[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 160 (2014), Part 10]
[Senate]
[Pages 14085-14091]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

  Ms. WARREN. Mr. President, I rise today to support an independent 
constitutional amendment offered by Senator Udall of New Mexico which 
would restore to Congress and the States the authority to rein in the 
enormous sums of money that are flooding into our political process.
  As they built our democracy, the Founders feared the impact of 
concentration of power. John Adams, a Massachusetts native and the 
author of our State Constitution, expressed this ideal well. He said:

       Power must be opposed to power, force to force, strength to 
     strength, interest to interest, as well as reason to reason, 
     eloquence to eloquence, and passion to passion.

  Balance, said Adams, was critical.
  But in Washington power is not balanced. Instead, power is 
concentrated all on one side. Well-financed individuals and corporate 
interests are lined up to fight for their own privileges and to resist 
any change that would limit their special deals.
  I saw this up close and personal following the 2008 financial crisis 
when I fought hard for stronger financial regulations, and the biggest 
banks in this country spent more than $1 million a day to weaken 
reforms. But there are many more examples.
  Big corporate interests are smart. They fight every day on Capitol 
Hill, every day in the agencies, every day in the courts, always with 
the same goals in mind--to bend the law to benefit themselves. The U.S. 
Supreme Court is doing all it can to help them.
  Three well-respected legal scholars, including Judge Richard Posner 
of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, a widely respected and 
conservative Reagan appointee, recently examined almost 20,000 Supreme 
Court cases from the past 65 years. The researchers used multivariate 
regression analysis to determine how often each Justice voted in favor 
of corporate interests during that time. Judge Posner and his 
colleagues concluded that the five conservative Justices currently 
sitting on the Supreme Court are in the top 10 most procorporate 
Justices in more than half a century--and Justice Alito and Justice 
Roberts No. 1 and No. 2.
  Perhaps the most egregious example of this procorporate shift is the 
Citizens United decision. In this new Citizens United era, the Supreme 
Court has unleashed a flood of secret corporate money into our 
political system and emboldened a powerful group of millionaires and 
billionaires who can toss out checks for millions of dollars to 
influence election outcomes.
  Earlier this year the Supreme Court gave them even more room to 
operate. Congress had long ago put limits on how much money one rich 
person could contribute to a candidate, a party, or a political action 
committee in an election. These commonsense limits were intended to 
preserve the integrity of our democracy and to prevent corruption or 
even the appearance of corruption, but the Supreme Court struck down 
those limits.
  As Justice Breyer noted in his dissenting opinion, the Court's 
decision ``will allow a single individual to contribute millions of 
dollars to a political party or to a candidate's campaign.''
  The impact of this line of judicial decisions is powerful. In 2012, 
about 3.7 million typical Americans gave modest donations, $200 or 
less, to President Obama and Mitt Romney. These donations altogether 
added up to about $313 million. In that same election, 32 Americans 
gave monster donations to super PACs. Thirty-two people spent slightly 
more on the 2012 elections than 3.7 million typical Americans who sent 
in modest dollar donations to their preferred Presidential candidate. 
When 32 people can outspend 3.7 million citizens, our democracy is in 
real danger.
  This is an extraordinary situation. The Supreme Court overturned a 
century of precedent, voiding campaign finance restrictions passed by 
Congress and making it far easier for millionaires, billionaires, and 
big corporations to flood our elections with massive amounts of money. 
The Supreme Court is helping them buy elections.
  We are here to try to reverse the damage inflicted on our country by 
these decisions. We are here to fight back against a Supreme Court that 
says there is no difference between free speech and billions of dollars 
spent by the privileged few to swing elections and buy off legislators.
  We are here to fight back against a Supreme Court that has overturned 
a century of established law in an effort to block Congress from 
solving this problem.
  I support a constitutional amendment only with great reluctance. Our 
Constitution sets forth the fundamental structure of our government, 
the scope of that government's power, and the critical limits on that 
power. Any change to its text should be measured, should be carefully 
considered, and should occur only rarely. But there are times when 
action is required to defend our great democracy against those who 
would see it perverted into one more rigged game where the rich and the 
powerful always win.
  This is the time to amend the Constitution. I urge my colleagues to 
support this effort. We were not sent to Congress to run this country 
for a handful of wealthy individuals and powerful corporations. We were 
sent here to do our best to make this country work for all our people.
  I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I chair the Senate judiciary subcommittee 
entitled the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Human 
Rights. Obviously, the most serious charge of the subcommittee is to 
consider proposals to amend the Constitution. S.J. Res. 19, the 
democracy-for-all amendment, was the first amendment considered by the 
constitution subcommittee since 2009, when I became its chair.
  The U.S. Constitution and the wisdom of its Framers has endured for 
generations. I have established--and so have many of my colleagues--a 
very high bar for suggestions to amend that Constitution. That is the 
way it should be. That is why Majority Leader Reid, Chairman Patrick 
Leahy of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and I were committed to 
ensuring this proposal would be thoroughly vetted and that it move 
through the Senate by regular order.
  It is important to recall that until the early 20th century most 
Americans were not allowed to vote. Even after the franchise was 
legally expanded, a violent racist campaign prevented many African 
Americans from voting.

