CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
"'DISCLOSE
ACT’ IS YEAR’S MOST IMPORTANT STATE BILL"
If there’s one dominant reason for the distrust many
Californians feel for governments at all levels, it’s the sense that special
interests regularly pour millions of dollars into federal, state and local
election campaigns while contriving to hide their identities.
That reality makes SB52, the so-called DISCLOSE Act
sponsored by Democratic state Sens. Mark Leno of San Francisco and Jerry Hill
of San Mateo County, the single most important measure state lawmakers will
consider this year.
Yes, they’ll face other big and contentious issues. Gov.
Jerry Brown’s budget bills will get plenty of attention from the public and the
Legislature before this month is out. So will plans for two massive tunnels to
carry Sacramento River water south. No one will ignore the debate about how to
divvy up new tax money from last year’s Proposition 30 among public school
districts.
Each of these deserves all the
attention it can get. But none will deal with the most basic issue standing
between citizens and the politicians they elect, the same issue that makes
voters distrust many ballot proposition campaigns.
The problem is money, which the most
formidable state Assembly speaker ever, Jesse Unruh, famously called “the
mother’s milk of politics.”
Money has poured into politics in
unprecedented quantities since the U.S. Supreme Court’s notorious Citizens
United decision, the one declaring corporations the equivalent of human beings,
giving them the right to donate limitless amounts to political campaigns so
long as those campaigns are not controlled directly by candidates.
This led to so-called independent expenditure committees, which
run ads that at the very least, often dovetail with those of the candidates
they back and hide the identities of outfits that actually put up the money.
There is no federal initiative
process, so Citizens United can’t be reversed by the people. It would take
years to pass a constitutional amendment overturning this, and there is no
serious move afoot now for such an amendment.
Which means anyone worried about
honesty in elections, anyone interested in knowing which candidates are
beholden to whom or what persons or companies are behind any particular ballot
proposition, needs an antidote of a different kind.
The most effective vaccine against political
lies and obfuscation is knowledge of who’s paying the piper, because that
person or company will usually also call the tunes to which candidates dance.
Enter the DISCLOSE Act. Sponsored last
year by former Democratic Assemblywoman Julia Brownley of Ventura County, now
in Congress, this measure would force every political TV commercial in
California to disclose its three largest funders prominently for six seconds at
the start of the ads, rather than using small print at the end. Similar rules would
apply to print ads, radio spots, mass mailers, billboards and websites. Ads
would also have to list a website that shows their 10 largest donors and links
to all contributors of $10,000 or more.
Doing this could end many subterfuges
in politics, including items like last year’s last-minute dumping of millions
of dollars into California ballot proposition campaigns by out-of-state groups
with vague names and anonymous donors. There would be no more point for tobacco
companies opposed to local anti-smoking regulations, for one example, to call
their committee “Californians for Statewide Smoking Regulations,” when it's
really out to kill such laws. For the companies themselves would be named in
white-on-black lettering in good-sized fonts.
This measure passed the Assembly last year, but time ran out
before the Senate considered it. So it’s back for another try, and because it
would revise and enhance the 1974 Political Reform Act, passed by voters as an
initiative, it needs two-thirds majorities in both the Assembly and state
Senate.
Good as SB52 sounds, it’s not quite a
match for a failed measure put forward almost 10 years ago that would have
required much the same information, but would also have demanded that it be
displayed in type matching the largest size anywhere else in the ad.
Other open-government bills are making
their way through the Legislature this year, but if this one passes, California
voters could quickly become the best informed in the nation. And, like many
other trends from medical marijuana to lower property taxes, if it happens in
California, you can count on it happening in other states soon.
But only if it gets two-thirds votes
in both houses of the Legislature, no sure thing when many members themselves
depend on obfuscated, big donors.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The
Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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