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STATEMENT OF U.S. SENATOR MITCH McCONNELL ON CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
U.S. Senate ^ | March 20, 2002 | Senator McConnell, the Defender of the Constitution

Posted on 03/24/2002 12:30:42 PM PST by Smile-n-Win

STATEMENT OF U.S. SENATOR MITCH McCONNELL
ON CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM

*The following statement was delivered today on the floor of the U.S. Senate*

Mr. President, I would like to begin by citing the ultimate campaign reform – the First Amendment to the Constitution:

“Congress shall make no law….abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press…”

I referred to the freedom of the press because it is the robust exercise of that freedom which has brought us here today to assault the freedom of speech.

Over the past 5 years, the New York Times and the Washington Post have joined forces to publish an editorial an average of every 5 ½ days on campaign finance reform. If you had to buy that editorial space in the Times or the Post it would cost about $36,000 and $8,000 respectively for each editorial. Multiply that amount by the number of editorials in each paper and it equals a total value of $8 million of unregulated soft money advertising that frequently mentions federal candidates. And, of course, that type of corporate, big media, soft money expenditure will not be regulated in this new law.

Why is the press -- the institution that has unlimited free speech -- so interested in restricting the speech of everyone else? Let’s take a closer look.

The unconstitutional issue ad restrictions in this bill purport to limit advertising within proximity to an election. However, it does not -- interestingly enough -- apply to newspaper ads. So, the already-powerful corporations that control the news -- and in many instances, the public policy -- in America will get more power and more money under this new law. One has to wonder why that blatant conflict of interest has not been more discussed in a debate about the appearance of conflict.

Outside groups such as Common Cause have devoted years and millions of dollars to lobbying this issue in the House and Senate. And why not, their fundraising will explode if this bill passes – they no longer have to compete with party committees for soft dollars. Shays-Meehan permits every member of the House and the Senate to raise soft money for these outside groups. And, I’m told that this unlimited, undisclosed, unregulated soft dollar fundraising has already begun.

Although the facts about the provisions of this bill are almost always misrepresented, the driving mantra behind the entire movement is that we are all corrupt or that we appear to be corrupt.

We have explored corruption and the appearance of corruption before in this chamber. You can’t have corruption unless someone is corrupt. At no time has any member of either body offered even the slightest hint of corruption.

As for the appearance of corruption, our friends in the media, who are part and parcel of the reform industry, continue to make broad and baseless accusations. It has been reported that the reform industry spent $73 million from 1997-1999 on this issue – this is all soft money. These all soft dollar expenditures are used to fuel negative perceptions of federal officeholders and candidates. Scandal or perceived scandal sells papers and gets viewers. In the non-stop competition to be the next Woodward and Bernstein, the reform industry relentlessly works to raise questions in their minds.

In short, I believe that the appearance of corruption is whatever the New York Times says it is. Add to that, cash-strapped, scandal-hungry newspapers and unlimited foundation donations for the reform industry – and you’re in full-scale corruption mode. The actual facts are rarely relevant.

Mr. President, I request that 2 articles be included in the record that document the hypocritical actions of the reform industry.

With no basis in fact or reality, the media consistently and repeatedly alleges our every decision can be traced back to money given to support a political party. I trust that every member of the chamber recognizes how absurd, completely false and insulting those charges are. In fact, we have been derelict in refuting these baseless allegations. I doubt we will ever see a headline that says “99% of Congress has never been under an ethics cloud.”

Each of us is elected to represent our constituents. We act in what we believe is the best interest of the country and our home states. Does representing the interests of our state and our constituents lead to corruption or the appearance of corruption? These allegations are not an attack on us, they are an attack on representative democracy.

What we are talking about here today is speech. The government telling people how, when and how much speech they are allowed. This wholesale regulation of every action of every American anytime there is a federal election is truly unprecedented.