[[Page 14086]]

  Six constitutional amendments, landmark civil rights legislation, and 
Supreme Court decisions helped make the promise of one person and one 
vote a reality. We must, in our time, in our generation, be constantly 
vigilant against threats to these victories which were won through the 
blood, sweat, tears, and even the lives of many Americans. That is why 
we are engaged in this debate today, because the right to vote is under 
siege. It is in peril. A well-funded, coordinated effort has made it 
harder for millions of Americans to vote and at the same time unleashed 
a tidal wave of special interest and corporate money into elections to 
drown out the voices of average Americans.
  Opponents of our amendment say, oh, they are just trying to repeal 
the First Amendment. They have it backwards. Our efforts would protect 
and restore the First Amendment.
  The amendment before the Senate would begin to undo the damage done 
by five activist, conservative Supreme Court Justices who have 
rewritten and distorted the First Amendment. With decisions like 
Citizens United and McCutcheon, these five Justices overturned a 
century of legal and constitutional precedent to give a privileged 
clique and corporate titans the power to drown out the voices of 
ordinary Americans--and that is exactly what is happening.
  Big-money donors--and their names are familiar to those who follow 
the world of politics; the Koch brothers, Sheldon Adelson, and the 
corporate interests they represent--certainly deserve a seat at the 
policymaking table. But the size of their bank accounts does not 
entitle them to buy every seat at the table, control the agenda, and 
silence their critics. Unfortunately, this is exactly what we are 
seeing across the Nation being played out, even as I speak, in this 
current election campaign. Big-money campaign donors and special 
interests, emboldened by the Supreme Court, have flooded our elections, 
unfortunately, to a great degree with secret contributions.
  Listen to these statistics: Spending by outside groups has tripled 
since the last midterm election. They spent $27.6 million in 2010 
compared to $97.7 million so far this year. In 2006, before this awful 
decision in Citizens United, these groups spent $3.5 million. And now 
the running total for this year: almost $100 million from outside 
special interest groups and well-heeled individuals.
  In 2012, super PACs spent more than $130 million on Federal 
elections, and 60 percent of all super PAC contributions that year came 
from an elite class of 159 people. In North Carolina, that elite group 
had just one member, that State had just one person. Seventy-two 
percent of all outside spending in 2010 in North Carolina came from one 
man, Art Pope, a millionaire, conservative, rightwing activist.
  As I stand and speak, there is a super PAC on the air attacking me in 
my home State. As best we can trace it, it is to one individual who so 
far apparently has spent $700,000 in negative ads against me on radio 
and television. Perhaps more will follow. That is the nature of the 
world we live in.
  Members of Congress who run for office, for election and reelection, 
abide by strict rules on disclosure, money raised, how much is being 
spent. But when it comes to these individuals, since Citizens United, 
all bets are off.
  Although some of the biggest and most frequent spenders are on the 
Republican side of the aisle, the influx of secret money from super 
PACs and wealthy donors is happening on the right and on the left. Many 
have created super PACs on the other side as a defense. Unfortunately, 
it is a tactic or strategy that has been dictated by the Supreme Court 
decisions. Sadly, all of this money fight is eroding our democracy and 
drowning out the voices of everyday citizens.
  One year ago, in the Shelby County decision, the same five Justices 
gutted the Voting Rights Act, civil rights legislation that had 
protected the constitutional rights of average Americans for 50 years. 
Emboldened by the Shelby County decision, more Republican-dominated 
State legislatures followed suit by pursuing legislation to restrict 
the right to vote. It is no coincidence that these laws have a 
