Posts tagged transparency

Posts tagged transparency

Gov. Scott Walker and Wisconsin Republicans tried to gut the state’s open records laws. Then they got caught.
“Today’s the day a little-known rule by the Federal Communications Commission takes effect for every TV station in the country. In a nutshell, it requires broadcasters that run political ads to disclose who paid for them.
"It may sound like a simple idea. But it could have tremendous effects on the way campaigns compete and spend money — not to mention for third-party groups and members of the general public who are interested in campaign finance, too.”
A great op-ed today from two small business owners on the need for an SEC rule on political spending transparency:
“When we invest in a publicly traded company, when we purchase shares, we become part-owners of that company. But under current rules, money from the general treasury of a public company can be disbursed to fund political activities without the owners (the shareholders) having any way to know about it.
"Just as in a small business, this should be considered dangerously poor management. It leaves the door open to abuse, secret back-room politicking, and distorted market outcomes influenced by pay-to-play politics. We believe the SEC must act to address this problem.”
“Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and a dozen of his Republican colleagues have asked the Federal Communications Commission to resist implementing new rules targeting the makers of political advertisements in the absence of Congress passing new disclosure legislation.”
Buried in the budget released by the White House Wednesday is a provision we can definitely get behind–requiring Senate candidates to file their fundraising reports electronically.

Unlike House members, Senators file their fundraising reports on paper. They are then scanned in by government employees (and can be hundreds of pages!) and uploaded. It’s inefficient and makes it hard for people to track which interests are handing out cash to Senate candidates.
Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont) has introduced legislation to require electronic filing for Senate fundraising reports. It’s good to see the administration on board too.
“Shareholders of [Starbucks] will vote at its March 20 annual meeting on a proposal by John Harrington, who owns 800 shares, to ‘adopt a policy prohibiting the use of corporate funds for any political election or campaign.’”
And these shareholders will see some public pressure too:
“WashPIRG and Public Citizen plan to deliver petitions to Starbucks headquarters Tuesday asking CEO Howard Schultz to institute a corporate policy against spending money in elections and to ask other CEOs to do the same.”
“Calling the lack of disclosure on hundreds of millions of dollars in spending during the 2012 election ‘egregious’ and 'offensive,’ Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) is hopeful that senators in both parties are now more amenable to campaign finance disclosure reforms”
Though Nov.1, $213.0 million has been spent by “dark money” groups to influence the 2012 elections. Of that, $172.4 million (81%) has been spent to help Republican candidates, as compared to $35.7 million (19%) to help Democrats.
Here are the details on Sunlight Foundation’s great new app:
Ad Hawk is a free mobile app that allows you to identify political ads as they air and immediately learn about who is behind them. Want to know who is spending money to influence your vote? The app provides valuable contextual information about the candidate, super PAC and issues ads airing on TV and radio this election year.
Learn more about it or download it in the Android or Apple store.