CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NOW WE’LL SEE WHAT TRANSPARENCY CAN DO”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NOW WE’LL SEE WHAT TRANSPARENCY CAN DO”
California
will be exploring new ground as the impending election year builds to its
climax in early November. For the first time ever, big donors to ballot
proposition campaigns will not be able to hide behind phony campaign committee
names like “Californians for Safe Streets” and the like when they put their
money behind causes, many of which can be self-serving.
It
will now be somewhat harder to keep dark money from having at least some light
shined upon it.
But
no one can be certain just yet how difficult it will be for real donors to hide
and just how exposed they might soon be. That’s partly because of some rather
vague language in the state’s new Disclose Act, quietly signed as Assembly Bill
249 by Gov. Jerry Brown, who issued no statement along with his signature, as
he often does on important bills.
Advocates
contend the language of the new law “will fundamentally change how campaign
financing is disclosed,” as legislative sponsor Kevin Mullin, a Democratic
assemblyman from San Mateo, put it.
And
it might do that. The bill requires ads for ballot propositions and independent
expenditure ads for and against candidates to identify their top three funders,
with none able to hide behind sometimes-misleading committee names. The idea is
to identify people and organizations actually trying to exert influence,
possibly causing some to downsize their contributions if they don’t want to be
listed publicly as leading donors.
This
should let voters know exactly who is trying to influence them. From the “who,”
it’s often easy to deduce the “why,” so California ballots could be cast in the
most educated manner ever.
Of
course, this measure might have been even better than what has now become law.
It could have required that disclosures of donors be made in a print size equal
to the largest anywhere else in an ad. But that was amended out of the bill as
it progressed through the Legislature. Instead, disclosures must be made
“clearly and prominently,” a vague phrase that will no doubt be litigated for
years.
Expect
some of the political consultants who conceive, write and approve the ads that
will be ubiquitous as 2018 progresses to try to obfuscate matters. Their radio
ads may feature the same kind of ultra-speed-reading often heard when
pharmaceutical companies list drug side effects near the end of their ads.
But
newspaper and television advertising will have to include printed information
on true campaign funders. In the beginning, some campaigns may try to get away
with small print, but that almost certainly won’t fly in the long run.
So
while this law does contain some vagueness, it is far better than no law, a
clear-cut case of not letting the perfect (identification in letters that match
the largest elsewhere in the ad) outweigh the good.
The
law’s other flaw is that it does not demand exposure of the largest direct
contributors to candidates, whose donors often launder their contributions
through the major political parties at both the state and country levels. But
there is nevertheless plenty of improvement over the longstanding ability of
big donors to remain almost completely anonymous.
Trent
Lange, president of the California Clean Money Campaign, which pushed the
Disclose Act for more than seven years before its final passage on a fairly
bipartisan vote (five Republican assembly members from swing districts joined
almost all Democrats in supporting it), called the new law “the biggest blow
yet against the unlimited secret money unleashed by Citizens United.” That’s
the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision declaring that corporations are like
people when it comes to political giving.
The
bottom line is that even with some vague parts of the new law likely to be
disputed and litigated over the next few years, there will still be more
disclosure of campaign finance information than ever before seen anywhere in
America.
But
we will all have to wait and see how much real voters care about this and
whether it really affects the way votes are cast.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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