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.
NEW YORK
New York Times: Most Fundamental Reform Missing from State
Budget
Governor Andrew Cuomo and state legislative leaders passed
New York’s 2014-15 budget last week without a comprehensive small donor public
matching system—instead establishing a very limited pilot public financing
program for the state comptroller’s race in 2014. Adding to this lapse in
leadership, Governor Cuomo said he will disband the Moreland Commission to
Investigate Public Corruption, labeling the narrow ethics reforms in the budget
a triumph. This was an especially disappointing development in light of
the myriad
of corruption scandals that engulfed several legislators in recent years,
including three of the last five Senate Majority Leaders or Co-leaders. Newspapers
throughout the state saw through the spin. The New
York Times opined that the budget’s inadequate ethics reforms do not
“come close to attacking the root of the corruption problem” in Albany. “The
most fundamental reform,” the Times continued, namely public matching funds for
small donations in all state races, “is missing.”
Syracuse Post-Standard: Public Financing “Pilot” Program a
Cop-out
The Syracuse
Post-Standard reiterated the shortfalls of the 2014-15 New York budget in
an editorial last week. Calling restricting public financing to the comptroller’s
office a “cop-out,” the upstate newspaper said that New York City’s successful
model demonstrates that a “pilot” program is unnecessary. If such a system
would have been implemented, it could have enabled candidates who can’t garner
big checks from special interests to compete with small dollar donations from
constituents. Unfortunately for now, the status quo, which allows incumbents to
build up their war chest to scare off any potential competitors, remains
intact.
Albany Times-Union: State Elected Officials Failed to
Address NY’s “Most Glaring Failure”
On Tuesday, the Albany
Times-Union termed Governor Cuomo’s failure to pass comprehensive ethics
reform the state government’s “most glaring failure.” Last year, the Moreland
Commission—which the governor appointed to examine New York’s corruption and
campaign finance laws—issued a thorough report detailing the legal and ethical
breaches that have become so commonplace in Albany over the past few years. In
response to the inadequacy of the current system to address pay-to-play
politics, the commission recommended several reforms including public funding
to match small donations. Unfortunately, Governor Cuomo and legislative leaders
“concluded that reform is appropriate only on a very small scale, and only as
long as it doesn’t apply to themselves.” The outcome is surprising considering
that most legislators, as well as the governor, claimed to support full public
financing for all races.
Crain’s New York Business: Ethics Deal Does Little to Deter
Corruption
On April 4, Crain’s
New York Business criticized New York lawmakers for their inability to
deliver on ethics reform. “At least 30 [state legislators] have left office
since 1999 because of transgressions ranging from inflating their expenses to
sexual harassment to taking bribes,” the editorial stated. Yet the reform
provision in the budget made only minor changes to state corruption laws and delegated
slightly greater enforcement authority to the state Board of Elections. It did
nothing to address the problem of legislators pushing bills or steering funds
at the request of special interests and campaign contributors. The decision to
eliminate the Moreland Commission to Investigate Public Corruption was
especially troubling, Crain’s said—just as the investigators “had dug their
teeth into a plethora of questionable dealings.”
Upstate Newspapers: Ethics Reforms Insufficient to Address
Corruption
The Rochester-based Democrat
& Chronicle called Governor Cuomo’s inability to pass comprehensive
campaign finance reform his administration’s “most notable first-term failure.”
The alternative to public financing for all races—a limited measure for the
state comptroller election in 2014—was too little and too late, given the
election year. The Buffalo
News concurred, saying the plan was a “laughingstock.” The dysfunctional
state Board of Elections is inadequately prepared to implement a public
financing program for the comptroller’s office this election cycle. Moreover, sky-high
campaign contribution limits, and loopholes for special interests hoping to get
noticed by politicians, are still the norm in Albany for the foreseeable future.
Overall, the budget bill was not a compromise for anyone, it was a disappointment.
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