Why the Wars Roll on: Ban Campaign Money From Outside the District

by: Ralph Lopez, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Why the Wars Roll on: Ban Campaign Money From Outside the District
Civilians carry a victim of a NATO airstrike in Afghanistan. (Photo: AFP)

    As public opinion tips against the US military presence in Afghanistan, and Congress talks about "doubling down," as the pullout from Iraq is accompanied by steadily increasing violence, and talk turns to slowing or halting the pull-out, the question the anti-war public must ask itself is: What now? War funding for Iraq continues despite two consecutive Democratic majorities elected expressly to stop it. Obama's high-stakes 2008 Super Bowl ad blared "Getting Us Out of Iraq," and it worked. He was elected. But the cold hard fact seems to be emerging that, regardless of public opinion, the wars will roll on.

    The occasional heroic Congress member or senator will call for a timetable, an exit plan or a halt to war funding, but despite lots of heat generated in the debate, the war bills seem to pass at the end of the day. This is because incumbents' real constituents are no longer the people who live in the district. The real power, the money which pays for television ad blitzes and the all-important donations to the local Little League, comes from far away.

    Very few people know that on average 80 percent of their Congress members' and senators' campaign funds come from outside the district, and largely from outside the state. They come from industries like defense, telecommunications and financial services. What do they get for these contributions, even in cases when the Congress member votes against those contributors' positions on certain bills?

    The 1976 US Supreme Court decision, Buckley v. Valeo, which equated money with "free speech," affirmed your right to buy your own congressman. But it did not explicitly affirm your right to buy mine. Since that decision, the amount of money in politics has skyrocketed and is at all-time highs. Also at record-breaking highs are the pay-offs, like bailouts for the auto and financial services industries.

    The savings and loan bailout of the nineties, at $200 billion, was chump change compared to the $700 billion TARP slush fund of today, which rewards financial services companies for the subprime mortgage fiasco. In searching for an answer to how the $3 trillion Iraq war can drag on despite three years of Democratic majorities in Congress elected to end it, follow the money.

    The citizen's watchdog group MAPlight.org has found that congressmen who voted for TARP, the "Troubled Assets Relief Program," received nearly 50 percent more in campaign contributions from the financial services industry (an average of about $149,000) than congressmen who voted no. Legislators who voted for the automobile industry bailout in 2009 received an average of 40 percent more in "contributions" from that industry (the less politic call them "bribes") than those who voted against it. And House Energy and Commerce Committee members who voted yes on an amendment in 2009 favored by the forest products industry, to allow heavier cutting of trees, received an average of $25,745 from the forestry and paper products industry. This was ten times as much as was received by each member voting no. This pattern repeats itself over and over.

    True, contributions don't guarantee a particular legislator will vote your way. But neither will he or she filibuster your bill or go on TV to ask rude questions about impacts to taxpayers or consumers. Arguably, that could be called hush money.

    What we have arrived at is a system of industries, defense, financial, telecommunications, health insurance, trail lawyers and the rest, looking to appease those who, as Richard Nixon said, can do something for them, or something to them. Take one example: Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), who chairs the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee. This is the final hurdle for war appropriations bills after they pass the House. No war bill gets to the president's desk until it gets past Inouye, who can stop it cold, send it into perpetual conference committee loops or change it in a dozen ways. As one might guess, money comes pouring in to Inouye from defense contractors from across the country:

    Campaign contributions to Sen. Daniel Inouye from the defense industry, ex-district.

photo

    Inouye takes in $160,000 from corporations not in his district that have a financial interest in war. Double Medal of Honor winner Gen. Smedley Butler said after World War I, "war is a racket."

    How do we change this? We can call for reform which forbids money from outside the district. If money from PACs or individuals is to be equated with "free-speech," then let it be confined to its rightful boundaries. There are now "free speech zones" for anti-war protesters, who welcome some public figures into town. So, the idea of geographically restricting some speech in the public interest is well established.

    By halting money from outside districts, connections between business interests and committee members will be by coincidence, not forged as unholy alliances, which may conflict with the interests of real constituents. The influence of the defense industry over key committee members and House and Senate leaders will be diluted. The principle of Buckley v. Valeo, that money equals free speech, remains intact. But congressmen will still answer to constituents, the way they are supposed to. Of course, citizens are always free to work their hearts out for whomever they want.