The courts have consistently upheld the free speech rights of individuals and parties. Even in the most recent case of Colorado II, the court made clear that parties are not to be treated any worse than any other organization in the protection of constitutional rights. This legislation falls far short of that charge. The Shays-Meehan bill weaves a bizarre web of restrictions and prohibitions around parties and candidates while simultaneously strengthening the power of outside groups and corporations who own newspapers.

This legislation is remarkable in its scope. Indeed, this legislation seeks nothing less than a fundamental reworking of the American political system. Our Nation’s two party system has for centuries brought structure and order to our electoral process. This legislation seeks, quite literally, to eliminate any prominence for the role of political parties in American elections.

This legislation favors special interests over parties, favors some special interests over others, it treads on the associational rights of groups by compelling them to disclose their membership lists to a greater extent than ever before contemplated, it hampers the ability of national and state parties to support state and local candidates, and places new limits on political parties’ ability to make independent and coordinated expenditures supporting their candidates. Many of these provisions are directly contrary to existing Supreme Court precedent.

Equally remarkable is the patchwork manner in which this legislation achieves this virtual elimination of political parties from the electoral process. It seeks to achieve a pernicious goal via haphazard means. And the real loser under this legislation is the American voter, who no longer can rely on the support of a major political party as an indicia of what a candidate stands for.

Let me walk you through how this legislation will affect all of us.

1. Effect on National Parties

A. The Numbers

Shays-Meehan will eliminate nearly 50% of the fundraising receipts of the National Parties. National parties will be forced to conduct their wide array of federal and state party activities with only half the revenue.

Shays-Meehan will eliminate 90% of cash on hand of the National Parties.

By eliminating so-called soft-money, or nonfederal money, national party support of state parties and state and local candidates will be dramatically reduced if not eliminated.

In the 2000 cycle:

Where will all the soft money go? To outside groups and we can raise it for them and to the newspapers who can sell advertising in proximity to an election.

B. Coordinated vs. Independent Expenditures.

Shays-Meehan significantly limits party support of federal candidates. Parties are prohibited from engaging in both independent and coordinated party expenditures after a candidate has been nominated. The bill treats all party committees – from state and local to the national party – as a single committee.

How this works: If the Atlantic City Republican Party does a $500 independent expenditure on behalf of a Senate candidate – the party is prohibited from making the permissible $900,000 coordinated party expenditure in New Jersey.

The impact is even more severe for Presidential candidates! – if a local party anywhere does a $300 independent expenditure, the nominee will loose the entire party coordinated – roughly $13.7M in 2000.

My colleagues on the other side of the aisle that have spent time in New Hampshire lately should pay very close attention to this provision.

C. Conventions.

Shays-Meehan will end National Party Conventions as we know them. The soft money ban covers host committees created to host these grand events.

In 2000, the federal convention grant was $14M per major party, just slightly more than was spent on convention security alone in 2000.

However, host committees raised and spent roughly $65M each. This is all soft money. Parties will be left with a choice: put on their conventions with 80% less funding or pay for them with all hard dollars - money that would otherwise be used for candidate support.

The big losers are not only the parties and presidential candidates, but also the host cities and the viewing public.

In case you think this can be done through state parties, Shays-Meehan closes that option – by allowing the use of soft money only for state, district or local political conventions.

Perhaps the outside groups will step in and fill the gap. We will be able to raise the money for them. Or maybe even the unrestricted media.

2. Effect on Federal Officeholders and Candidates

Shays-Meehan “federalizes” our every action and conversation. The big losers under this bill are state and local candidates and our state parties.

Under Shays-Meehan we can only raise money for state and local candidates within the hard dollar limits and restrictions – individual limit will be $2,000 per election.

Under Shays-Meehan we can only raise soft dollars for state parties within the hard dollar limits and restrictions - $10,000 from individuals.

But have no fear, my colleagues, the House has provided us with an alternative:

3. Effect on State and Local Parties

4. Effect on State and Local Candidates

5. Effect on Outside Groups

A. Outside Groups vs. The National Parties.

Soft money will exist and thrive under Shays-Meehan – everywhere but at the party committees. Here are a few short examples:

The bottom line is that this bill does not take money out of politics, it takes the parties out of politics.

