"Campaign
finance reform" is a hot issue on Capitol Hill again in the wake
of the Enron collapse. One very prominent Senator, who has championed
the reform cause from the beginning, embarrassingly received thousands
for his own campaign from the failed company. Oblivious to his
hypocrisy, he recently appeared on national television lamenting
that "Enron has tainted all of us. This shows why we need campaign
finance reform."
If the Senator
and so many others in Congress believe so strongly in campaign
finance reform, why is money in politics such a big problem? In
other words, why don't these politicians simply put their money
where their mouth is, act with integrity, and do a better job
of policing their own campaigns?
I agree with
him that a big problem exists. Special interest money has a huge
influence in Washington, and it has a tremendous effect on both
foreign and domestic policy. Yet we ought to be asking ourselves
why corporations and interest groups are willing to give politicians
millions of dollars in the first place. Obviously their motives
are not altruistic. Simply put, they do it because the stakes
are so high. They know government controls virtually every aspect
of our economy and our lives, and that they must influence government
to protect their interests. Our federal government, which was
intended to operate as a very limited constitutional republic,
has instead become a virtually socialist leviathan that redistributes
trillions of dollars. We can hardly be surprised when countless
special interests fight for the money. The only true solution
to the campaign money problem is a return to a proper constitutional
government that does not control the economy. Big government and
big campaign money go hand-in-hand.
The so-called
reform legislation being proposed is clearly unconstitutional.
The First amendment unquestionably grants individuals and businesses
the free and unfettered right to advertise, lobby, and contribute
to politicians as they choose. More importantly, the Constitution
does not grant Congress the power to regulate campaigns. In fact,
article II expressly authorizes the regulation of elections,
so the omission of campaigns is glaring. While some in the media
have raised First amendment questions, few seem to understand
that Congress clearly lacks the constitutional power to regulate
campaigns at all.
Campaign
finance reform really means more regulations, more controls, more
telling the American people how they can spend their money and
how they can lobby Congress. Your freedoms should not be restricted
because some politicians cannot control themselves. The problem
is that there are members of Congress who yield to the temptation
and influence of money, who effectively sell their votes to those
who can give them money and keep them in office. If enough members
did not yield to the temptation, they would not have to posture
with phony campaign finance reform bills and they would not have
to undermine the Constitution.
We
need to get money out of government. Only then will money
not be important in politics. Campaign finance laws will not make
politicians more ethical, but they will make it harder for average
Americans to influence Washington.