The detailed outline of Wyden and Murkowski’s plan is available online at: www.wyden.senate.gov/campaign-finance-reform or www.murkowski.senate.gov.
Wyden has long championed increased transparency in federal elections and was a primary cosponsor of the DISCLOSE act when it was introduced in the previous Congress as well as a constitutional amendment introduced earlier this year giving Congress the power to regulate campaign contributions and expenditures. He authored the original “Stand by your Ad” provision along with Senator Susan Collins (R-Maine) as part of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002.
The text of the opinion piece by Wyden and Kurkowski is below:
“Take it from two
This influx of unregulated political cash stemming from the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision spawned a particularly vitriolic political cycle. Groups on both sides dumped some $6 billion into tearing down candidates for public office. The anonymity of much of this spending encourages ads that lower the level of political discourse and makes it harder, not easier, for Americans to make informed decisions. Most of all, this spending ensured that those elected in November would carry that pressure for strict and absolute partisanship back to Washington, hobbling our efforts to govern for another two years.
The resulting political gridlock is preventing progress in a number of areas – apparent in the “fiscal cliff” negotiations – but most significantly on fundamental campaign-finance reforms. Our states have already pointed the way toward a solution.
In Alaska, Gov. Sean Parnell (R) signed legislation – passed by a Republican-dominated lower house and a bipartisan Senate – similar to the U.S. Senate-debated Disclose Act, which enhances disclosure requirements for political spending and limits corporations and political organizations from coordinating with political parties and candidates. The Corporate Reform Coalition has said that “
We propose combining the best elements of the
Under our proposal, any organization engaging in federal political activity of any kind, from candidacy to advocacy, would be required to disclose their donors in real time. The law would apply to every candidate running for office and every billionaire hoping to influence an election. The same rules would apply equally to corporations, nonprofits and every type of organization in between, so long as they are using money to try to influence elections, as well as to labor union political funds and “right to work” organizations.
Along with many Americans, we are uncomfortable with the Citizens United decision. Unlimited corporate and individual spending is corrosive to democracy and undermines the political process. But the case has been decided, and it is our prerogative as legislators to improve on it. What we, and you, can do is shine a bright light on the system the court created to ensure accountability for all who attempt to influence the democratic process. At minimum, the American people deserve to know before they cast their ballots who is behind massive spending, who is funding people and organizations, and what their agendas are.
While the majority of the justices rejected limits on political spending in Citizens United, they still acknowledged disclosure as vital to elections and democracy. Justice Antonin Scalia said as much in the 2010 case Doe v. Reed when he wrote, “Requiring people to stand up in public for their political acts fosters civic courage, without which democracy is doomed,” and that both campaigning and petitioning anonymously were destructive to a democratic system.
Congress has failed to take up this charge and ensure that the spending sanctioned by Citizens United is not cloaked in secrecy and subterfuge. Thoughtful members of both parties should discuss and agree to a disclosure structure that addresses all potential avenues of access and abuse and treats everyone in the political process equally. In other words, one that is fair to all.
We plan to offer a bipartisan proposal that we hope can serve as a base from which Congress can finally move forward. We hope that you will join us in making that proposal a reality so that the American people are not forced to suffer through another election cycle filled with anonymous sleaze and innuendo.”
Ron Wyden, a Democrat, represents