[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 128 (Tuesday, September 9, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5383-S5384]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I want to start today by reading a few
quotes on the issue of campaign finance reform. Here is the first one
from 1987:
What we ought to do is eliminate the political action
committee contributions because those are the ones that raise
the specter of undue influence. And those can be gone
tomorrow. We can pass a bill tomorrow to take care of that
problem.
Another quote from the next year:
We Republicans have put together a responsible and
constitutional campaign reform agenda. It would restrict the
power of special interest PACs, stop the flow of all soft
money, keep wealthy individuals from buying public office.
Two years later, 1990:
We would eliminate PACs altogether. It would be interesting
to see whether our colleagues on the other side of the aisle
will be willing to eliminate PACs altogether. And we would
have the money come from individuals in small and fully
disclosed amounts.
A few years later, 1997:
Public disclosure of campaign contributions and spending
should be expedited so voters can judge for themselves what
is appropriate. These are reforms which respect the
Constitution and would enhance our democracy.
Three years later, in 2000, another quote:
We need to have real disclosure. And so what we ought to do
is broaden the disclosure to include at least labor unions
and tax-exempt business associations and trial lawyers so
that you include the major political players in America. Why
would a little disclosure be better than a lot of disclosure?
A quote from 2003:
Money is essential in politics and not something we should
feel squeamish about, provided the donations are limited and
disclosed, everyone knows who is supporting everyone else.
So, Mr. President, who did these statements come from? Tom Udall, the
sponsor of the vote that we had last night? Michael Bennet from
Colorado? He and Tom Udall sponsored the constitutional amendment. Did
it come from them or some other Democrat?
No, that is not the case.
Let me quote a few more things:
Keep wealthy individuals from buying public office and stop
the flow of soft money and public campaign contributions and
spending should be expedited so voters can judge for
themselves what's appropriate.
Those are quotes. Did these quotes come from Bernie Sanders, who is
known as being a liberal? He has been an outspoken advocate for
campaign finance reform.
The author of these quotes is none other than my friend the
distinguished Republican leader, the senior Senator from Kentucky.
These are all his quotes word for word. The senior Senator from
Kentucky has a track record of campaign finance reform spanning two
decades or more. I was with him
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there 25 years ago, fighting the undue influence of unlimited campaign
donations. I cosponsored his 1989 constitutional amendment that
would have given Congress power to enact laws regulating the amount of
independent expenditures. I was there with him. But I guess times have
changed. I am aware that the Republican leader has stated that his
views on the matter of campaign finance have changed over the years.
What a gross understatement. But as Victor Hugo wrote:
Change your opinions, but keep your principles. Change your
leaves, but keep your roots.
At one time the Republican leader was rooted in the principle that
the wealthy shouldn't be able to buy public office whether for
themselves or for others. Even as recently as late in 2007 he was
preaching donor disclosure. What has changed in the last few years?
Over the last several years we have witnessed the Koch brothers
trying to buy America, to pump untold millions into our democracy,
hoping to get a government that would serve their bottom line and make
them more money. The news today says they are out promoting themselves,
and that is easy to do because they are worth $150 billion.
So we are watching the corrupting influence that the Republican
leader foretold 27 years ago and many years thereafter before our very
eyes. He switched teams. What could have possibly convinced the senior
Senator from Kentucky that limitless, untraceable campaign donations
aren't really that bad after all?
I yield the floor.
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