iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
GET UPDATES FROM The Brennan Center for Justice
 

Not Buying Senator McConnell's Position on Disclosure

Posted: 06/21/2012 6:03 pm

By Jonathan Backer

In an opening salvo against the DISCLOSE Act of 2012, which the Senate will begin debating in the coming weeks, Senator Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) wrote a Politico op-ed saying President Obama and congressional Democrats are attempting to "muzzle political speech" by pushing to bring transparency to the third-party spending unleashed by Citizens United.

McConnell has it backwards. He characterizes the DISCLOSE Act as "an attempt to get around the court's decision in Citizens United," but in fact, the bill is an attempt to realize the vision of disclosure that Citizens United embraced -- by an 8-1 vote. In his majority opinion, Justice Anthony Kennedy praised disclosure, saying online reporting of political spending provided "shareholders and citizens with the information needed to hold corporations and elected officials accountable for their positions and supporters" (emphasis mine). He further noted, "A campaign finance system that pairs corporate independent expenditures with effective disclosure has not existed before today."

Unfortunately, it still doesn't exist: "'Let there be light,' and then there was light," is not how this nation operates, whatever the Supreme Court may think. Indeed, the sort of disclosure described by Justice Kennedy does not even exist for direct contributions to candidates. U.S. Senate candidates need only file paper campaign finance reports, an anachronism that can delay disclosure of campaign finance data by months. Meanwhile, some outside groups spending tens of millions of dollars to influence the 2012 election reveal no information about their donors.

In an age of unlimited political spending, the DISCLOSE Act would provide the sort safeguards that eight of nine members of the Supreme Court believe are essential for accountable and functional democracy.

McConnell, of course, is entitled to disagree with the Supreme Court and others, who believe that greater disclosure is needed in the aftermath of Citizens United. What he can't do is depict supporters of disclosure in such Orwellian terms without explaining his own seismic shift on the issue. In 2000, McConnell co-sponsored, with 22 Republican colleagues, the Tax-Exempt Political Disclosure Act, a measure that would have required disclosure of contributions of $200 or more to the very same types organizations targeted by DISCLOSE. Declaring his support for the bill, McConnell argued that tax-exempt groups should not be allowed to "continue to spend millions of dollars on political activity with no meaningful disclosure."

One need not search too far or wide for an explanation for McConnell's conversion on disclosure. When McConnell supported increased disclosure by issue advocacy organizations and tax-exempt labor and trade organizations, such groups spent minimal amounts on advertising. In the 1998 midterm election, third-party groups spent $15 million on political advertising. Wealthy individuals, corporations and unions, by and large, directed their resources to political parties, to which they made unlimited contributions to the tune of $191 million.

In 2002, McCain-Feingold outlawed these soft money contributions, and the role of outside groups in elections has increased ever since (with four months remaining in the 2012 campaign, outside groups have already spent more than $147 million). McConnell, the foremost congressional opponent of McCain-Feingold, became the lead plaintiff in the case that unsuccessfully challenged its constitutionality after it became law in 2002. The great irony is that soft money contributions, like all donations to parties, were subject to the very sort of disclosure that McConnell now opposes.

McConnell's position on campaign finance reform is consistent in only one way -- his desire to minimize the restrictions on and maximize anonymity for large contributions from wealthy and powerful interests. He was perfectly willing to support disclosure for outside organizations, so long as they were not meaningfully involved in the electoral process. But now that they are, he views disclosure as a tool used by left-wing groups to "grind their critics into submission."

As Justice Antonin Scalia recognized in Doe v. Reed (2009), "Requiring people to stand up in public for their political acts fosters civic courage, without which democracy is doomed." It is too easy for anonymous speakers to tear down their political opponents using false or misleading information. Disclosure ensures that political speakers must stand by their claims and engage in true debate with their opponents. It also allows the public to hold entities to account when they irresponsibly distort the facts for political gain. McConnell should disavow his newfound antipathy toward disclosure and help restore accountability to our elections.

Jonathan Backer is a Research Associate for the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice where he focuses on money in politics.