disproportionate impact on minority, young, and low-income voters.
  During his confirmation hearings, Chief Justice John Roberts of the 
Supreme Court said this of the right to vote. It was ``the right 
preservative of all other rights.'' And he pledged to be a neutral 
umpire, calling balls and strikes when it came to issues such as the 
right to vote. But because of the judicial activism of Chief Justice 
Roberts and his four conservative allies, the right to vote of average 
Americans is now at greater risk than any time since the Jim Crow era.
  Two years ago I decided to take my subcommittee for hearings in the 
States of Ohio and Florida. In both of those States, the Republican-
dominated legislatures, inspired by a group known as ALEC that is not a 
lobbying group but creates so-called model legislation, had dreamed up 
ways to restrict the opportunity to vote. How did they do this? Some of 
them called for the presentation of identification cards when you vote. 
Others said: We will limit the time that you can vote--no early voting. 
We will restrict the opportunities for people to vote.
  My first table of witnesses consisted of a bipartisan gathering of 
election officials in both Florida and Ohio, States that had passed 
these restrictive voting laws. I asked the first panel, under oath, a 
basic question: Tell me about the incidents of voter fraud and voter 
abuse in your State which led to these changes in the legislature. 
There were none.
  Tell me the number of individuals who had been prosecuted for voter 
fraud in Ohio and Florida that led to these changes in State 
legislation. There were virtually none. One said he could remember 
maybe one case or two in the course of years.
  I think it is pretty clear. These efforts to restrict the right to 
vote have nothing to do with the integrity of elections. There isn't a 
single one of us in either political party who condones voter fraud and 
voter abuse, period. But to restrict the right to vote of millions of 
Americans in the name of stopping voter fraud that doesn't exist--well, 
it is time to ask the more basic question: What is the real reason? The 
real reason is to restrict the right to vote.
  It is hard to believe that Republicans in State legislatures, and 
even some in this Chamber--the party of Abraham Lincoln, for goodness' 
sake--is party to this effort to restrict the right to vote across 
America. For goodness' sake, I have been involved in election campaigns 
which I have won and those which I have not won. I always felt, if it 
was a fair election, so be it; let the people speak. That is what a 
democracy is all about. But when you start playing with the rules, when 
you start saying, well, we are going to try to make it tougher for 
people to vote--even those who are legally entitled to vote--I frankly 
think we have crossed a line which we should not ever cross in this 
country. Fire hoses, growling dogs, and insidious poll taxes have now 
been replaced with a well-funded campaign denying millions their right 
to vote and a flood of special interest money drowning out the voices 
of average Americans.
  Is that your vision of America? Is that your vision of this country 
in the future, where your opportunity to vote is now restricted more 
and more, even without any indication of voter fraud or voter abuse, 
when your opportunity to be informed about the candidates and their 
positions is in fact overwhelmed by those who come in--such as the Koch 
brothers and those on the left, too--to spend millions of dollars?
  I introduced a bill a few years back for public financing and 
campaigns. There was one valiant Republican who stood, who agreed to 
cosponsor my bill, and only one: Arlen Specter, a Senator from 
Pennsylvania, a Republican Senator. What happened to him? I can tell 
you what happened. The late Arlen Specter was challenged in his 
Republican primary by one of those on the far right in his party. He 
couldn't win as he looked at the polls. He switched parties and became 
a Democrat. I lost my only Republican on public financing when he 
joined us on this side of the aisle. He lost the Democratic primary, 
went on and finished his term

