If Blagojevich Is Against it, Your State Rep. Should Be For It…. Campaign Finance Reform

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If Blagojevich Is Against it, Your State Rep. Should Be For It….Campaign Finance Reform


image by Ed Fallon

From 1993 to 2006, Ed served seven terms in the Iowa Legislature, representing residents of downtown Des Moines, the surrounding neighborhoods and the City’s northeast side. Ed’s focus as a lawmaker was to champion the needs of constituency groups treated unfairly by government or neglected by the majority of policy makers.  He also became a leader on land-use, the environment, reforming tax increment financing (TIF), and opposing corporate welfare.  He is co-founder of I'm for Iowa an Independence Movement for Iowa.

The following is a guest opinion published in the Des Moines Register.

It's easy to muster contempt for Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Politics in America are rife with corruption, but rarely is corruption as brazen and unrepentant as what we've been treated to recently by Illinois' soon-to-be former CEO.

To learn that someone apparently would openly try to sell a U.S. Senate seat shocks and disgusts us.

Blagojevich is a menace and needs to go to the gated community where other Illinois governors before him have gone. But America's campaign-finance system is a far greater menace to democracy. If we can muster shock and disgust for Blagojevich, we should be utterly appalled at the pervasive role of money in politics.

Face it. What we call “elections” have become auctions. The auctioning of U.S. Senate seats occurs every six years – every two years for congressional and state legislative seats. Big donors, corporations and special interests “bid” on the candidate of their choice. In close races, the smart money bids on both candidates, and the one backed by the highest bidders usually wins.

We don't want to believe our elected officials can be bought. But as someone who served for 14 years in the Iowa House, I say with confidence that what big money wants, big money usually gets. Rank-and-file lawmakers may be well-intentioned but often are strong-armed by legislative leaders beholden to corporate donors and special interests. As a result, the most pressing challenges of our time – climate change, budgetary reform, health care, farm policy, to name a few – see practically no progress year after year.

So, while I hope the good people of Illinois fire Blagojevich and fire him soon, I have a more pressing hope that Americans across the country get fired up for campaign-finance reform. In Iowa, Senator-elect Pam Jochum is leading the charge on VOICE (Voter-Owned Iowa Clean Elections). This bill would make it easier for rank-and-file lawmakers to stand up to party leaders, allow more citizens to run for office and give the public far greater access to the halls of power.

The federal equivalent of Jochum's bill is sponsored by Sens. Dick Durbin and Arlen Specter. Both would establish greater fairness, openness and accountability in the financing of elections. Both deserve our strong backing.

When lawmakers consider whether to support campaign-finance reform, perhaps the question they should ask is this: What would Blagojevich do? Well, beyond the governor's attempt to sell a U.S. Senate seat, his veto of a bill to prohibit contributions from donors with state contracts of more than $50,000 makes it clear he's no friend of reform.

And I can't think of a stronger endorsement than that for reducing the role of money in politics.



**BFIA Action Alert**


If you support VOICE, now is a good time to take action.  Write a letter to your local paper or to the Des Moines Register [letters@dmreg.com], or contact your legislator


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