B. Issue Ad Restrictions

C. Loopholes for Outside Groups

UNIONS

There are other loopholes in Shays-Meehan for specific outside groups.

INDIAN TRIBES

D. Coordination

Petitioning the Government to Redress Grievances

6. Closing

Mr. President, I submit for the record additional documents written by individuals and groups across the political spectrum which highlight the fundamental problems with this legislation. Although this legislation will pass today, I am confident the Supreme Court will step-in to defend the constitution.

I want to commend the proponents of this bill for acknowledging the serious constitutional questions that are wrapped up in this legislation and for providing an expedited route to the Supreme Court for an answer to these questions. I am consoled by the obvious fact that the courts do not defer to the Congress on matters of the Constitution.
Today is a sad day for our Constitution, for our democracy, and for our political parties. We are all now complicit in a dramatic transfer of power from challenger-friendly, citizen-action groups known as political parties to outside special interest groups, wealthy individuals and corporations that own newspapers.

After a decade of making my constitutional arguments to this body, I am eager to become the lead plaintiff in this case and take my arguments to the branch of government charged with the critical task of interpreting our constitution.

Today is not a moment of great courage for the legislative branch. We have allowed a few powerful editorial pages to prod us into infringing the First Amendment rights of everyone but them. Fortunately, this is the very moment for which our Bill of Rights was enacted. The Constitution is most powerful when our courage is most lacking.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: cfrlist; silenceamerica
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To: Smile-n-Win

Senator Tom Daschle Say NO SPEAKY
UNDER PENALTY OF THE CFR LAW

Thank God for reasonable men of honor, character and Constitutional Champions like the good Senator Mitch McConnell. I'm going to ride that tiger with you all the way to the Supreme Court and happily hear the man with the gold stripes on the sleeves of his judicial robes rip CFR asunder.

41 posted on 03/24/2002 2:47:15 PM PST by harpo11
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To: Smile-n-Win
First Amendment bump.
42 posted on 03/24/2002 2:49:49 PM PST by Faraday
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To: harpo11
Well said.
43 posted on 03/24/2002 2:51:41 PM PST by Graewoulf
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To: jwalsh07
Thanks for the link. What would be really funny is if the FEC would rule that, due to the complexity and confusion of the new CFR law, there will be absolutely NO advertising allowed 60 days prior to the election since it's impossible for the FEC to discern what is legal and what is not. :o)

Talk about a bunch of stunned politicians!

44 posted on 03/24/2002 2:59:38 PM PST by McGavin999
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To: jwalsh07
This is the first comprehensive analysis I have seen. I wish it had come out sooner. This is indeed a bad bill if Mitch is being factual and I am sure he is. Bush should veto the bill. If not this analysis should be the first brief filed with the court challenge. I am wondering what advice Bush is getting from Ted Olsen on this.
45 posted on 03/24/2002 3:42:24 PM PST by Texasforever
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To: Texasforever
Ted Olsen is on our side, I'm sure. This one has Karl Rove's fingerprints all over it.
46 posted on 03/24/2002 3:49:34 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: Texasforever
By the way, the media has already begun to hang the "read my lips....." millstone around President Bush's neck. Why they couldn't think two moves ahead on this one is something that I don't understand. As F16flyer said, it is enigmatic. I don't get it.
47 posted on 03/24/2002 3:53:07 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: jwalsh07
Ted Olsen is on our side, I'm sure

It was more than a rhetorical question. If he is “on our side” then he, as Solicitor General whose main function is to vet the constitutional soundness of legislation a president is asked to sign, must either recommend a veto OR recommend that the Executive branch not join the defense of the bill before the court. This is going to get extremely complicated if Bush signs this.