[[Page 14087]]

and passed away. But he was the only Republican with the courage to 
stand for public financing to change this mess we have.
  I can tell you we are reaching a point where mere mortals--
individuals who don't happen to be multimillionaires--want nothing to 
do with this political business. It has become the hobby of high 
rollers. The two candidates for the highest offices in my home State 
now are multimillionaires playing with their own money now, putting 
millions into their campaigns.
  I am not envious of their wealth. I have said it publicly and I will 
say it again: I am only one Powerball ticket away from matching their 
wealth. So I am not jealous of them, but it says something about the 
political process, doesn't it, that someone could put in $10 or $12 
million of their own money and the Supreme Court can say, well, they 
are just exercising their right to free speech. Really? I didn't see 
the word ``cash'' in the First Amendment. I didn't even see the word 
``money'' in the First Amendment. That is what we are up against.
  S.J. Res. 19, which is before us, is a constitutional amendment. It 
is narrowly tailored and it is a proposal to protect and restore the 
First Amendment. It empowers Congress and State legislatures, the 
elected representatives of the American people, to set reasonable, 
content-neutral--let me underline that--content-neutral limits on the 
amount of money wealthy individuals and special interest donors can 
give to candidates. It overturns Citizens United by authorizing 
Congress and State legislatures----
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent for 5 additional 
minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DURBIN. I thank the Senator from Texas.
  It overturns Citizens United by authorizing Congress and State 
legislatures to prohibit corporations and unions from spending money 
from their treasuries to influence elections. Our amendment will ensure 
that elections are contests for the best ideas, a contest where mere 
mortals--the group I mentioned earlier--have the same chance to succeed 
as multimillionaires. That is why our amendment is supported by 60 
diverse advocacy organizations and the majority of the American people. 
Politicians may not get it, but the American people do. They could see 
what is happening to this bidding war we now call elections. They 
understand the flood of television.
  We have one Senatorial candidate on our side, who she has been 
subjected to $15 million in independent expenditures, negative ads in 
her State. That has been going on for almost 1 year. She is going to 
weather the storm and be reelected, incidentally. But imagine that $15 
million of special interest groups just showering her with hate and 
venom for month after weary month. Is that what our political process 
has come down to?
  Opponents of our amendment argue that any limit whatsoever on 
election spending violates the First Amendment. Just as there is no 
constitutional right to buy an election, freedom of speech doesn't give 
anyone the right to violate or overwhelm the constitutional rights of 
others. Apparently five conservative Supreme Court Justices believe the 
wealthy and elite have a greater right to free speech because they have 
more money.
  Our opponents also argue that corporations are people. Give me a 
break. Corporations are granted the advantages of perpetual life, 
property ownership, and limited liability to enhance their efficiency 
as an economic entity, according to Justice Rehnquist in one of his 
opinions, but he went on to say in the same opinion, ``Those properties 
so beneficial in the economic sphere pose special dangers in the 
political sphere.''
  That was Justice Rehnquist speaking about giving powers to 
corporations which exceed the obvious. While some First Amendment 
protections have rightfully been extended beyond everyday Americans to 
corporations, Citizens United went way too far. Living, breathing 
Americans face challenges these legally created entities will never 
face. Corporations never get married, they don't raise kids, they don't 
care for sick relatives, and they cannot vote in elections or run for 
office. Corporations have the right to be heard, for sure, but the 
right to control an election with their bank account? There is 
something wrong with that decision.
  Our amendment restores the basic longstanding principle that 
corporations shouldn't be able to wield their enormous economic power 
to sway Federal elections. Our amendment restores and protects the 
First Amendment for all Americans. I encourage my colleagues to vote 
for S.J. Res. 19, and I expect a strictly partisan vote. I am sorry if 
that happens, but I expect it.
  When we brought up the issue of disclosure, to disclose who was 
giving to campaigns, we couldn't get the Republicans to give us 
support. Just disclose who is giving the money. Nope. Keep it secret. 
That was their position. Now they not only want to keep it secret; they 
want to make sure those who are abusing the process by sending in huge 
sums of money on behalf of corporations and individuals are going to be 
protected. They may protect the special interests, but they will do it 
at the expense of average Americans who are losing their faith--losing 
their faith in this process and in the institutions it creates.
  Restore that faith. Support S.J. Res. 19. Let's amend the 
Constitution and make Citizens United a vestige of a wrong-headed 
decision by the Supreme Court.
  I yield the floor.
  I again thank my colleague from Texas.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Republican whip.
  Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I am glad I got to catch a few of the 
tail-end remarks of my colleague from Illinois. I didn't realize what 
this debate was truly all about, but he made that clear.
  This is all about public financing of elections, according to him, 
because anybody contributing any of their hard-earned money to support 
a candidate whom they happen to believe in or someone espousing or 
advocating for the principles they believe in--there is something 
inherently wrong with that according to the distinguished majority 
whip, the Senator from Illinois, because to him the only answer is 
let's take your money and use that to finance an election perhaps to 
benefit a candidate who doesn't agree with anything you believe in. Is 
that what this is all about, public financing of elections?
  He said something else I don't think I ever heard anybody have the 
audacity to say before. He said voter fraud doesn't exist. I am sure in 
Chicago they have had a few instances of voter fraud. We have 
unfortunately had some in Texas, some that resulted in the nomination 
of Lyndon Johnson to be Democratic nominee for President of the United 
States in box 13 in Duvall County, TX, and there have been a number of 
other instances investigated and found cases of voter fraud that have 
been found to exist.
  What is the problem with issuing or requiring somebody to have a 
photo ID to vote? In Texas to get a voter ID, for which the Attorney 
General has sued the State of Texas, saying somehow it is 
discriminatory to require somebody to have a voter ID to prove they are 
who they say they are so they can then cast their vote, even though it 
takes a photo ID to get into the Department of Justice--you cannot go 
see Eric Holder or anybody at the Department of Justice unless you have 
a photo ID. Oh, by the way, you cannot buy tobacco products, you cannot 
buy alcohol, you cannot fly on an airplane without a photo ID, and if 
for some reason you don't have one in the State of Texas, well, you get 
one for free. How does that possibly burden the right to vote?
  It is no surprise that 70 percent of the respondents in most of the 
polling I have seen--Independents, Democrats, and Republicans alike--
say they think voter ID is a good idea, because what does it do? It 
protects the integrity of the ballots for people who are qualified to 
vote and doesn't permit illegal votes to dilute those votes.

