[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 147 (Wednesday, September 28, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H6015]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
(Ms. KAPTUR asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, here we are a few short weeks before
national elections, so it is a good time to take account of the
outlandish flood of money pouring into the Presidential campaign. The
American people don't want this out-of-control spending anymore.
Why should it cost 16 times more to conduct an election in 2016 than
it did in 1980 in inflation-adjusted dollars? The last time I looked,
we still have just one President, 100 Senators, and 435 Congressional
Districts. So why the outlandish increase in campaign spending?
The public gets sick and tired of the TV campaign ads. It costs a
fortune. All the while, the public is becoming more disillusioned and
distrustful of our very instruments of government.
We need campaign finance reform. It is far too much that candidates
have to raise today. Actually, in 1980, it cost $107 million for
President Carter and President Reagan to conduct that Presidential
campaign. Already this year, $1.6 billion has been spent--16 times as
much as 1980.
It is no surprise that, of the largest givers of the financial
industry, not one of them has gone to jail after the financial crash of
2008.
My constitutional amendment, H.J. Res. 38, grants Congress and our
States the power to set limits on the amounts of contributions and
expenditures with respect to candidates in Federal, State, and local
elections.
So when the Presidential candidates pass through your town, ask them
exactly what they intend to do about out-of-control campaign spending
and when they intend to do it. How about making campaign finance reform
the first bill they send up to Congress in 2017 as H.R. 1.
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