campaigns. It’s just through the back door –
in hidden taxes – and at a cost hundreds of times more
than if you simply paid for the elections up front. Wouldn’t
you rather pay a fraction of the cost, up front, and in a way
that levels the playing field for all candidates, including
3rd party and independents? That's what the Clean Money
system provides.
I
don’t want my tax money going to candidates I don’t
agree with.
Guess what again? Through this
same hidden tax system your dollars already are going to candidates you
don’t agree with. At the very least you
are funding the salaries of all incumbents when they are campaigning and
fundraising, while challengers must pay their own.
With public funding you are really
funding a Clean Money electoral "system" that returns democracy to the electoral process. Unless you
are one of the 1% who gives over $200 to candidates, your voice is simply
not being heard. Don't waste sending your money.
I
don’t want tax money spent on projects I don’t
agree with.
Translated, most people don’t want their money spent on wasted projects.
But that will continue as long as we have special interests controlling state
spending. In truth, our taxes are always spent on one or more projects we
don’t agree with. We must eliminate the projects that are not in
the best interest of the general public, and only full public funding of
the electoral process will accomplish that.
45%
public funding is enough for politicians.
Not
really. What it means is that the 45% public money subsidizes the 55% coming
from special interests, who then turn their 45% discount around to get
legislation passed that results in even more legislative favors and higher
taxes. We are better off paying the complete bill and having legislators
totally responsible to the taxpayers. A 50% plan in Minnesota failed to reduce
special interest influence, and a 45% plan in Wisconsin will fare no better.
Public
financing of campaigns is “welfare for politicians.”
There
is no better system of “welfare for politicians” than our
current moneyed system. Instead of being beholden to their constituents,
politicians need only satisfy the few moneyed interests who fund their elections.
Incumbents enjoy a 16-to-1 cash advantage and a 9-to-1 reelection advantage.
That's a kind of "welfare" that simply can't be matched elsewhere. But
then, I’ll vote them
out!
Maybe, but likely not. Most voters
do not research legislative voting records, and politicians know it.
People
vote mostly on the basis of name recognition
and party rhetoric. That’s why money – and lots of it – is
so important to the incumbents who don’t want to spend their time
with constituents. It buys TV time and other media to get their names
heard, loud and clear, thus overwhelming challengers without access to
wealthy
contributors.
Public
financing of campaigns protects incumbents.
What better protection
do incumbents need than their reelection rate of 90% under
the current moneyed system?
Besides, if public financing
really did protect incumbents, they’d
have passed it years ago. But it does just the opposite and that’s
why they oppose it. The Clean Money system levels the playing field for challengers, and good
politicians don't mind that. The inept ones like things just as they
are, thank you.
Public financing violates freedom of speech.
Not true, though that is a safe argument that protects politicians at the
polls.
Actually, since the two reform
proposals (Clean Money and SB12) are voluntary and candidates can opt
out of either, they pass constitutional muster. Clean
Money, in fact, has already passed constitutional challenges in both Maine
and Arizona. Further, it doesn’t violate free speech; it ensures that
one’s megaphone (cash) does not drown out the speech of those without
wealth or access to it.
Those who argue that their money represents their speech can still give
money to the candidates who (a) want to take it, and (b) have opted out of
the public grant. But without the optional public grant, only those voters
with sufficient cash in the bank can sway the direction of elections -- that,
in itself, violates the 14th Amendment right of equal protection for those
without the cash to make political contributions.
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