[[Page 14088]]

  We spent the last several weeks back home meeting with our 
constituents. I know some people like to call it recess. I know it 
doesn't feel like recess, at least not in the elementary school sense 
of the word, because most of the time this is a period during which we 
get to travel our States and interact with our constituents and do 
something we need to do more of, which is to listen to what they have 
to say and what their concerns are, and I did that in Texas.
  My constituents did not say the most important thing we can do is 
pass a constitutional amendment gutting the First Amendment, the right 
to free speech. That didn't come up one time. What did come up were 
their concerns about the economy, about the access to health care, 
about immigration, about the challenges imposed by radical Islamic 
terrorists and the Russian strongman Vladimir Putin. All of those came 
up. Not a single time did my constituents say: We want you to go back 
to Washington, DC, and vote to gut the First Amendment right to free 
speech. At this time of high unemployment and stagnant wages, with the 
labor participation rate at historic lows--that is, the percentage of 
people actually in the workforce looking for jobs is at a historic 
low--and millions of Americans concerned about losing their health 
insurance or facing higher deductibles or premiums, with a crisis on 
the southwest border which has not gone away with this wave of 
unaccompanied minor children coming across from Central America, with 
terrorists on the march in the Middle East, with Russian military 
forces continuing a full-blown invasion of Ukraine, despite all that, 
the majority leader in his wisdom has decided to bring up this 
amendment because he thinks the most urgent order of business is to 
replace the current First Amendment which has stood the test of time 
for lo all these many years since our country's founding and replace it 
with one that empowers incumbent politicians to control who has access 
to the resources in order to get their message out.
  Now everyone is entitled to their priorities, but it is painfully 
clear the majority leader's priorities have everything to do with 
November 4, the coming midterm elections, so it is all politics all the 
time, no matter what. I am embarrassed, frankly, to confront my 
constituents when they say: What are you going to be doing when you 
return to Washington, DC? Are you going to be dealing with jobs or the 
energy sector--which is a very bright spot in our economy--or what are 
we going to do to make sure the millennials--the young adults--can 
actually find jobs so they can pay down their college loans and so they 
can get to work? What are you going to do to keep the promises the 
President made on health care; that if you like what you have you can 
keep it, the premiums for a family of four are going to go down by 
$2,500, and you can keep your doctor if you like your doctor--what are 
you going to do to make sure those promises are kept?
  Instead of dealing with all of those very important issues, it is 
embarrassing for me to tell my constituents that, look, the majority 
leader is the one who controls the agenda in this Senate. He is the 
traffic cop, and an individual Senator--and certainly not one in the 
minority--doesn't have any ability to control the agenda of the U.S. 
Senate.
  So this is all Senator Reid's choice as the majority leader, and he 
claims this proposed constitutional amendment is all about getting so-
called dark money out of the political system. In reality, if that was 
all this was about, we might have a good debate and a vote. But in 
reality what he is concerned about is opposition--political support 
that is going to make it more likely that Republicans regain the 
majority of the Senate and Democrats become a member of the minority. 
That is what is motivating this vote. In reality what this amendment 
would do would be to undermine some of our most cherished, most 
fundamental, and most important liberties.
  If this proposed amendment ever becomes law, State and Federal 
lawmakers would suddenly have vast new powers to regulate or even 
criminalize political speech. So to state the blindingly obvious, the 
Founding Fathers proposed and readopted the First Amendment precisely 
because they saw how dangerous it was to let politicians restrict the 
exercise of free speech. The Founders understood that without the First 
Amendment we could end up with a never-ending cycle of elected 
officials shrinking the boundaries of permissible speech. A political 
system such as that would be totally incompatible with the principles 
and values of a free society. Yet that is exactly the type of political 
system we would have if this constitutional amendment being proposed 
ever were to take effect.
  I heard the majority whip saying this isn't about political speech, 
this is just about the money, but that argument quickly falls apart.
  For starters, my colleagues amendment would allow Congress to 
restrict freedom of assembly and freedom of petition as well, both of 
which are essential to safeguarding political speech. While the 
amendment might not give Congress the power to curtail freedom of the 
press per se, it would give Congress the power to curtail political 
speech by individuals and activists, which begs the question: Why 
should the political speech of newspapers and magazines be any 
different from the political speech of you and me? Why should theirs be 
carved out and unrestricted in terms of the financial resources that 
could advance those points of view in newspapers and magazines? Yet our 
ability to communicate about the things we care about the most would be 
restricted by limiting the amount of money we could spend to advocate 
those points of view.
  After all, when newspapers publish editorials about public policy, 
they are trying to persuade politicians and other elected officials to 
adopt a given position, and that is an important part of our system.
  I ask unanimous consent for an additional 3 minutes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. King). Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. CORNYN. Newspapers are trying to persuade voters all the time to 
elect a given candidate because they endorse those candidates.
  I remember when I ran for my first public office as a district judge 
in Bexar County, San Antonio, TX, one of the most important things I 
sought was the endorsement of the editorial board of the local 
newspaper. I knew that even if nobody knew anything else about me, if 
the newspaper editorial board thought I was a credible candidate, that 
might help in my election.
  Neither Federal nor State lawmakers should have the power to decide 
what type of political speech is permissible. Free speech is free 
speech. The solution to speech is more speech, not less speech.
  For 225 years the First Amendment has served as the guarantor of 
American democracy. It was designed to protect all speech, not just 
speech we happen to agree with or that supports our particular point of 
view. A recent Supreme Court decision put it this way: ``There is no 
more basic right to our democracy than the right to participate in 
electing political leaders.''
  Unfortunately, this amendment would undermine that right, and it 
would roll back perhaps the most elemental freedom of our founding 
document by creating a system in which vital, indispensable liberty 
would be contingent on the ever-shifting tides of partisan politics. 
These efforts should not only be not supported, they should be 
repudiated firmly, loudly, and unapologetically, nothing less than the 
very bedrock of American democracy is at stake.
  As I close, I wish to add that the Founders wisely put the process by 
which the Constitution can be amended in our Constitution. Two-thirds 
of the House and two-thirds of the Senate must vote for a 
constitutional resolution and then it goes to the States where three-
quarters of the States must ratify this constitutional amendment. I can 
tell you that there is no doubt in my mind that this would ever happen 
with this amendment.
  Why is the majority leader bringing this up now, less than 60 days 
before the midterm elections? Perhaps it is to

[[Page 14089]]