48 posted on 03/24/2002 4:41:07 PM PST by Texasforever
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To: jwalsh07
If you want to see something hilarious see The liberal analysis
49 posted on 03/24/2002 4:52:27 PM PST by Texasforever
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To: jwalsh07
By the way, the media has already begun to hang the "read my lips....." millstone around President Bush's neck.

I guess you saw Fox News Sunday this morning, huh? Bush isn't going to win with the media on this one; he may as well veto the bill and take the heat while getting his way.

50 posted on 03/24/2002 5:30:16 PM PST by NittanyLion
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To: jwalsh07
Thanks for the bump.
51 posted on 03/24/2002 8:08:16 PM PST by PRND21
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To: jwalsh07
Thanks for the bump.
52 posted on 03/24/2002 8:08:18 PM PST by PRND21
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To: PRND21
Don Feder has an article out Monday in which he argues the Bush White apparently wants a Republican Party with good looks and no substance. None of those pesky conservatives to deal with. Seen in this light then, the President's statement of support for a blatantly unconstitutional act like CFR suddenly makes a lot of sense. When it comes to domestic conservative issues, the President and his advisors have decided being Rats in drag is the next best thing. Along with spurning the party's activist base on issues of concern to them. We'll see how much THAT particular strategy helps the GOP this year and in 2004.
53 posted on 03/24/2002 8:59:23 PM PST by goldstategop
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To: RAT Patrol
REFORM THE MEDIA

That is indeed what needs to be done!

54 posted on 03/25/2002 12:22:28 AM PST by Smile-n-Win
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To: Eva
No, the point of the article is that CFR sets up an outside of politics power broker to hold the purse strings. Clinton already had the organization in place.

Gosh, that would be a nightmare!

55 posted on 03/25/2002 12:34:12 AM PST by Smile-n-Win
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To: Torie;RAT Patrol;CDHart;jwalsh07;Doug Loss
At no time has any member of either body offered even the slightest hint of corruption.

This is what I find the most ironic about this whole unconstitutional CFR. Whoever supports it is makes this ominously self-revealing statement: "I know politicians must be corrupt, because I am corrupt myself. Politicians need to be protected from themselves by--[guess whom]--the Government!"

Bribing is done in the greatest possible secrecy, so there is no way for politicians, especially opponents, to know about one another's corruption affairs. (Unless the scandal becomes public, but that has hardly been a case with a majority of Congressmen.) Presuming without proof that your opponents are corrupt, while maintaining the claim that you yourself are honest, is in hypocritical contempt of the presumption of innocence. By trying to use your own corruptness as proof of your opponents' corruptness, you incriminate yourself, and prove nothing about your opponent. By saying that politicians are corrupt by nature, while being a politician yourself, you admit to being corrupt by nature, and you even make no apologies about it.

It was a good idea from Senator McConnell to include this line in his speech. He made it quite clear to his fellow Senators: If you vote for this unconstitutional bill, you admit to being corrupt. And lo, 49 Democrats and 11 RINOs still voted for the unconstitutional bill.

People seem not to see that their opinion of the world is also a confession of character.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson

56 posted on 03/25/2002 1:20:02 AM PST by Smile-n-Win
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To: conspiratoristo; GOP_Lady; Pontiac; commiewatcher; dubyaismypresident; DRJ'sfirst; gvnr...
BUMP
57 posted on 03/25/2002 1:36:01 AM PST by Las Vegas Dave
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To: Las Vegas Dave
Long read alert! Save for later.
58 posted on 03/25/2002 4:28:45 AM PST by Commiewatcher
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To: Smile-n-Win
AMEN!
59 posted on 03/25/2002 7:54:35 AM PST by RAT Patrol
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To: Freee-dame
The bill is written with "separability." What parts do you think will be declared unconstitutional? Will what's left favor the 'rats?

Some people are hoping that the restrictions on free speech will be scrapped, while the increase in the hard money limit from $1000 to $2000 will be left intact. That would be a good net result for Republicans, though the Washington Times is not so confident: see this thread.

60 posted on 03/25/2002 11:50:36 AM PST by Smile-n-Win
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