Will Obama Issue an Order Exposing Big Corporate Political Spenders in Citizens United Era?
source: http://www.alternet.org/news/153729/will_obama_issue_an_order_exposing_big_corporate_politic...
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January 10, 2012 - An executive order requiring that federal contractors disclose their electoral spending—by top officers and as corporations—is being reconsidered by the White House despite stiff opposition from the business lobby after it was first proposed last spring, according to civil rights attorneys working on the issue.
“There’s a lot of movement at the White House,” said Craig Holman, government affairs lobbyist for Public Citizen. “I just had a meeting at the White House counsel’s office, trying to encourage them to move forward with the executive order. They have the perfect window of opportunity to get the executive order done.”
“It’s simple—any company that is paid with taxpayer dollars should be required to disclose political contributions,” said Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., who has pushed for the White House to issue the order. “With public dollars come public responsibilities, and I hope President Obama will issue his executive order right away.”
The order, if issued, would likely be the only campaign finance initiative to emerge from Washington this year as nothing is expected from Congress. It would take effect after the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council adopts new disclosure rules. That could come as the 2012 election season moves beyond the primaries and it would offer a new way to see who is behind the newest independent groups spending millions on political attack ads.
“Most of the major corporate players are also government contractors,” Holman said. “So if we get this executive order approved, we will get a comprehensive picture of how corporations are spending money in elections.”
Spending on federal contracts was $541 billion in 2010, which was about 4 percent of the gross domestic product, according to the Congressional Research Service, and almost 15 percent of the federal budget. The top 100 contractors are some of America’s biggest firms, and include support services for the military overseas, weapons makers, computer companies, telecommunication firms and other service providers. Companies that could fall under the disclosure order employ about 22 percent of the domestic workforce, CRS said.
The proposed executive order emerged last April, where it swiftly drew condemnation from some of Washington’s biggest business lobbies, including the Professional Services Council, the Aerospace Industries Association and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Almost immediately, Republicans in the House and Senate began adding amendments to appropriations bills prohibiting federal agencies from collecting the political contribution information as part of the procurement process.
Rep. Eshoo led the Democrats' response by making floor speeches and introducing short amendments to spending bills requiring the contractor disclosure.
“I rise to call for transparency and disclosure in our system and throughout our government,” Eshoo said, in a typical speech. “In 2002, when we voted to pass the historic McCain-Feingold campaign finance bill, most Republicans voted no, saying we needed disclosure….They said we needed to put spending out in the open and let the voters assess it. Today, when the president proposes requiring contractors to disclose their spending and not to limit it, Republicans are up in arms. They say it will politicize the contracting process. But when contractors can spend money in elections, the contracting process is already politicized.”
In July 2011, Eshoo sent a letter, signed by 62 other House Democrats, urging President Obama to issue the executive order. That letter noted that a handful of states ban forms of political spending by contractors, citing Connecticut, New Jersey, West Virginia and Hawaii. It also noted that since 1994, the Securities and Exchange Commission has barred brokers and securities dealers and their PACs from making campaign contributions to bond-issuing officials. The SEC rule was upheld in court.
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- WakeUpPeople
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ithink
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Obama would,nt need to if some of these thousands of investigative reporters launched a big push to find and publish the names of corps and big political doners to these super pacs.Just knowing the hunt is on and the possible exsposure could tend to make them stop and think before they write that check or make that electronic transfer.
- 5 months ago
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ithink
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fiberbundle
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ithink:
I wish Wiki-leaks would find and publish the names of all the hedge fund clients and tax cheats in the United States and Western Europe. Somehow, I think it would be the same list.
- 4 months ago
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fiberbundle
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MotherForTruth
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Depends on the list of Obama sponsors.
- 5 months ago
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MotherForTruth
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ThirdSection
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I'm just glad that Obama is the kind of President who never capitulates. Whew!!!
- 5 months ago
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ThirdSection
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JustZ
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Sure seems like common sense to me. Companies paid by the public ... should be forced to disclose where they're buying their government.
- 5 months ago
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JustZ
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KimClark
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I think it has some scope that they hope is enough to pacify the people raging about Citizens United, NDAA, Sofa, Glass, just to list a few. I trust one thing here, it won't give us the full truth and will make people think they are getting something. How easily can the super pacs funnel threw non government subcontractors? I trust if it's hard it won't happen!
- 5 months ago
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KimClark
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JustZ
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KimClark:
"...I trust if it's hard it won't happen!" ...Exactly...or expensive. That's always a deal breaker too.
- 5 months ago
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JustZ
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rerushg
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Sounds interesting. So what are the unintended consequences? Slippery slopes? We're getting screwed, right? Just got to figure out how.
- 5 months ago
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rerushg
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rossmick
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I hope so.
- 5 months ago
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rossmick
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JanforGore
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It sounds good with an election coming, and while he like all of them raise millions in donations. Get the corporate money out to begin with then you are doing something. Per Citizens United they can give, but you don't have to take it.
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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JohnA
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That would be good, but it will never happen because then he would have to expose all the big corporate political spenders donating to him.
- 5 months ago
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JohnA
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fiberbundle
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I think Obama should do it because we need a lot of case law to restrict the scope of "Citizens United". By considering more cases the Supreme Court could retreat, in a face saving manner, from one of the worst decisions it ever made, by neutering "Citizens United's" effect with subsequent decisions.
- 5 months ago
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fiberbundle
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truthglow
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fiberbundle:
But he won't. History tells us that he'll take the money and run. He's as greedy a politician as the rest of them. I idealized him 4 years ago. No more. History has taught me the truth of the matter.
- 4 months ago
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truthglow
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fiberbundle
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truthglow:
I was disappointed. On paper he seemed well suited to address the lawlessness of our "foreign policy" and financial sector of our economy. He has extensive knowledge of Constitutional law and edited the Harvard Law Review. He spoke well, in an inspiring manner, and about substantive current political problems; he Ivy League educated. He wasn't the embarrassment to our country that Bush the Younger is. But, alas, once in office, he was either overwhelmed with the problems (Hamlet); or he just wasn't the warrior for justice we thought he was. He seemed to always be feting the very snakes who crashed our economy; rather than indicting them. He abandoned the Democratic Party electoral efforts in 2010, and is not a team player. Lately he's showing some grit; and he's the only viable choice among electable candidates. But I feel your pain; a lot of us do. Do you think Hillary could be persuaded to give it a go?
- 4 months ago
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fiberbundle
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dinm76
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But he would have to have some BALLS to do something that good and we all know he dosn't have any!
- 5 months ago
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dinm76
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MSII
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I deeply wish he would do this, but won't hold my breath on it. He needs to get some fire-in-the-belly going, he needs to fight!
- 5 months ago
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MSII
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Truthitswhatsfordinner
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MSII:
I agree but he can't fight himself on this issue.
- 5 months ago
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Truthitswhatsfordinner
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truthglow
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MSII:
Or a spine!
- 4 months ago
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truthglow
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Leen61
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He should. But it remains to be seen if he will.
- 5 months ago
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Leen61
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bailey78
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If he wants to get elected again he had better pull some rabbit out of a hat. An it had better be a pretty one.
- 5 months ago
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bailey78
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Truthitswhatsfordinner
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Of course he won't do it because he himself was funded, and is still funded, by the same Wall Streeters that fund his opposition.
- 5 months ago
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Truthitswhatsfordinner
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bailey78
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Truthitswhatsfordinner:
He may try some double talking again to make it look like he tried. But thats the most we will see.
- 5 months ago
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bailey78