motivate his own political base in the hope that will mitigate some of 
the losses in the November 4 election. But it certainly cannot be 
without any hope or pipedream that it would ever become the law of the 
land, and for the reasons I have stated it should not.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico.
  Mr. UDALL of New Mexico. Mr. President, I say to my good friend the 
Senator from Texas that there are very important reasons for bringing 
up this issue now, and it is because of the elections that are going 
on. He makes it sound as though this is some kind of a political 
process. What is going on in our elections right now--and here are the 
nine top Senate races in the country. The blue on this chart indicates 
partial or nondisclosed money. This is the dark money. Nobody knows 
where this money is coming from. It could be billionaires or large 
corporations. It could be almost anyone with a secret agenda.
  As an example, more than half the money in this race in Arkansas is 
dark money. In Georgia we can see that almost all of the money is in 
this category of partial or nondisclosure. In Kentucky and North 
Carolina almost half the money is in the category of partial or 
nondisclosed money, and there is a significant amount of partial or 
nondisclosed in the other nine States. This issue has to do with what 
is happening right now in our elections.
  Just 6 months ago I went over to the Supreme Court and listened to 
the McCutcheon argument and the ruling--well, I went over there longer 
than 6 months ago. They made the ruling about 6 months ago. That ruling 
said one individual can give $3.6 million, and that is what this is 
about. We are trying to get to the bottom of what is happening in our 
elections and how our elections are being taken away from us and how 
they are being influenced in terms of dark money. This is a very good 
time to have this debate.
  I will also say to my friend from Texas, this is a bipartisan 
amendment. This amendment started back in 1983 with Ted Stevens, a 
Republican. Ernest Hollings could not be more of a bipartisan figure in 
the Senate, and he picked it up. From 1983 to today, we have had 11 
Republicans either vote for the amendment or a similar amendment or 
beyond the amendment. This is not anything that should be partisan. 
This dark money and the impact it is having is something the American 
people are very worried about. I will come back to this chart in a 
minute.
  This is a crucial period in our history. Americans will go to the 
polls and vote. It is our heritage, it is something to celebrate, and 
it is something to protect. The integrity of our elections is crucial, 
but our campaign finance system is under siege, drowning in cash and 
record amounts of money. Much of the money is from outside groups and 
much of it is hidden. Our elections should not be for sale to the 
highest bidder. Money has poisoned our political system. The American 
people have lost faith in us as they have watched this merry-go-round 
and constant money chasing from special interests and very little has 
been getting done.
  Folks want Congress to get to work and work together so we can find 
real solutions to real problems and spend our time raising hopes 
instead of raising cash. That is why Senator Bennet and I have 
introduced our constitutional amendment and that is what I wish to talk 
about today.
  Total spending on Federal elections was over $6 billion in 2012. That 
is double what was spent in 2000, just 12 years before. That is a lot 
of money. Where does it come from? Most of it comes from a tiny 
fraction of the population, and there are billionaires and special 
interests writing checks--often in dark corners with a lot of the dark 
money, as I talked about at the beginning of my speech. Nobody knows 
who is behind that dark money, and that dark money is in our elections 
in a big way.
  There are basically two questions: How did we get into this mess and 
how do we fix it? First, we need to look at the history, which is 
important to understand because folks can change the subject, but they 
cannot change the facts and the facts are very clear. Our campaign 
finance system is being destroyed by misguided Supreme Court decisions, 
one after another with narrow 5-to-4 decisions, giving a hammer to big 
money and chipping away at our democracy.
  Normally the tradition in the Supreme Court has been that of Justices 
deciding on issues with a vote of 9 to 0 or 8 to 1 after trying to work 
things out, but these are narrow 5-to-4 decisions which are dividing 
the country and dividing the Court.
  We can go all the way back to a Supreme Court decision back in 1976 
in a case called Buckley v. Valeo, when the Court said money and free 
speech are the same thing. Four years ago in a case that involved 
Citizens United, the Court said corporations are persons and they can 
spend all they want.
  Basically the Supreme Court put a for sale sign on elections. These 
elections and decisions opened the door and allowed a flood of money. 
They ignored political reality and drowned out the voices of ordinary 
Americans.
  Most recently the McCutcheon decision knocked down aggregate 
contribution limits. What we are talking about in that case is that one 
person can dole out $3.6 million directly to candidates and parties in 
all 50 States. Let's put that in perspective for the average American 
working full time and making minimum wage. He or she would have to work 
239 years to make that much money. Because of the McCutcheon decision, 
one person can dole out $3.6 million directly to candidates and parties 
in all 50 States. It would take the average American, working full time 
and making minimum wage, 239 years to make that much money. Look at the 
imbalance and inequality there.
  Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said in a recent interview 
in the National Law Journal:

       I think the biggest mistake this Court made is in campaign 
     finance. . . . It should be increasingly clear how [money] is 
     corrupting our system.

  Justice Ginsburg is right. It is clear to most Americans, which is 
why opponents of reform either change the subject or muddy the water, 
which I will get into in a minute. But the point must be made that the 
five conservative Justices on the Supreme Court are not done. If left 
unchecked, the hammering will continue and the destruction will go on.
  Chief Justice Roberts made a troubling statement in the McCutcheon 
decision. He said preventing bribery is the only basis, the only 
justification for Congress to pass campaign finance laws.
  What does this mean? It means more bad decisions from the Court, the 
floodgates stay open, and the money keeps pouring in. Short of 
prohibiting out and out bribery, Congress is powerless to act and the 
American people must step aside. Billionaires will stay at the front of 
the line. All of this, folks, defies common sense.
  Senator McCain said after the ruling on McCutcheon: ``There will be 
scandals involving corrupt political officials and unlimited, anonymous 
campaign contributions that will force the system to be reformed once 
again.''
  I am afraid my friend is right. There will be scandals. We are 
setting the stage for scandals. Just look at the millions of dollars of 
undisclosed money pouring into our elections.
  How can there be reform? The Court has tied the hands of Congress. 
Until the Constitution is amended, we cannot enact real reforms--
reforms such as McCain-Feingold. The Court will just strike them down. 
We are headed back to the pre-Watergate era.
  In 2012 outside groups spent $450 million to influence Senate and 
House races. In 2008, before Citizens United, they spent $43 million. 
That is a tenfold increase. There is an obvious trend and it is deeply 
troubling. Much of that money is hidden.
  According to a recent report by the Brennan Center, over half the 
money spent in this year's top nine Senate races is not fully 
disclosed. So in 2 months we will know the outcome of these elections, 
but we won't know who paid for them.