 
FOLLOW POLITICS
 
 
  • Comments
  • 14
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
10:41 AM on 06/22/2012
If you have ever attended a public forum, you know everyone has the right to speak their mind.
The only catch being you have to stand up and be seen.
If you have a strong enough opinion and want to be heard, you had better be prepared to have your face attached to your words.
Mitch doesn't think that step is necessary.
He'd like to phone it in.
NOT going to fly, Mitch.
Speak up, speak loudly, clearly, frequently.
But, you cannot speak from the shadows.
photo
demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
10:37 AM on 06/22/2012
Mitch McConnell knows what matters to his backers - their voice = their money.
They want their voices heard, but they do not want their money traced back to their businesses.
OUR voices = OUR money.
When we pool our resources and fight back against the businesses which support views opposed to our own, we have a huge impact.
That's what Mitch fears.
He saw what we did to Rush Limbaugh and the Komen Foundation.
When OUR money speaks, the GOP gets hurt.
So, Mitch wants the voices to be heard on his end, but he wants to project the voices from an undisclosed location.
You cannot have it both ways.
If money = Voice, we should get to see who is speaking. Otherwise, you need no voice.
photo
realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
09:08 AM on 06/22/2012
WHAT is Mitch McConnell afraid of if he is not helping someone to hide something... its its all legitimate why take away disclosure? We would not want China nor Iran to be laundering money into a political election.

Mitch needs a wake up call.. HE NEEDS TO BE VOTED OUT OF OFFICE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE

OBAMA 2012

RESTORE BALANCE TO THE SUPREME COURT.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Schalaine
We are women. We vote.
08:30 AM on 06/22/2012
Of all the Republicans that I intensely dislike, Mitch is right up there. Citizens United has allowed Republicans to put our country up for sale. And, if we are not careful, this country as we know it, will be a memory. Corporations are people, will become our new national motto.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
watchingduck
Wossamotta U. proud alumnus
02:34 PM on 06/22/2012
isn't it amazing how such an absolute corporate plutocrat keeps getting elected with the help of plenty of poor and working class kentuckians. there is a special kind of sickness involved in that.....brain washing, stockholm syndrome....not sure..
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Schalaine
We are women. We vote.
04:17 PM on 06/22/2012
I almost feel badly for them. These people watch faux 24/7...listen to rusbo daily...read conservative blogs that spread the lies of faux and rush. I don't think going to church helps....Have you heard some of the crap that come out of these "ministers" mouths? They are just surrounded in a shroud of lies and deceptions. What bothers me is they feel so validated and justified in their hatreds all based on lies.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:53 AM on 06/22/2012
Mitch McConnell is a clown in congress getting paid by raping hard earned tax dollars from the American people!
zinxeb
Empathy ends cruelty
02:08 AM on 06/22/2012
Immigration reform, finance reform, healthcare reform, tax reform, election reform...neocons are always talking about the need for all of these, but when it comes to actually doing anything, they are a "no show". Four years in Congress, and not a dam thing done...except deliberate gridlock. Actually doing anything about all of the reforms we need might make Obama look good,..and get reelected...heaven forbid!!

Best way to get all of these reforms is to start with Congress reform!
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
12:00 AM on 06/22/2012
Why is all of this even legal?

Congress of decades past, (obviously a great deal more ethical than the one we got now) had the good sense to pass laws banning corporations from contributing directly to political campaigns.

They further had the good sense to severely LIMIT the amount any one individual could donate to any politician or political party.

And now THIS.....................

"Power tends to corrupt, absolute power corrupts absolutely"

Is that sentence REALLY THAT HARD to understand?

Or is our government and judciciary already so corrupt that they no longer even care?
photo
demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
10:39 AM on 06/22/2012
"Justice" Roberts made it so.
He has ushered in the sale of our nation to the highest bidder.
I think he gets the standard 6% Real Estate commission on the sale.
02:30 PM on 06/22/2012
You are definitely on to something. We already know that Thomas has accepted bribes, in the form of his wife's $700,000 in "salary," and Scalia has accepted bribes, in the form of honoraria, free flights, and resort stays.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:13 AM on 06/22/2012
It's legal because of that pesky 1st amendment. When congress passes any law that abridges your right to publicize your opinion they're abridging freedom of speech. The only real mystery here is why the courts allowed congress to limit speech for so long.
11:27 PM on 06/21/2012
"Disclosure ensures that political speakers must stand by their claims and engage in true debate with their opponents."

Well, that's the rub isn't it. If the repubs had to actually be held accountable for their statements, accusations and innuendos, well, then, they couldn't keep getting away with them. They just might have to deal with the truth and reality, something that would really put a kink in their game plan.