[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 34, Number 9 (Monday, March 2, 1998)]
[Page 303]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Letter to Members of the Senate on Campaign Finance Reform Legislation

February 20, 1998

Dear __________:

    Next week, the Senate is scheduled to debate campaign finance 
legislation. You will have an important opportunity to cast a vote for 
real reform of our electoral process. Today, I am writing to urge you to 
support legislation that will make our democracy work better for all 
Americans.
    The campaign finance laws were last rewritten twenty-three years 
ago. Those laws have served us well, but they have been overwhelmed by a 
flood of money and the rising cost of campaigns. Politicians have talked 
about reform for years. Now it is time to act. The McCain-Feingold bill 
puts an end to the soft money system, expands disclosure requirements, 
increases penalties for election law violations, and strengthens the 
rules for so-called independent campaign expenditures. Make no mistake: 
a vote against McCain-Feingold is a vote for soft money, for unlimited 
backdoor campaign expenditures, for the status quo.
    For these reasons, I have supported and will continue to support the 
McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act and I urge the Senate to 
pass it. I also urge the Senate to reject any attempts to attach an 
amendment that would make this bill unpalatable to one party or another. 
Such an attempt is nothing less than an effort to defeat campaign 
finance reform.
    A critical mass has been reached for campaign finance reform. 
Citizen groups, spurred by business executives and civic leaders, have 
gathered one million signatures on a petition to Congress calling for 
reform. Presidents Ford, Carter, and Bush have been joined by dozens of 
former lawmakers in calling for reform.
    Today the responsibility rests in the hands of the Senate. If you 
want to strengthen our democracy, vote for the McCain-Feingold 
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act.
    Sincerely,
                                                  Bill Clinton

Note: Identical letters were sent to all Members of the Senate. This 
letter was released by the Office of the Press Secretary on February 21.