[[Page 14090]]

  This chart is a great indication. We have the top-most contested 
Senate races, and here in the red we have full disclosure of the money. 
So the red shows us what people know and that they know who the 
contributors are, but the blue, which is more than half if we average 
it through all of the elections, represents partial or absolute 
nondisclosure.
  This clearly shows we have a broken system. There are only two ways 
to fix it. The Court can reverse itself--that is unlikely--or we can 
amend the Constitution, making clear in the Constitution that people 
have the right to regulate campaign finance. Until then, we will fall 
short of real reform. That is why a constitutional amendment is 
essential--because the time has come to give power back to the elected 
representatives of the people.
  Opponents say this is just an election year stunt, but, again, this 
ignores history. Our amendment is similar to other bipartisan 
amendments introduced in nearly every Congress since 1983 when Ted 
Stevens--a Republican--was the lead sponsor. Many prominent Republicans 
cosponsored and voted for these amendments over the course of three 
decades, people such as John Danforth, Strom Thurmond, Nancy Kassebaum, 
Arlen Specter, John McCain, and Thad Cochran. This was always a 
bipartisan effort. And this was before Citizens United, before 
McCutcheon, when things went from bad to worse.
  It is not a radical idea. In fact, it is pretty simple. It would give 
back power to Congress to regulate campaign finance at the Federal 
level and to States at the State level. That is it, period. We do not 
dictate specific reforms. We can debate the specifics, and we should, 
but Congress has a duty and a right to enact sensible campaign finance 
reform.
  The American people support reform because they know a basic truth: 
No matter how hard some may try to obscure it, when the Court says 
money is free speech, there is a great risk that special interests can 
drown out the voices of everyone else because we know we don't get 
something for nothing. Folks writing those checks want something in 
return. Whether they are Democratic billionaires or Republican 
billionaires, they want value for their money, which usually means less 
compromise and which usually means less compromise and more gridlock.
  Opponents of reform are in full throttle by ignoring history and 
torturing logic. But let's be clear. Here is the bottom line: They 
oppose any limits, they oppose any restrictions on how big the checks 
are or even saying which billionaires are writing them. It is hard to 
defend that. Instead, they change the subject and talk about threats to 
free speech, which goes something like this: If Congress can regulate 
campaign finance spending, then it can also regulate free speech. I 
think this is a straw man argument not supported by history, logic, or 
the law. It isn't persuasive, and it is basically a scare tactic.
  Congress has a long history of regulating campaign finance, often in 
the wake of scandal. Since 1867 Congress has been in the business of 
regulating campaign finance by banning solicitation of campaign funds 
from naval yard government employees. We have had the Pendleton Act, 
the Tillman Act, the Federal Corrupt Practices Act of 1925, the Hatch 
Act, the Federal Campaign Election Act of 1974, and the Bipartisan 
Campaign Act of 2002.
  First scandal and then reform--that is the unfortunate pattern. Every 
generation has faced that challenge for ethical government, for 
standing up to the power of big money, and the Congress has acted. It 
has not banned books, suppressed preachers, or stopped printing 
presses. Reform has been modest, reasonable, and responsive, sensible 
enough to pass both Houses of Congress and get the signature of the 
President. We have to answer to our constituents, unlike Supreme Court 
Justices.
  Further, our amendment does not give Congress free rein. There is 
still a reasonableness requirement in the Court's interpretation of any 
constitutional amendment. If Congress did pass extreme laws, the Court 
could still overturn them as unreasonable. The First Amendment is in 
full effect. So in the classic example, we protect free speech, but we 
cannot yell ``fire'' in a crowded theater. ``Reasonable'' is not a 
complicated idea--except maybe here in Washington or to billionaires 
who demand their way or the highway.
  Opponents also argue that our amendment protects incumbents. This, 
again, misses the point. If anything, the current system favors 
incumbents. Raising $10 million, $15 million, or $20 million for a 
Senate seat is a tall order--one many qualified candidates will 
decline. If a person is elected, it is just the beginning of this 
endless campaign cycle to compete, to keep up, to raise more money. 
Every Member in this body can speak to the hours on the phone dialing 
for dollars when our time could be better spent meeting the real needs 
of our constituents and serving the folks who sent us here in the first 
place.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired.
  Mr. UDALL of New Mexico. I ask unanimous consent for 1 more minute to 
sum up.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. UDALL of New Mexico. Mr. President, this is not about free 
speech, and the American people know it. It is about the wealthiest 
interests trying to buy elections in secret, with no limits, period. 
That is it.
  Let me finally say that I have had a great group of Senators working 
with me on this amendment over the years. One of them we are going to 
hear from right now--Senator Bernie Sanders from Vermont. All of us--
Senator Leahy, Senator Durbin on the Judiciary Committee--have worked 
and refined this amendment to do everything we can to make sure that it 
is responsive to the American people and that it will make us 
responsive to the American people in terms of having a good, solid 
electoral system other than the one the Supreme Court is leading us 
down the path with.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
  Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, let me begin by thanking Senator Tom 
Udall for his extraordinary work over the years in calling attention to 
this disastrous Supreme Court decision called Citizens United which is 
doing so much to undermine the foundations of American democracy. It 
has been a pleasure working with him, and we will continue to fight.
  My colleagues may not know it by reading the newspapers or watching 
TV, but this week we are going to be having a debate on what I consider 
to be the most important domestic issue facing the United States of 
America; that is, whether this great country retains its democratic 
foundations--one person, one vote--or whether we move into an 
oligarchic form of society where a small handful of billionaires is 
able to control not only the economic life of our Nation but the 
political life as well.
  Whether one is a Democrat, whether one is a Republican, or whether 
one is--as the Presiding Officer and I are--an Independent, the 
overwhelming majority of the American people do not believe free speech 
has anything to do with billionaires being able to buy elections.
  The Washington Post reported earlier this week that one family, the 
Koch brothers--a family worth $80 billion--has already put on the air 
some 44,000 ads, and this campaign has 2 months left to it--44,000 ads. 
America is supposed to be about debates on issues. It is not supposed 
to be a process where a billionaire can come into a small State such as 
Maine or Vermont and plop $50 million down or $20 million down to elect 
candidates whose sole job in life is to represent the wealthy and the 
powerful.
  Men and women have put their lives on the line and died to defend 
American democracy--the right for all of us to be involved in the 
political process, not to create a situation where a handful of 
superwealthy families can elect the candidates they want.
  I think some people, when they hear about Citizens United, say: Well, 
it is kind of an esoteric issue; it is not really relevant to my life.

