[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 58 (Tuesday, April 21, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H2319-H2320]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GOVERNMENT BY THE PEOPLE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Denham). The Chair recognizes the
gentleman from North Carolina (Mr. Jones) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JONES. Mr. Speaker, last week, mailman Doug Hughes flew a
gyrocopter onto the Capitol lawn to make a point about the influence of
money in politics. While I don't condone violating restricted airspace
and
[[Page H2320]]
putting innocent people at risk by flying a gyrocopter onto the Capitol
lawn, Mr. Hughes does have a point about the pervasive influence of
money in politics. I have seen it get worse and worse during my 20
years in Congress.
The Citizens United decision by the United States Supreme Court in
2010 created super-PACs and multi-millionaires who buy candidates. As
of April 8, 2015, there were 1,360 super-PACs in existence that
controlled nearly $700 million in the 2014 election cycle, according to
OpenSecrets.org. The American people have lost confidence in the House
and in the Senate partially because super-PACs influence candidates and
politicians.
Too many times I have seen bills come to the floor of the House that
seem influenced by money. Just last week, the House voted on H.R. 650,
the Preserving Access to Manufactured Housing Act of 2015, which does
nothing but line the pockets of Warren Buffett by enabling his near-
monopoly of the mobile home industry to strap poor people with higher
interest rates while his companies are being protected from government
regulations against predatory lending.
It is my disgust at this influence of money in politics that has led
me to be a cosponsor of H.R. 20, the Government by the People Act,
introduced by my colleague Congressman John Sarbanes. H.R. 20 would
curb the influence of super-PACs so that small donors can have a voice
again.
We in Congress owe the American people a vote on this bill so we can
inspire confidence in our democratic process. House leadership should
bring this bill to the floor, but I know it won't happen. There isn't
the stomach for reform bills in this Congress, even for bipartisan
reform bills. Maybe it does take a statement like Mr. Hughes' to bring
this issue into the national debate and to make Congress address our
out-of-control fund-raising.
I ask my colleagues in both parties in the House of Representatives
to look seriously at the John Sarbanes bill, because the Government by
the People Act will help to restore the confidence of the American
people. We cannot stop what is already public law, and we cannot change
Citizens United unless we go back through the legal process, but we can
have an alternative. That is what the John Sarbanes bill does, so I
hope Republicans and Democrats will look seriously at becoming
cosponsors.
I ask God to bless America.
____________________