House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi
(D-Calif.) and Rep. John Sarbanes (D-Md.) published an op-ed in The
Washington Post Wednesday advocating for the Government by the People Act on
the day it was being introduced in the House.
“We must disclose the sources of the
money in our campaigns, amend the Constitution to reverse the grievous error of
the Citizens United decision, reform our broken campaign finance system and
empower citizens everywhere to exercise their right to vote,” Pelosi and
Sarbanes wrote.
The landmark U.S. Supreme Court
ruling in Citizens United vs. Federal Elections Commission lifted restraints on
political speech, allowing corporations and unions to spend money on elections
as long as they do not donate directly to a candidate’s campaign. The ruling
overturned much, but not all, of the 2002 McCain-Feingold campaign finance
reform act.
The case is named for the
conservative group Citizens United, which sued when the FEC tried to block the
airing of a documentary critical of Hillary Clinton during the early stages of
the 2008 presidential campaign.
“We know that if the role of money
in our elections were reduced and the level of civility in our politics increased,
the result would be the election of more women, more minorities, more young
people and more people dedicated to serving the public interest, not special
interests,” Pelosi and Sarbanes wrote. “Most members of Congress would leap at
the chance to fund their campaigns without having to turn to a familiar cast of
big donors and entrenched interests. Today, that’s virtually impossible.”
The op-ed said that the bill has
three main focuses: on a refundable $25 tax credit to encourage average
citizens to deduct campaign donations on their taxes; on establishing federal
matching funds for candidates for federal office who agree to limit the large
donations to their own campaigns; and giving candidates the chance to get more
federal tax dollars in the homestretch of the campaign.
Pelosi and Sarbanes compared a
reversal of the Citizens United ruling with landmark civil rights events in
American history for women and blacks.
“From Seneca Falls, N.Y., to Selma,
Ala., generations of Americans have stood up against seemingly insurmountable
status quos that denied their voices and their votes,” Pelosi and Sarbanes
wrote. “Today’s generation, too, must have the courage to take back our
politics.”
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/02/05/nancy-pelosis-call-for-changing-the-constitution/-
See more at: http://www.teaparty.org/nancy-pelosis-call-changing-constitution-34171/#sthash.iipJPLBq.dpuf http://www.teaparty.org/nancy-pelosis-call-changing-constitution-34171/
Comments:
You
know it’s a bad idea if Pelosi likes it.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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