    When two-thirds of the nation's wealth is owned by just ten percent of the population, as is the case in the United States, that ten percent has a lot more money to give than the other 90 percent: therefore, the interest of society in limiting the corrupting influence of money across geographical boundaries is clear. MAPlight.org found that money travels outward from wealthy zip codes to poorer ones.

    If congressmen were not meant to represent geographical constituents, the founders wouldn't have drawn district maps. Campaign finance is now a frenzy of interests shopping for committee members and chairpersons across the country. The industry determines which committees are targeted. The reason incumbents no longer pay attention to constituents who are overwhelmingly against bailouts, or strongly anti-war, is that their real bosses will always give them enough money to bury any challenger in a blizzard of negative TV ads.

    Why should Boeing Aircraft (maker of the Apache helicopter,) which doesn't even have a shop or an office in my district, be allowed to give money to my congressman in Boston? (It does.) He shouldn't be worrying about what Boeing thinks. He should be worrying about what I and my neighbors think. Without any extraneous distractions.

    If there is one thing congressmen hate, it's being embarrassed and tongue-tied in public. If he or she won't go to the mat to end the wars, or for any other issue important to the district, then ask your representative what's the deal with that contribution from the real estate company in Arizona. Or what have you. If your congressman is using your district's leather seat (it belongs to the district, not to any one person or set of outside interests) in that historic, marble-filled chamber to represent you, vigorously, then there's no problem. If not, further questions are in order.

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Ralph Lopez has been published in the Boston Globe, the Baltimore Sun, the Chicago Tribune, and other smaller newspapers. He has a degree in economics and political science from Yale University. He has reported from Afghanistan, and at present lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.


Comments

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Best idea I've heard in a

Best idea I've heard in a while.


Keep it simple if you

Keep it simple if you prefer. The right is great at doing this Lockheed Martin is part, of the root of all evil. Put them out of business,


It's not just the campaign

It's not just the campaign money but the high-paying job opportunities after office or during office (for your family members and friends). Look at Sen. Phil Gramm or Sen. Daschle. Or you can get a multi-million dollar book advance from friendly corporations (e.g. Gov. Palin). Campaign finance reform is essential or we will see little or no change.


Perhaps it is time to

Perhaps it is time to challenge: Buckly v. Valeo, and laws which allow corporations to be considered "people," "binding arbitration" limited to the financial institutions chosen arbitrators, Congressional behaviors like allowing totally unrelated riders or "earmarks" to attach themselves to any bills, the "seniority rules" practice in Congress which places the most "bought" members into powerful committee positions to perpetuate themselves and the businesses to which they are beholden, and the choosing of members of the Supreme Court for life and by ideological bent... Perhaps it's time for a second American Revolution, albiet a peaceful one like a Constitutional Convention.


Thanks for calling the

Thanks for calling the current system of campaign "contributions" as system of bribery. It's clear that it is. Buckley v. Valeo in essence said that people possessing a lot of that abstraction that we call "money" get to govern everyone else. There is a move afoot (actually adopted in for legislative elections in Arizona and Maine) to provide for publicly funded electoral campaigns. This would be a major step forward. Another step forward would be allowing proportional representation in congress. This would open the way to a true multi-party system. With just two parties having a lock, it is just too easy and convenient to control for the big money interests.


I've been saying that for a

I've been saying that for a long time. It it a distortion of the concept of representative democracy to allow contributions from those who are not constituents. I would also add that contributions should only be allowed from human beings. If corporations challenge based on Buckly v. Valeo, then they should be limited to contributions in the state where they are chartered.


Love Ralph Lopez' concept.

Love Ralph Lopez' concept. Too easy to get around it, though. It's nothing for a large, well-heeled company to open a one-person office in every district, qualifying it to contribute to every Congress member. Will M's comment suggests a way to fix that problem: correct the famed Supreme Court clerical error that resulted in companies being recognized as "persons" under US law. In fact, if eliminating corporate personhood is too sweeping a change -- making chaos of business law and tort law, perhaps -- then corporate personhood could be legally limited to those areas, with political activity and political contributions specifically prohibited. Essentially the law would say to companies: "As a convenient fiction, society go along with the pretense that you are a 'person' in some respects but definitely not others."


