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DC Court Upholds Pay-to-Play Ban
Some great news came out of the courts Tuesday, as the DC Court of Appeals upheld a law barring federal contractors from making contributions in federal elections. The ban, which…
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Harvard Professor and Issue One Advisory Board Member Malcolm Salter has an excellent op-ed in Forbes detailing how the sugar industry uses campaign contributions and lobbying to artificially inflate the price of sugar and maintain billion dollar subsidies.
The sugar industry, which Republican presidential candidates Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush have held up as a prime example of crony capitalism, makes more PAC contributions than all other U.S. crop producers combined. The payoff? U.S. consumers pay 64 to 92 percent more for sugar than the rest of the world, on top of $3.7 billion that taxpayers shell out to the industry annually in subsidies.
The right and the left both rightfully decry crony capitalism—but to solve the problem we will have to do more than cut off subsidies. In his op-ed, Salter recommends revamping our ethics laws so that lobbyists are no longer a source of campaign cash for lawmakers. Salter also recommends empowering small-dollar donors through citizen funding so that legislators can raise the money they need for campaigns while remaining loyal to their constituents.
In addition to revamping our lobbying laws and empowering small-dollar donors, the Committee for Economic Development released a report earlier this year recommending increased transparency as a method for rooting out crony capitalism.
These recommendations are good medicine for what ails our democracy and our economy—sans the spoonful of sugar.
Issue: Money in Politics
Archived
Some great news came out of the courts Tuesday, as the DC Court of Appeals upheld a law barring federal contractors from making contributions in federal elections. The ban, which…
Archived
The Internal Revenue Service is unlikely to take steps to shine a light on dark money spending in the run-up to the 2016 elections, the New York Times reports today.…
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Disclosure requirements are varied, complicated, and poorly enforced. That’s a problem, because where there is confusion, subversion and outright disregard for the law abounds. As campaign finance law has mutated…