[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 128 (Wednesday, September 22, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7341-S7342]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE DISCLOSE ACT
Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, I come to the floor once again to speak
in strong support of the DISCLOSE Act, which would close the glaring
campaign finance loopholes that have been opened by the Citizens United
ruling. This Supreme Court ruling was a true step backward for our
democracy. It overturned decades of campaign finance law and policy. It
allowed corporations and special interest groups to spend unlimited
amounts of their money influencing our democracy and opened the door
wide for foreign corporations to spend their money on elections right
here in the United States.
The Citizens United ruling has given special interest groups a
megaphone they can use to now drown out the voices of average citizens
in my home State of Washington and across the country. The DISCLOSE Act
would tear that megaphone away and place it back in the hands of
American people, where it belongs.
I am extremely disappointed that Senate Republicans continue to block
this critical legislation. This is a very personal issue for me. When I
first ran for the Senate back in 1992, I was a long-shot candidate with
some ideas and a group of amazing and passionate volunteers by my side.
Those volunteers cared deeply about making sure the voices of
Washington State families were represented. They made phone calls, they
went door to door, they volunteered hours of time, they talked to
families all across my State who wanted more from their government.
We ended up winning that grassroots campaign because the people's
voices were heard loudly and clearly. But, to be honest, I don't think
it would have been possible if corporations and special interests had
been able to drown out their voices with an unlimited barrage of
negative ads against candidates who did not support their interests.
That is exactly why I support this DISCLOSE Act. I want to make sure
that no force is greater in our elections than the power of voters
across our cities and towns, and no voice is louder than citizens who
care about making their State and country a better place to live.
The DISCLOSE Act helps preserve those American values in a lot of
ways. First of all, it shines a very bright spotlight on the entire
process. The DISCLOSE Act will make corporate CEOs and special interest
leaders take responsibility for their acts. When candidates put up
campaign commercials on television, we put our faces on our ad and tell
every voter we have approved the message. We don't try to hide what we
are doing. But right now corporations and special interest groups don't
have to do that. They can put up deceptive or untruthful ads with no
accountability and no ability for the public to know who is trying to
influence them.
The DISCLOSE Act also strengthens overall disclosure requirements for
groups who are attempting to sway our elections. Too often,
corporations and special interest groups are able to hide their
spending behind a mask of front organizations because they know the
voters will be less likely to believe their ads if they knew the
motives behind the sponsors. The DISCLOSE Act ends that. It shines a
light on this spending and makes sure voters have the information they
need so they know what they can trust.
This bill also closes a number of other loopholes that have been
opened by the Citizens United decision. It bans foreign corporations
and special interest groups from spending in our U.S. elections. It
makes sure that corporations are not hiding their election spending
from their shareholders. It limits election spending by government
contractors, to make sure taxpayer funding is never used to influence
an election. It bans coordination between candidates and outside groups
on advertising so that corporations and special interest groups can
never sponsor a candidate.
This DISCLOSE Act is a commonsense bill. It should not be
controversial. Anyone who thinks voters should have a louder voice than
special interest groups ought to support this bill. Anyone who thinks
that foreign entities should have no right to influence U.S. elections
ought to support this bill. Anyone who agrees with Justice Brandeis
that sunlight is the best disinfectant should support this bill. And
anyone who thinks we should not allow corporations such as BP or
Goldman Sachs to spend unlimited money influencing our elections ought
to support this bill.
Every 2 years we have elections across this country to fill our
federally elected offices. Every 2 years voters have the opportunity to
talk to each other about who they think will best represent their
communities and their families. Every 2 years it is these voices of
America's citizens who decide
[[Page S7342]]
who gets to stand right here representing them in the Congress. That is
the basis of our democracy and it is exactly what the DISCLOSE Act aims
to protect. I am very proud to support this bill and I urge all our
colleagues to stand up against special interests and for voters in
their States and allow this bill to finally pass.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
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