The Brennan Center regularly compiles the latest news
concerning the corrosive nature of money in New York State politics—and the
ongoing need for public financing and robust campaign finance reform. We’ll
also be linking to dispatches from around the country highlighting the national
scope of this crisis. This week’s links were contributed by Syed Zaidi.
For more stories on an ongoing basis, follow the Twitter hashtag #moNeYpolitics and #fairelex.
For more stories on an ongoing basis, follow the Twitter hashtag #moNeYpolitics and #fairelex.
NEW YORK
NY Assembly Passes One-House Budget with Public Financing
Reforms
On Tuesday in Albany, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver spoke
to a large group of Fair Elections supporters gathered for a rally. Silver
assured the activists that public
financing and comprehensive campaign finance reform would be in the
one-house budget to be released by the Assembly the following day. “You all
have until April 1st to convince the Senate to do the right thing and pass
campaign finance reform,” he added. On Wednesday, the Assembly approved
its one-house
budget plan with the aforementioned reforms included. Specifically, the Assembly
budget proposed a fund to match donations up to $250 from constituents at a
6-to-1 ratio; similar to Governor Cuomo’s budget, which was introduced last
month. Under the Assembly proposal, a 10 percent surcharge on penalties for
securities fraud and a $5 check-off on tax return forms would fund the system.
On the Senate side, the Independent Democratic Conference and the Republicans
are still negotiating the details of the chamber’s one-house budget. A Senate
resolution released Thursday said that the Senate budget would modify Governor Cuomo’s public financing program, but did not specify how.
Fmr. NJ Governor Whitman: NY Can Serve as Shining Example of
Reform
In a recent interview,
the first female governor of New Jersey, Christine Todd Whitman, explained why
she supports Fair Elections reform in New York. Whitman stated that public
financing presents a grand opportunity for New York to showcase itself as a
leader in reform. Although she was not an early supporter of public financing,
she soon realized that it would allow “those who don’t have access to great
wads of money the opportunity to compete.” In addition, she said, public
financing could help control the extraordinary costs of running an election
campaign—as it did when she was running for governor in New Jersey. When asked
why there is so much opposition to public financing among Republicans (her
political party), she replied that the “Koch brothers aren’t the only people
who give a lot of money. There’s a MoveOn.org and there are the
unions, so it should play to [the Republicans’] advantage too to see some of
this [reform] and get some of their nontraditional candidates more
attention.”
McCutcheon Presents Opportunity for New York to Address
Money in Politics
This year, the U.S. Supreme Court is set to decide McCutcheon
v. Federal Election Commission. Katrina vanden Heuvel wrote
in the Washington Post that although the decision is difficult to predict
at this stage, one possibility is that the Roberts Court could invalidate
aggregate contribution limits—restrictions on the total amount that one
individual can donate to all political campaigns within an election cycle. Regardless
of the outcome, the decision presents an excellent opportunity for New York
State to address the torrent of unlimited spending on elections by special
interests. Governor Cuomo has proposed a series of reforms including matching
small donations with public funds, in order to give constituents the same clout
that mega-bundlers and PACs have in Albany. The measure would also reduce
sky-high contribution limits and beef up enforcement of campaign laws. In
addition, the system also presents distinct advantages for women. “All five
states that have public financing rank in the top 12 for the proportion of
women legislators, with two in the top five.”
Sign-Up for McCutcheon Rapid Response
McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission has been termed
the next Citizens United. Aggregate contribution limits are vital to preventing
the circumvention of candidate contribution limits. The U.S. Supreme Court
could issue its ruling in McCutcheon any day. Join the McCutcheon Rapid Response team to
be ready for an event on the day of a ruling.
Norden: Public Financing Can Make Elected Officials
Dependent on Their Constituents Rather than Special Interests
In a Buffalo
News op-ed last week, Lawrence Norden, the deputy director of the Brennan
Center’s Democracy Program, stated that comprehensive campaign finance reform,
with a public funding option, is the most practical remedy to the influx of big
money in state politics. Although some reformers have pinned their hopes
exclusively on a constitutional amendment to reverse Citizens United, such a
feat would entail a long and arduous process including the cooperation of 37
states and two-thirds of Congress. Alternatively, public financing can mitigate
many of the problems—such as the disproportionate influence of special
interests and mega-donors—of the current system, and has a real shot of passing
this year. It has already garnered the support of a majority of assembly
members, senators and the governor. The objective of any reform, Norden
explained, should be to make politicians dependent on their constituents rather
than those writing the biggest checks. “The experiences of Connecticut and New
York City,” he noted, “show that comprehensive campaign finance reform, with
public financing at its core, can be a valuable step toward cleaning up our
state government.”
Cuomo Releases Ad to Push Public Financing of Elections
Governor Cuomo’s campaign has released a set of ads
regarding his budget priorities as negotiations over the topics continue. Among
these, is an ad
that asks state residents to call their representatives in Albany to urge
them to support the governor’s comprehensive reform package, which includes
public financing of elections.
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