Interesting. Congresspeople

Interesting. Congresspeople do not accept comments from people outside their districts, i .e. you have to be from Maine to e-mail them, yet they accept contributions from out of state. At the same time, how one Congressperson votes affects more than his/her district: it affects all of us. Maybe we should all be allowed to voice our opinions to them, but only in state people can make contributions? Or just truly limit the amounts of the contributions in general? I know that on in-state referendums people complain that the outcome is determined by out-of-state contributions. Most likely enforceable limits on contributions is the simplest route.


Will M., I think a

Will M., I think a constitutional convention is a scary prospect. There is nothing in the Constitution that describes how it will be conducted nor any limits placed on the convention once convened. We could emerge with an entirely new constitution from a closed convention. I prefer the relatively open amendment process.


We need to pay our

We need to pay our congressional representatives the highest salary in the land, say $5-$10 million per year. It would prevent any misdeeds (no financial incentive), they could fund their own re-election campaigns, and it would be cheaper for the American public in the long run. We wouldn't have so many ridiculous expenditures on things that do nothing to advance the interests of America as a whole. It appears that America is going the way of Rome. Very sad, but corruption is having a very deleterious impact on society.


Economic censorship.

Economic censorship. Legalized corruption.


Why is this an article? Our

Why is this an article? Our government is owned by corporations, the corporations that profit from war. Both the Democrats and Republicans are in bed with the corporations. The system is broken and our present government is not going to fix it. I'm tired of people surmising what could be but, isn't.


"Love Ralph Lopez' concept.

"Love Ralph Lopez' concept. Too easy to get around it, though. It's nothing for a large, well-heeled company to open a one-person office in every district, qualifying it to contribute to every Congress member." Point well-taken. The area of the law would need to be employed surrounding "piercing the corporate veil," i.e. creating fronts or corporations with no true business purpose save to get around other laws. Anyway it would get pretty obvious were Boeing to have a two-person office in every farm county; at least the picture would be clear to people rather than allowing them to pass the money under the table.


Why not just ban all

Why not just ban all contributions from non-persons, i.e. corporations, unions, "institutes" trusts? They have no right to free speech, as they are not citizens.


Peter G Peterson is now

Peter G Peterson is now funding/donating/supporting PBS= World Focus.


The dollar is undermined by

The dollar is undermined by the unconstitutional things they do. Giving tax money to their campaigns does not fix this. To get a message to a company like Boeing, ordinary people could refuse to fly. Some companies appear to rely so largely on subsidies, however, that it isn't clear they can be affected short of their wholly owned congresspeople retiring or the global melting of the dollar to inconsequential status. The dollar could drop enough that the bribes would not justify the massive creation of dollars to subsidize the bribers. Some argue this has happened in certain countries. Local people then must trade local stuff because the currency is irrelevant.


Why the Afghanistan War?

Why the Afghanistan War? Sent Why Does the Afghanistan War Roll On?_The more I see of the reasons/excuses to be in Afghanistan the more It looks like the overriding reason is to support the US Military Industrial Complex. (MIC) __The MIC needs a war or the immediate threat of war to keep it's funding increasing. The MIC is a funder of our politicians, it has its own secret service, it provides generals and such to the media for its PR campaign and it puts it spends money in every state. __The other reasons to be there range from feeble to nonsense. . . . Are we really promoting civil rights for women? I doubt it. . . . Are we there to promote a democratic government? Never, they are too hard to control. . . . Are we there for oil/gas/pipelines? For security reasons those are not feasible in any foreseeable future. . . . Are we there to catch Osama? From a statement by Benazir Bhutto, she claimed Osama Bin Laden had been murdered by Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh. Wikipedia http://tinyurl.com/as9ee _or Youtube 6:10 min in, http://tinyurl.com/33ejz4 __For me the most compelling reason for the war in Afghanistan is to support the Military industrial complex and I expect that this is a big reason we have one war after another under every administration. __acomfort


Lobby forms of government

Lobby forms of government are the style and substance of politics in corporatism, it has taken one form or another in almost every country on earth where consumerism is the way of life. Humans who appreciate liberty and justice for all have no choice other than establishment of a parallel organization form which is designed to withstand unavoidable ecological collapse. We the people must learn to cooperate, create externalized profits, and have more fun than consumers do.


