http://www.truth-out.org/progressivepicks/item/34523-reclaiming-democracy-from-a-rogue-supreme-court
Sunday, 24 January 2016 00:00 By
Mark Karlin,
Truthout | Interview
The following is an interview
with Derek Cressman
Mark Karlin: Wall Street has
become the symbol of big money controlling government and our economic system,
but the oligarchical purchase of democracy extends much farther than Wall
Street monetary and financial policy, doesn't it? Citizens United unleashed
billionaires and millionaires, corporations and lobbying firms and
organizations to essentially buy candidates and frame election issues, didn't
it?
Derek Cressman: Wall Street is
absolutely a major source of funds for campaigns, but donors tied to fossil
fuel extraction, tobacco, gambling, corporate agriculture and pharmaceuticals
all write huge checks, as well as ideological and eccentric billionaires. To
see the impact, witness how quickly President Obama took prescription drug
prices off the table when he began negotiating health-care reform in his first
term or how an obscure oil pipeline like the Keystone XL became a national
topic of debate. Similarly, the lack of campaign funds from regular people
makes it much harder for Congress to prioritize income inequality or student
debt.
It's interesting to me how
much emphasis the mainstream corporate media puts on regularly reporting on how
much each candidate has raised in their campaigns for office. Doesn't this,
regrettably, become a benchmark factor in the "electability" of
candidates, as you recount personally in your book?
Because both editors and
readers know that money matters, fundraising becomes an easy benchmark to
measure campaigns by. This is one reason why disclosure of campaign funding is
not enough. While it has many benefits, disclosure also has some downsides - it
discourages some candidates from running and discourages some voters from
participating since all "viable" candidates seem to be taking money
from one special interest or another (with Bernie Sanders being the exception
that proves the rule). Big money not only impacts who wins elections; it
impacts who runs in the first place and who gets taken seriously by the media and
endorsing organizations. As I learned in my campaign for secretary of state in
California, everyone wants to be with a winner and the best way to predict that
is fundraising.
What is the difference that
you detail between paid speech and free speech?
It's the difference between an
advertisement and a news story. The key question you need to ask to distinguish
free speech from paid speech is who is paying for the information to be
disseminated - the speaker or the reader. Advertising intrudes on a reader's
choice of what information to accept and what to reject. Paid speech is like a
hack on your spam filter that gets in the way of emails you want to read.
How does paid speech -
particularly through television advertising in the billions of dollars and
other dark money "investments" - dissipate a citizens' democracy?
Paid speech undermines our
autonomy to control our own information flow and puts that power in the hands
of big money donors and political campaigns; paid speech effectively crowds out
free speech. We all have only 24 hours in a day, and realistically we can maybe
devote one of those hours to consuming information pertaining to politics. Our
email inboxes overflow, our televisions are filled with hundreds of cable
stations, our phones ring off the hooks, junk mail clogs our postboxes. The
only sane response is to create information filters that allow you to decide
which speech is most important - and paid speech (advertising) violates those
filters and ensures that only a few well-financed viewpoints can break through
the clutter.
During a presidential election
campaign - which now extends basically two years - isn't it a challenge to
galvanize people, as you are attempting to do, to push back against the Supreme
Court - and other judicial deciding bodies - by passing a constitutional
amendment to reverse Citizens United?
Because our time is scarce, it
is always a challenge to get people to focus our collective attention on any
one thing - but especially the seemingly mundane issues of our political
process. However, I actually think campaign season is an ideal time to raise
these issues. Voters will be inundated with paid speech and many will turn away
from the election process as a result, which is exactly what many campaign
consultants want. To re-engage voters, we need to first acknowledge what has
turned them away from politics to begin with and then offer real steps to
address that. Elections that are centered around substantial issues like
reclaiming our democracy from a rogue [Supreme] Court are a chance for voters
to make our voice heard.
Your book is called "an
instruction manual to restore fair elections." What are some of your
options that citizens can engage in?
There are simple things that
anyone can do like joining organizations, writing letters to the editor and
even stamping messages on dollar bills. But especially this
year, we should all be asking congressional candidates where they stand both on
a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United and a long line of
related cases as well as Supreme Court nominees that would overturn those
cases. The book also suggests bigger projects like working to get your local or
state legislature to place a question on the ballot allowing voters to instruct
their elected representatives to pass a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens
United. We are likely to see questions like that in California and Washington
State this year as well as many cities.