[[Page 14091]]

  Those who believe that are dead wrong. If people are concerned about 
the collapse of the middle class; if people are concerned about the 
fact that more people today are living in poverty than at any time in 
American history; if people are concerned about the fact that we have 
more wealth and income inequality in America today than any other major 
country on Earth; if people are concerned that we are the only major 
country on Earth without national health care, guaranteeing health care 
to all people; if people are concerned about the crisis of global 
warming and many other issues, people have to be interested in the 
issue of Citizens United and how we elect Members of the House and 
Senate and Governors, and so forth and so on, because ultimately what 
this is about is whether the wealthy can determine the agenda of the 
House and the Senate, whether they can say to candidates: Here it is--
we are going to put $50 million into your campaign, and all you have to 
do is support us on A, B, C, D, and E. You have to make sure the rich 
get more tax breaks--despite the fact that the wealthy are doing 
phenomenally well. You have to make sure we cut food stamps or 
education or we eliminate the Environmental Protection Agency. That is 
why we are giving you the money we are giving you.
  People do not spend hundreds of millions of dollars on campaigns for 
fun, for the hell of it; they are spending money because they have an 
agenda. And the billionaire agenda is not the agenda of the American 
people.
  I wish to read for a moment exact language from the 1980 Libertarian 
Party, whose Vice Presidential campaign and major funder was one David 
Koch--one of the two Koch brothers. What I am going to read to my 
colleagues today is what I believe remains their agenda today because I 
see no evidence that it has changed.
  When we turn on the TV and we see an ad coming from one of the Koch 
brothers' organizations, know what they stand for.
  ``We favor the abolishment of Medicare and Medicaid programs.''
  That doesn't mean cutting them; that means ending them.
  ``We favor the repeal of a fraudulent, virtually bankrupt and 
increasingly oppressive Social Security system.''
  That does not mean they are opposed to raising the minimum wage, 
which many of us want to do; they want to do away with Social Security 
entirely--not cut Social Security but do away with it.
  ``We support repeal of all laws which impede the ability of any 
person to find employment, such as minimum wage laws.''
  What that means in English is that while we are trying to raise the 
minimum wage, they want to abolish the concept of the minimum wage. So 
in high-unemployment areas, an employer can pay a worker $3 an hour or 
$4 an hour.
  This is also from the Koch brothers' platform: ``We oppose all 
government welfare, relief projects, and aid to the poor programs. All 
of these government programs are privacy-invading, paternalistic, 
demeaning, and inefficient. The proper source of help for such persons 
is the voluntary efforts of private groups and individuals.''
  That means goodbye to good jobs, nutrition programs, Federal aid to 
education, and goodbye to unemployment insurance.
  This is not a conservative agenda. This is not a small-government 
agenda. This is an extremist agenda designed to eliminate virtually 
every piece of legislation passed by Congress in the last 80 years 
which protects the middle class, working families, low-income people, 
seniors, and the system. That is their agenda.
  I am not saying every Republican adheres to every aspect of this 
agenda, but these guys are pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into 
the political process for a reason, and that reason is to make the 
wealthiest people in this country even wealthier while they do away 
with all legislation that protects working families.
  Citizens United is one of the worst decisions in the history of the 
U.S. Supreme Court. I hope every Member of the Senate votes this week 
to start the process for a constitutional amendment to overturn 
Citizens United.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Georgia.

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