<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-bernie-sanders/we-the-people_b_1219573.ht
ml>
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-bernie-sanders/we-the-people_b_1219573.htm
l
 
 
 <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-bernie-sanders> Sen. Bernie Sanders
 <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-weissman> Robert Weissman


 <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-bernie-sanders> Sen. Bernie Sanders
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-weissman>  and Robert Weissman


We the People 

Posted: 1/20/12 02:52 PM ET

If you are concerned about the collapse of the middle class, you should be
concerned about how American campaigns are financed. If you wonder why the
United States is the only country in the industrialized world not to have a
national health care program, if you're asking why we pay the highest price
in the world for prescription drugs, or why we spend more money on the
military than the rest of the world combined, you are talking about campaign
finance. You are talking about the unbelievable power that big-money
interests have over every legislative decision.

An already horrendous situation was made much worse two years ago this month
when the Supreme Court ruled in Citizens United v. the Federal Elections
Commission that multinational corporations have a constitutional right to
spend whatever they want to influence election outcomes. A bare 5-4 majority
lowered the floodgates on unchecked, unlimited, unaccountable corporate cash
in political campaigns. Corporations were equated with people. A century of
laws regulating business spending on elections were upended. In one fell
swoop, five justices fantasized for corporations a right never conceived by
the founders whose preamble to our Constitution begins with the words, "We
the people..." 

The ruling not only poisoned our political process. It contaminated the
legislative process. It cast a permanent chill over all policymaking. Will
the merits or the money tip the balance when an issue comes before Congress?
What do you think? If the question is on breaking up huge banks, for
example, every member of the Senate and the House, in the back of their
minds, will ask themselves what the personal price would be for taking on
Wall Street. Am I going to be punished? Will a huge amount of money be
unleashed in my state? They're going to think twice about how to cast that
vote. Not to put too fine a point on it, you will see politicians being
adopted by corporations and becoming wholly owned subsidiaries of corporate
entities.

We already have seen what kind of damage Citizens United can cause. In the
first election after the decision was handed down, corporations in 2010
poured hundreds of millions of dollars into independent organizations not
formally affiliated with parties or candidates. About half of the $300
million spent by independent organizations came from undisclosed sources. In
60 of the 75 congressional races in which power changed hands, the
unaccountable outside groups backed the winners. They spent freely and
overwhelmingly on negative ads. The early phases of this year's elections
bear witness to projections that the Citizens United effect will be much
worse. Karl Rove has announced plans to raise
<http://motherjones.com/mojo/2011/09/karl-rove-american-crossroads-haley-bar
bour-fundraising> $240 million. The Koch brothers promise to spend $200
million. It's fair to assume the Chamber of Commerce will spend at least as
much. The Super PAC supporting President Obama, Priorities USA Action, aims
to play in the same league. Hundreds of millions more will be in play.

It's a virtual certainty that all of this spending will fundamentally
distort our democracy, tilting the playing field to favor corporate
interests, discouraging new candidates, chilling elected officials and
shifting the overall policymaking debate even further in the direction of
giant corporate interests and the super-wealthy.

So now we face a choice. Americans can let Citizens United remain the law of
the land, or we can have a functioning democracy. We can't have both. We
choose democracy. With no reason to think that this court will reconsider
its decision, we need a constitutional amendment.

Yes, legislative reforms could mitigate the damage. We should require better
disclosure rules. We should make shareholders approve corporations'
political spending. We should provide public financing of elections, but
entrenched money interests have thwarted that for decades. 

But nothing can truly cure the problem unless Citizens United is overturned
with a constitutional amendment.

The Saving American Democracy Amendment in the Senate and a companion
proposed in the House by Florida Representative Ted Deutch would do just
that. The amendment would establish that constitutional rights belong to
real people, not for-profit corporations. The amendment would prohibit
corporations from making election-related expenditures. It would clarify
that Congress and states have the power to regulate campaign spending,
overturning the doctrine that election contributions and expenditures
constitute First Amendment-protected speech and therefore may be subject
only to limited restrictions. And it would affirm that nothing in the
amendment limits freedom of press.

It's no easy thing to enact a constitutional amendment, but momentum for an
amendment is building. People who have honest differences of opinion
understand that there is something profoundly disgusting with what is
happening in Washington and that there is something wrong with American
democracy when you have a handful of billionaires and businesses putting
hundreds of millions of dollars into the political process. Very few people
think that has anything to do with American democracy. The American people
desperately want to restore our democracy and return to rule by all of the
people, not corporations and the superrich.

Bernie Sanders is a United States Senator from Vermont. Robert Weissman is
the president of Public Citizen.

 <http://democracyisforpeople.org/> Democracy Is For People

 
<http://sanders.senate.gov/petition/?uid=f1c2660f-54b9-4193-86a4-ec2c39342c6
c> Sign the petition to support Sen. Sanders' Saving American Democracy
Amendment.

Follow Sen. Bernie Sanders on Twitter:
<http://www.twitter.com/senatorsanders> www.twitter.com/senatorsanders 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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