You suggest a constitutional
amendment in chapter six that would state that the US Constitution does not
prohibit placing a limit on the amount of political contributions. This would
nullify the Supreme Court decisions that have removed most campaign limits on
the wealthy, including Buckley v. Valeo and Citizens United. If such a
constitutional amendment were passed, however, wouldn't we need citizens to be
energized to get federal and state legislatures to enact stringent financial
contributions?
Yes, and we've seen that
organizing around an amendment is the best way to get citizens energized. Once
we have the political strength to pass an amendment with two-thirds in both
houses of Congress, we will also be in a strong position to pass federal
legislation. And, the 38 state legislatures that need to ratify an amendment
would be primed as well. Having a clear vote on the principles of limiting big
money is an ideal way to pave the way for the more technical and wonky details
that would be included in enacting legislation and regulations. Conversely,
trying to pass complicated legislation without first winning the clear
political mandate to do so hasn't been that successful for reformers over the
past four decades.
What do you think of the
ability of candidates who are independently wealthy who finance their
campaigns, which is becoming increasingly common for members of the oligarchy
who have never held office? One just need take a look at Donald Trump.
You could also look at
California Congressman Darrell Issa, former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine or
[former] New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Wealthy candidates not only
have the advantage of self-funding, but also of connections to other wealthy
people and an immediate leg up in the media "viability" assessment,
which may mean they don't actually need to spend that much of their own funds.
The overall effect skews the demographic makeup of Congress (more than half of
whose members are millionaires). It also forces non-wealthy candidates to adopt
positions that cater to wealthy interests so they can compete.
Wouldn't publicly financed
elections on the federal, state and local levels solve all these problems?
Public financing of candidates
is helpful, especially in down-ticket, low visibility races. It leads to more
candidates, with a greater diversity of viewpoints, and campaigns and
legislation can focus on issues that ordinary people care about. However, in
highly visible races, public funds may actually increase our reliance upon paid
speech (albeit more balanced and diverse speech) and may continue to turn
voters away from politics.
We need to rethink whether
30-second ads are really the best way to inform voters, however they are paid
for. What I'd really like to see is public funding for free internet service
for every American, tax credits for newspaper and magazine subscriptions, and
full funding for multiple public TV and radio stations (while banning them from
accepting private funds or running any ads). This type of public funding would
promote listener-solicited speech, not paid speech forced on us by candidates
and consultants, and ultimately would provide voters with higher quality
information.
Finally, unless we check the
raw, unaccountable power of the Roberts' court, I fear they will keep chipping
away at the viability of public financing programs as they have by unleashing
huge sums of private funds and by striking down (in Arizona) the opportunity
for publicly financed candidates to respond. As we saw with the McCain-Feingold
ban on soft money, the fact that the court has previously upheld a policy is no
guarantee that the five ideologues in the current majority won't ignore that
precedent to further their own personal politics.
Your title for chapter eight
is "Halfway Home: We're Further Along Than You Think." What is the
cause for your optimism?
When I was in college, I
studied the Soviet Union and the South African apartheid regimes, which were
even worse that what we face today in America. Those regimes looked immutable,
despite being morally bankrupt and lacking the support of the overwhelming
majority of their people. What we learned is that social change happens like a
political earthquake - sweeping changes happen quickly, and unpredictably,
after sufficient pressure has built up over time.
The Roberts' court looks
untouchable today, yet many will be surprised at just how rapidly it crumbles
as its foundations are similarly shaky both intellectually and politically. We
have reached a point where 80 percent of Americans think that the Supreme Court
got it wrong when it equated campaign spending with free speech - that's simply
not a sustainable position for the court to maintain.
While shifts in political
tectonics do take time, we need to recall that we are 40 years into the
struggle against judicial intervention with campaign finance laws (which began
in January of 1976 with the Buckley v. Valeo ruling). The only question,
really, is how much damage the court will incur to its long-term reputation and
respect before it yields to common sense and respect for the people it purports
to serve.
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