Do you remember �And for the Sake of the Kids�? It was the
motherhood-and-apple pie PAC through which coal company Massey Energy spent $3
million to defeat West Virginia�s incumbent Chief Justice through grossly
misleading attack ads. McGraw�s successor promptly reversed a $50 million jury
verdict against Massey for fraud and breach of contract. The power-grab was so
blatant it inspired a John Grisham novel.
Now that the U.S. Supreme Court�s Citizen�s United decision
has destroyed any federal checks on their actions, the coal industry is
planning similarly manipulative campaigns for the 2010 elections.
Other rightwing groups are pledging $200-300 million. Because corporate donors can now legally
mask their identity, it�s going to be near-impossible to hold them accountable
for all the ads they fund.
The congressional DISCLOSE Act is intended as at least a partial antidote,
requiring organizations involved in electoral campaigning to reveal the
identities of their major donors in their political ads. The act also bars
foreign corporations, major government contractors and financial bailout recipients
from making political expenditures. It�s a sad statement that every Republican
backed a filibuster, hoping to drown the Democrats in unaccountable cash.
The Democrats currently remain one vote short, and vow to
try again. We would hope that the moral arguments would convince Olympia Snowe,
Susan Collins, or Scott Brown. Or that they would resurrect the John McCain of
McCain-Feingold, the bill that Citizen�s United eviscerated. Democratic
negotiators even added burdensome reporting requirements for unions in a vain
attempt to get Republican votes. But persuasion or even bending-backwards
compromise gets little traction with the Party of No. Even those who decried
Citizens United, like Snowe, seem more intent on bringing the Democrats down
than preventing American democracy from becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of
Exxon, Massey, BP, Goldman Sachs, and every other corporate interest willing to
pay the cost. The alternative is for ordinary citizens to hold the Republicans
accountable for further empowering the most destructive corporate interests on
the planet. We need to make their party�s support for anonymous attack ads a
liability for every one of their candidates, and every officeholder carrying
their standard.
This means challenging Republican representatives at town
meetings and campaign rallies, rallying and picketing at their offices and
those of their corporate backers, protesting with puppets and
banners, writing letters to local newspapers and passing city council
resolutions, canvassing door-to-door in ways that reach beyond the choir.
Canvasses and petition campaigns that reach out beyond the usual on-line choir,
acting in every creative public way we can think of. As with most important
efforts, there are no magical solutions, but the more of us who participant in
visible public action, the more chance we�ll have of prevailing, both through
extracting a political cost, and creating the maximum possible chance that at
least one Republican senator will switch and supports the minimal transparency
that the DISCLOSE Act provides.
We obviously have more leverage on senators and
representatives running in November, or those, like Olympia Snowe and Scott
Brown, who are running in 2012 in Democratic-leaning states. But even for those
seemingly less vulnerable, we need to make clear how profoundly their actions
undermine our democracy. It�s an insult that Wyoming and North Dakota have as
much Senate representation as California, and that senators representing 11
percent of the country have the power to block the will of those representing
89 percent, which is why Senate filibuster rules need to be changed at the
beginning of next session. But for now, we have to deal with the issue of
transparency, and hold those accountable who�d prevent it. Americans are
politically distracted, overloaded, and amnesiac, but they didn�t like Citizens
United, with 80 percent opposing it. So they should respond to
efforts to reverse or ameliorate its damage.
It�s tempting to assume someone else will magically create
these efforts. But given the stakes, we need to appoint ourselves to step
forward, as so many of us did to carry Obama to office, and then connect with
others doing the same. MoveOn is already planning local Fight Washington Corruption rallies throughout the country
on August 10 and 11. If enough of us can participate, bring in others, and
enlist the organizations we work with, they could be a powerful beginning step.
We�ll then need to find further ways to bring pressure, reach out to the
currently uninvolved, and make clear the stakes for our democracy. As with
every critical issue we face, we can�t just sit back and hope for change from
D.C.
Paul
Loeb is the author of �Soul of a Citizen: Living with Conviction in Challenging
Times,� recently published in a wholly updated new edition after
100,000 copies and The
Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen�s Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear,�
the History Channel and American Book Association�s #3 political book of 2004.
For more information or to receive Loeb�s articles directly, see www.paulloeb.org.
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