The corporate barbarians are
through the gate of American democracy. Not satisfied with their all-pervasive
influence on our culture, economy and legislative processes, they want more.
They want it all.
Two years ago, the United States supreme
court betrayed our Constitution and those who fought to ensure that its
protections are enjoyed equally by all persons regardless of religion, race or
gender by engaging in an unabashed power-grab on behalf of corporate America .
In its now infamous decision in the
Citizens United case, five justices declared that corporations must be
treated as if they are actual people under the Constitution when it comes to
spending money to influence our elections, allowing them for the first time to
draw on the corporate checkbook – in any amount and at any time – to run ads
explicitly for or against specific candidates.
What's next … a corporate
right to vote?
The US Constitution has
served us very well, but when the supreme court says, for purposes of the first
amendment, that corporations are people, that writing checks from the company's
bank account is constitutionally-protected speech and that attempts by the
federal government and states to impose reasonable restrictions on campaign ads
are unconstitutional, our democracy is in grave danger.
I am a proud
sponsor of a number of bills that would respond to Citizens United and
begin to get a handle on the problem. But something more needs to be done –
something more fundamental and indisputable, something that cannot be turned on
its head by a rightwing supreme court.
That is why I have
introduced a resolution in the Senate (introduced by Representative Ted Deutch
in the House) calling for an amendment to the US Constitution that says simply
and straightforwardly what everyone – except five members of the United States
supreme court – understands: corporations are not people with constitutional
rights equal to flesh-and-blood human beings.
Corporations are subject to
regulation by the people. Corporations may not make campaign contributions –
the law of the land for the last century – or dump unlimited sums of money into
our elections. And Congress and states have broad power to regulate all
election spending.
I did not introduce this lightly.
In fact, I have never sought to amend the Constitution before. The US
Constitution is an extraordinary document that, in my view, should not be
amended often. In light of the supreme court's Citizens United decision,
however, I see no alternative. The ruling has radically changed the nature of
our democracy. It has further tilted the balance of power toward the rich and
the powerful at a time when the wealthiest people in this country have never
had it so good.
At a time when corporations
have more than $2tn in cash in their bank accounts, make record-breaking
profits and swarm Washington
with their lobbyists 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for the highest court
in the land to suggest that there is just not enough corporate
"speech" in our system defies the bounds of reason and sanity. The
ruling already has led to plans, for example, by industrialist brothers David
and Charles Koch to steer more than $200m – potentially much more – to
conservative groups ahead of election day 2012. Karl Rove has similar designs.
Does anybody really believe
that that is what American democracy is supposed to be about?
I believe that the Citizens
United decision will go down as one of the worst in our country's history – and
one that demands an amendment to our Constitution in order to restore sovereign
power to the people, as our nation's founders intended.
If we do not reverse it and
the culture of corporate dominance over our elections that it has exacerbated,
there will be no end to the impact that corporate interests have on our
campaigns and our democracy.
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