There is only a fool proof

There is only a fool proof way of ending this corruption: public financing of all political campaigns, federal, state and local. Here again the Governments needs to step in to do the big job that "private industry" botches for all of us. Health Care anyone?


Where does one get the

Where does one get the information about who gives how much to each member of congress?


I think this whole

I think this whole discussion misses the point; the American public is too easily taken in by TV. BBC ran an interesting series about how Freud's work was used to shape our collective mind, first to buy products and now politically as well. Check it out and remember that everything on the tube is designed by very clever people to fool us. http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8953172273825999151# A smart public wouldn't vote for these corporate tools no matter how much money they had to throw around.


I saw a proposal a few years

I saw a proposal a few years ago by a columnist who proposed up to $200 as a tax credit for contribution to any legit candidate. You'd simply show it on your 1040 to be reimbursed by the IRS for your political contribution, up to $200. If 10 million voters did that on their 1040, it would help offset the campaign contributions of industries.


The problem is, who is going

The problem is, who is going to pass such a ban? The very congressmen and senators who benefit from outside and corporate contributions? No, this has to be enforced by the voters. We need a strong, non-partisan, single-issue organization to issue a seal of approval to candidates who take a "Pledge Against Corruption" and promise to accept contributions only from registered voters in their district, no more than, say, $100 per person per election, and to borrow no money at all. And then we voters need to take a pledge to vote for such candidates over unpledged candidates, even when we disagree with their views.


Halting money from outside

Halting money from outside districts to congressmen is a very good idea. Doing so may indeed increase the chances that "my" congressmen" will speak for me. However, this "halting" would require congressmen to pass it into law in the first place. The likelihood of this is extremely slim. Perhaps it would be easier to have implemented a "Nascar Rule" as I read in a Truthout article about a year ago or so. Car racers and their cars are tatooed all over by the companies that sponsor them. Who contributes to who is visible to all with eyes to see. Why not implement that rule for congress people? It would oblige them during campaign adds and TV appearances to reserve in the upper right corner of the screen a full list, in decreasing order of importance, of the corporate interests that supported their campaign. Then, perhaps, the voter could have an idea of what bills they will support or kill in congress.


Still, the wealthiest people

Still, the wealthiest people or person in an area would hold sway over the poorer majority. We need an even better plan.


The ideas in this article

The ideas in this article and from posters are excellent but there are two prerequisites prior to implementation and no healthy idea will even reach the launch pad without fulfillment of them. First we have to realize and admit that we have lost (over the last two generations - '75 onwards) a true sense of courage required to live a healthy non-deluded life. We have lost courage mostly through conscious social manipulation by the corporation CEOs allied to demons in the right wing. Second, we have to fix and transform our democracy to survive the death knell that these same demons have been sounding for three decades by making ourselves infinitely more responsible as citizens of our renewed democracy. With the courage to go up against a fascist CEO or a corrupt representative and the knowledge from experience of how to improve our democracy (such as the ideas above and many many more) we can return to being the only persons (without corporations) recognize3d and respected by a strengthened constitution facing a humbled Capitol Building full of our servants. But we have to change ourselves first before we start on such an incredibly challenging journey as suggested above.


Simple platforms with human

Simple platforms with human groups attached who pledge to forfeit their lives and sacred honors if they stray off-task. We then have right/left/middle/up/down/manic/depressive performance auditors who puppy them (it sounds less menacing than dog) and make sure they do what they are charged to do, no more, no less. I will never forget a school principal who welcomed me as a somewhat uppity mother, by saying, "Come on in. We need you to keep us honest." This is one of my fondest memories of the (now-gentrified) 'hood. Very sadly, from my point of view, the 'hood is largely lost forever, although I admit I like the new genuine French cafe with real French people with accents. Their store-made bread costs less than Whole-You-Know-What's bread, and Provence is now a chain, Portland style.


