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House votes to make dark money even harder to trace
Is it just us, or is dark money getting even darker? On Tuesday, the House passed H.R. 5053, the Preventing IRS Abuse and Protecting Free Speech Act. The bill forbids…
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Homeland security, taxes, the size of government, campaign finance. Of these issues, the top four being mentioned on Facebook, only one was left undiscussed in last night’s Fox Business GOP presidential primary debate.
Americans care deeply about the level of money in our elections, which makes its omission last night deeply troubling. The debate focused on the economy and business, two areas where campaign finance reform would make a huge difference.
Fox moderators should have taken the time to address such an important issue.
Campaign finance reform is an issue that unites Americans of all ideologies. Eighty-four percent of respondents to a June New York Times/CBS News Poll answered that money has too much influence on our political campaigns — that’s 80 percent of Republicans and 90 percent of Democrats.
Procurement, contracting, lobbying — these are all factors that are intimately tied to business and ones where an imbalance of influence can shift the playing field away from the average American. Crony capitalism, a favorite conservative topic, came up briefly, but the moderators should have pressed the candidates on solutions to this and related issues.
Ignoring campaign finance belies the importance that reform has for so many Republicans specifically, and so many Americans across the political spectrum.
Issue: Money in Politics
Archived
Is it just us, or is dark money getting even darker? On Tuesday, the House passed H.R. 5053, the Preventing IRS Abuse and Protecting Free Speech Act. The bill forbids…
Archived
Say “catfish” in a seafood restaurant and you’ll be sure to get a nice plate of filling protein. But say “catfish” in Washington and you’re more likely to tick someone…
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Republicans and Democrats agree on very little, but you’ll hear both parties decry government waste, fraud and abuse on the campaign trail. So where did Congress first look to save…