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For once I agree with something a Ravenswood wingnut says. There is truth even in jest, my friend.
Would that make his wifes missing fur Obama-drama? And speaking of drama,isn't Levine pleading guilty again today?
Another good reform -- both federally and locally -- is some uniform guidance on how to report occupation and employer. Right now, a whole bunch of rich people with very specific interests in government business can get away with calling themselves self-employed "investors" or "entrepenuers." There needs to be better rules on what a big-time donor has to disclose.
How about a requirement that any person or organization that makes aggregate contributions in excess of a certain amount (say $25,000) has to file a statement of economic interest, disclosing all financial dealings with the state?
The federal example should teach us that caps absolutely do not work. They simply channel political money into other entities to do the same work, but without the transparency or accountability.
Money will find its way into politics. The Illinois system of reporting - but no caps - provides transparency and accountability. We would be worse off with caps, and the rise of a slew of 527 equivilent groups with no transparency or accountability.
That is the only way for people to participate without crawling to the party and not being a millionaire.
http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/242/index.html
Illinois is the Wild West of political fundraising. We get the best government that money can buy.
I'll leave it to Cindy Canary to advise us how to establish reasonable and constitutional limits.
One more thing about Caps, they make the candidates spend more time raising money from more people. More time in fundraising means less time for everything else. This of course gives another advantage to self-funded candidates .
Sharply limit contributions from non-individuals (corporations, PACs and "soft money") and from all out-of-staters.
Full disclosure for all.
If there is an extremely corrupt sitting Governor, then he can sell state contracts for campaign contributions, beat the hell out of a non-corrupt opponent, and win re-election to continue this cycle of corruption.
I think if a candidate can raise at least $2,000,000 then they should be eligible for a matching with state funds if necessary.
I don't think any person should qualify. I think they should demonstrate a minimal threshold of political adeptness.
Ashur Odishoo
Candidate
State Representative 11th District
www.voteodishoo.com
So if you raise $20 million on a promise to better fund schools, you spend "your" $20 million doing that.
Seems like an easy way to solve everyone's problems. Plus, if you've got enough money to contribute to a campaign then you've got too much money and by taking that money and using it to solve the state's problems, you'll spare the rest of us those unsightly tax increases.
Then why can't the state pay up things like the Medicaid backlog? Good grief.
I think it would be interesting to try a "sliding scale" where challengers are initially allowed to raise money in large increments - $10,000 per contributor, say - and then they must start raising in smaller amounts once they reach a certain threshold of viability. I don't know what that would be in an Illinois Tier 1 race currently, what you need to have in order for the media and other donors to take you seriously as a candidate. $100,000? $200,000? Whatever it is, we should not make it too hard for challengers to reach that threshold.
The nice thing about a sliding scale is that since you have to gather these large contributions first (presumably from your die-hard believer supporters), there's plenty of time for the media and your opponent to look at them, and if it looks like you're a paid subsidiary of the trial lawyers or any other group, they'll have plenty of time to make that case to the public.
Capping the amount you can spend as a candidate is a very bad idea. It never works. Pols always find a way around it, and since they write the laws, they find ways not to enforce them against themselves. But history has shown us that contribution limits, if reasonable, and strong disclosure laws can provide some benefits. They won't cure all that's wrong with Illinois, but they are worth trying.
If such a cap is unconstitutional, then there should never be a cap on contributions ever, or else we basically say working-class individuals will be shut out of holding office.
I do think we should focus more on campaign contribution limits for corporations and PACs than for individuals, but only with full disclosure of WHO they are and to make sure that all business interests are disclosed. The system will NEVER be corruption-proof. Dishonest crooks will always find a way around a system which relies on honesty. But we can put some reasonable, constitutional, safeguards in place to keep out special interests while not restricting individual's rights to support the candidate of their choice.
I support full and quick disclosure, particularly with contributions over a certain threshold (maybe $25,000). I also like the suggestion above of requiring filing statements of economic interest for the big givers.