So how do you persuade

So how do you persuade crooked legislators to pass laws (effective ones) that prohibit what they profit from? Their families get jobs from. What's described is essentially a spoils system. What are the proposals for changing that system--besides saying how flawed & easily deluded we all are. Suggestions? Realistic ones?


"Where does one get the

"Where does one get the information about who gives how much to each member of congress?" http://MAPlight.org and http://opensecrets.org


Here's a thought: Require

Here's a thought: Require every state to require every candidate running for federal office to list ON THEIR BALLOTS, under their names, their political party affiliation, AND: 1.) their 10 biggest dollar contributors, and the nature of the business (in layman's language) of each contributor; AND: 2.) who from Washington was hired by any influential/"connected" company, during or after their term of office. Both would be much easier to accomplish with uniform ballots nationwide for all federal elections -- in order to remove each state's involvement in the format of federal ballots -- and the electorate would have consistent ballot information nationwide.


It is naive to think that

It is naive to think that banning, controlling, containing, or regulating political contributions will work. The best way would be to swamp out those contributions by allowing a tax credit up to about $300 on the IRS 1040 for political contributions to legit candidates. That would be better than 'public financing' of elections because YOU pick whom to support, not the Fed Elections Commission.


The article misses the

The article misses the point. Most of the money spent goes on TV ads, & we own the airwaves. Require TV companies to run political ads for free & you cut through a lot of the crap. The proportion of airtime could relate to the percentage of the vote in the previous election. The party which won the last election would have a built in incentive to pass this into law.


Representative government is

Representative government is unfortunately too far removed from whom it is purportedly representing. Even majority rule misrepresents the minorities. And what we're seeing here is that it's not so much the majority who gets represented, but the most powerful who get their way, both monetarily and persuasively. Actually, this is how our legal system operates, too. It's not even truth that is sought, but rather what's deemed beyond a reasonable doubt, which essentially comes down to whatever's most convincing. Big money buys big influence which dominates populations. Democracy is mostly a bogus appeasement while the effective influencers hold sway safely unfazed by ineffective citizenry. Holding truth to power would need a certain amount of agreement among all players to be mutually interested in truth over power.


Overlooked are corporations

Overlooked are corporations being granted super-citizen rights over the past century. When this country was first settled and nation came into existence, corporations did not have the rights of a free land holding man. Now corporations and their executives have more rights to influence government with bribes called campaign contributions or fact finding missions (to resorts of course) or jobs when they leave office. Corporate executives can even order the deaths of people and worst case they receive a fine that amounts to a few hours' profits for the company and certainly does not affect their own pay and bonuses. We need a Constitutional amendment that strips away these super-citizen powers of corporations, including the right to give money directly or indirectly to government officials. It is time to truly make corporate bribes illegal in this country and stop engineering loopholes to maintain the flow of money. This corruption is deeply embedded in both the Democratic and the Republican parties and has killed this Republic and too many of its sons and daughters.


Lots of ideas but no action

Lots of ideas but no action that will stop war in it tracks because it's profitable. Until we figure out how to stop profit in war - we're kinda doomed wouldn't you say? This is supposed to be a Christian country. "Thou shalt not kill." Unless you wear a uniform. Then it's call bravery. That's just sick. Who can come up with an idea that will use armies for a profitable service without killing anyone? Whoa! That's an idea. Maybe they could fix bridges...? Teach? Farm? Nurse?


Superb idea! And very easy

Superb idea! And very easy to understand and spread the word about. Let's make it a new movement: No more contributions (legal bribes) from anyone outside your district. In the case of the Senate: No more contributions (legal bribes) from anyone outside of your state.


Whatever is done,corporate

Whatever is done,corporate financing of elections must be stopped,starting with out of State contributions!


They'd just open offices in

They'd just open offices in every district they want to contribute to


Too easy for Corps to get

Too easy for Corps to get around plan, we are increasingly matching them with small Internet donations that are now as important, and only those would stop. Public Funding as in Maine or AZ of elections is only way out, and even that will be hard. Belling cats needs good planning.


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