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Sunday, August 13, 2006
Paul Jacob :: Townhall.com Columnist
Thank goodness the rich are still free to speak
by Paul Jacob
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Before the McCain-Feingold campaign finance regime, many more groups spoke out on issues during campaigns, when voters were more likely to pay attention (which is reasonable, since that's close to the time when they get to make their critical decisions). But these groups are now forced to disclose donors and subject themselves to FEC regulation if they communicate mentioning a candidate's name within 30 days of a primary and 60 days of the general election. (You don't want voters to have too much information too close to an election. Not if you are an incumbent.)

More regulations from a tribunal in Washington, which would follow the dictates of incumbents in Congress, cannot be the answer. The lessons of last Tuesday, and the election before that, and the one before that . . . they make this very clear.

After the creation of the FEC with the first set of sweeping campaign finance regulations in 1974, our elections have become noticeably less competitive. In the 14 election cycles preceding the 1974 "reforms," Senators were three times more likely to lose in a primary than since. Since 1974, the Senate re-election rate has gone up by 17 percent. The incumbent re-election rate, during the same period, has increased 5 percentage points for the House.

But campaign finance regulators, politicians, and pundits call for more regulations. They'd like to ban an individual from contributing his own money to his race. They have already jiggered the rules to benefit the candidate, usually the incumbent, faced with a candidate spending his own wealth.

Thank goodness for rich folks like George Soros and the less well-known conservative financiers. Politics is a marketplace similar to other endeavors. You can't do much without capital. Campaign finance laws have as their purpose (as well as result) the restriction of the capital formation necessary to reach the public with a message or a candidacy. This cuts hardest against new messengers and new ideas.

Whether Ned Lamont's opposition to the war in Iraq be right or wrong, isn't it good that the public got to consider it? Our Founding Fathers committed their lives, fortunes and sacred honor. Thank goodness some of them had fortunes to help us tackle the critical mission of independence. We need such patriots today as well.

It has become popular to bemoan wealthy candidates and thus wealthy officeholders. Let's buck this trend.

We should be glad that at least the rich are still free to speak.

And let's hope they'll agitate for reversing course on campaign finance, away from regulation by the political incumbency and toward freedom of speech for the rest of us.

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About The Author
Paul Jacob is President of Citizens in Charge. His daily Common Sense commentary appears on the Web, via e-mail, and on radio stations across America.
 
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Term Limits
The problem with Term Limits is that it requires the members of Congress to vote for it.

It requires Congress to voluntarily reduce its own power.

It's never gonna happen.

Re: Buck
It seems to me that the reason that Senate members serve 6 year terms is that the Senate is the body that traditionally deals more with national issues, whereas House members deal with things that are more localized. Of course House members deal with national issues as well, but they are more directly accountable to their local electorate than Senators and are the ones that deal most directly with their constituents.

The President is given a four year term so that there is no real threat of an "Imperial Executive". The President has a limit on his time in office so that no one person can consolidate executive power in his hands and have a stranglehold on the executive functions of the government.

Your post is dead right on the way things have turned out though, and the column hits it on the head as well.

BTW, if anything in this post is inaccurate CMoore will probably be along to correct it :-)
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