[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 98 (Wednesday, June 27, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H4074]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DARK MONEY DONORS, SHOW YOURSELVES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Arizona (Mr. Grijalva) for 5 minutes.
Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, money has taken over our political
process. Big corporations and high-rolling political schemers tell us
everything is still mom and apple pie, and there's nothing to worry
about.
But some of us have seen the effects of these hidden million-dollar
dark money donations. We've seen the ads that tell you what to think
and who to vote for, without telling you who's talking. We've seen the
multimillion-dollar lawsuits that help elite corporate interests,
without explaining who's paying the bill. We've seen more and more
elections bought and paid for by the only people who can afford it. And
those people are not us.
It's time to start naming names and asking why these people won't
tell us who they are. We must start to fight back and ask them what
they have to hide.
A front group called the National Federation of Independent Business
is suing to block the Affordable Care Act. The president of the group
says he's doing this to help small businesses. When I and my colleague
Representative Keith Ellison wrote him a letter, asking him who his
members are, he refused to answer. We asked him who gave him several
recent million-dollar-plus donations that have helped fund the lawsuit;
he refused to answer. We asked him why Karl Rove's Crossroads GPS
political group gave him $3.7 million just when he initiated the
lawsuit; he refused to answer. And he thinks that's good enough. Well,
it's not.
NFIB has never liked answering questions. In 2006, according to an
article in the Nashville Scene, the organization claimed 600,000 member
businesses nationwide. Today on its Web site, it claims about 300,000.
But when we asked NFIB to disclose where its money comes from, instead
of providing us the courtesy of a written response, the group told the
press that its membership has been growing by leaps and bounds since
the lawsuit began. It described shrinking by 50 percent as big, new
expansion, and it said new members had made small donations that
covered the cost of this complex lawsuit before the Supreme Court.
In other words, NFIB won't tell us the truth about who it represents
or how big it is. What does it have to hide?
Our democracy has always been about people. It's been about
individuals and families making choices about who represents their
interests. It's about what kind of country we want to live in, not
about what kind of country the very wealthy want to choose for us.
Today, as we prepare for the Supreme Court ruling on the Affordable
Care Act, millions of Americans with preexisting health conditions,
with sick children, with long-term medical needs, and with no insurance
stand together on one side. A front group with bottomless pockets that
won't explain its motives sits on the other.
Mr. Speaker, this is not what our democracy is supposed to be about.
Our Founding Fathers did not believe wealth makes a man more important
than his neighbor. They didn't believe money is more important than the
dignity of the individual. They didn't believe that any company or any
organization is entitled to a special set of rules. And they certainly
didn't believe that an incorporated business entity is the same thing
as a human being.
There is no reason we have to accept the choices that the very, very
wealthy few in this country are making for the rest us. Today we stand
up to be counted, and we demand that dark money donations come to
light; that anyone who wants to influence our democracy step forward
and state his name for the record and be honest and transparent with
the American people.
{time} 1110
Democracy is not for sale, and an election should not be an auction.
I'm proud to be on the floor today and say that I am on the side of
people that want disclosure, want fair elections, and are tired of the
influence of dark money in our collective democracy.
I challenge those front groups to ``put up'' or ``shut up.'' Tell us
who's funding you and what you really want. It's about 4 months and a
little more time until America elects a new Congress and a President.
Let the voters decide. They know where I stand. And we want these front
groups to tell us where they stand, where they get their money, who
they are, and who they represent.
The American people in this great democracy of ours should make the
choice whether we like it or not. The influence by a very few secretive
groups that are fronting for others should not be the ones that decide
who represents the American people, who will run this country, and who
will set the priorities for this country.
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