American Anti-Corruption Act: The Tipping Point for American Citizens
The American Anti-Corruption Act:
A tipping point for American citizens
In the wake of increasing concerns about the undue influence of money and special interest groups in American politics, the anti-corruption advocacy group Represent.Us created a grassroots campaign in support of a law called the American Anti-Corruption Act. The Act is "a nine-point plan to crack down on lobbyists, strengthen the flimsy law intended to prevent super-PACs from coordinating with campaigns, and put a stop to undisclosed donations funneled through dark-money nonprofits" (Aronsen 2013). It should be noted that ironically, "Represent.Us is a project of United Republic, a campaign finance reform group that, like many of the outside spending organizations it takes aim at, is a 501(c)(4)" although it is bipartisan in its composition (Aronsen 2013). Its bipartisan membership includes "former Federal Elections Commission chair (and Stephen Colbert's 'personal lawyer') Trevor Potter, Lawrence Lessig, disgraced lobbyist-turned-reformer Jack Abramoff, representatives from Occupy Wall Street and the DC Tea Party Patriots, and even Teddy Roosevelt's great-grandson, Theodore IV" (Aronsen 2013). This diverse composition is designed to answer the concerns of critics that there might be singular, self-interested reasons behind the principles of the Act. The Act is designed not to address the abuses of a single political party but to reform the campaign finance and influence-peddling system, particularly after the U.S. Supreme Court undercut many of the reforms inherent in a previous campaign finance reform law,
The first tenant of the American Anti-Corruption Act is that it will "prohibit members of Congress from soliciting and receiving contributions from any industry or entity they regulate, including those industries' lobbyists" [and] "prohibit all fundraising during Congressional working hours" (American Anti-Corruption Act, 2012). One of the concerns about Congress' ability to effectively regulate industry and pass legislation is that congressmen and congresswomen are increasingly dependent on the funds of special interest groups to financially support their election campaigns. The Act's intention is, in part, to denature that influence. "In 2009 alone, lobbyists spent $3.5 billion, or about $6.5 million per each elected member in Congress" (Shaw 2012). The concern is that "money can affect what goes into the bills…let's say we are talking about healthcare: money guaranteed that single-payer health insurance was not on the table [when drafting the Affordable Care Act]. There could be nothing more fundamental to that bill than that" (Shaw 2012). The influence of healthcare insurance lobbyists, in other words, likely exercised a powerful influence in shaping the congressional response to demands for reform. The American Anti-Corruption Act would also demand a firming-up of the definition of what constitutes a lobbyist and "limit the amount that lobbyists and their clients can contribute to federal candidates, political parties, and political committees to $500 per year and limit lobbyist fundraising for political campaigns" (American Anti-Corruption Act, 2012).
The American Anti-Corruption Act was intended to reduce the influence of PACs, or Political Action Committees, which dramatically increased in power after the Supreme Court's ruling on Citizens United. The Citizens United ruling effectively declared corporations to be 'persons' whose free speech rights to make campaign contributions to express themselves. "Super PACs are political action committees that can accept unlimited donations from individual donors and, as a result of Citizens United, corporations and unions as well" (Laurenz 2014). The influence of traditional political parties has been declining and the influence of these affiliated partisan groups is on the rise. "Unlike candidates for federal office who must abide by donation limits currently set at $2,600 per individual, these super PACs can, and do, accept checks from wealthy donors in any amount. While super PACs are prohibited by law from coordinating directly with candidates, they can operate a sort of shadow campaign, running ads supporting one candidate or attacking another, with the intent of shaping the outcome of an election" (Laurenz 2014). In fact, many argue that the influence of such PACs is far more dangerous, given that observers are not aware of the biases behind them.
Since Citizens United, the amount of shadowy money going to such PACs has exploded now that corporations and unions can freely donate without financial restrictions. "During the 2012 cycle, in which non-party outside spending tripled 2008's total and topped $1 billion for the first time, super PACs accounted for more than $600 million of that spending" (Mayersohn 2014). The influence of these organizations has grown disproportionately large, even though such wealthy PACs often only represent...
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