- The Washington Post says "The county would be better served by Cheryl C. Kagan ..."
- Endorsed by the Firefighters and Police as "strong on public safety issues."
- Endorsed by the Sierra Club for my "proven track record" on the environment!
- Endorsed by SEIU as "a strong voice... committed to issues important to working families."
- Endorsed by the B-CC Chamber of Commerce PAC as a business-friendly candidate.
- Endorsed as the "better advocate for the environment" by MD League of Conservation Voters.
- Endorsed by MC NOW for my commitment to "promoting women’s equality."
- Endorsed by NARAL Pro-Choice Maryland as the "real leader" in District 17.
- Endorsed by CASA in Action as a "courageous and effective" advocate for these difficult times.
How We Can Save Democracy in Maryland, Part Two
Published: Friday, July 2, 2010 7:00 am By: Marc Korman Source: Maryland Politics WatchIn Part One, I reviewed District 14 Delegate candidate Eric Luedtke’s thesis
about the need for campaign finance reform in Maryland and one idea for
reform. Today I will look at a few more potential reforms.
Cultural Shift
District 16 Delegate
candidate Ariana “Tornado” Kelly suggested to me that a cultural shift
could be one solution. All Democrats use union shops for their
printing. That is part of the Democratic Party culture. So why not
make campaign finance part of the Democratic culture, at least for
primaries?
At the federal level, Democrats used to have a
public financing culture, at least for presidential candidates. From
1976 to 2004 using the public financing system established in the wake
of Watergate was the norm for Democratic Presidential Primary
candidates. That ended in 2004 when Howard Dean opted out. John Kerry
followed suit, as did Obama and Clinton in 2008. Obama also became the
first Republican or Democratic presidential nominee to opt out of the
public financing system for the general election.
Locally,
District 17 State Senate candidate Cheryl Kagan has made her “Clean
Seventeen” pledge that limits her own donations. One legislative
candidate told me privately they could try and make an issue out of
having less funding than some of their opponents to appeal to
progressives. District 16 candidate Kyle Lierman has pledged to take no
state or federal PAC money. If these efforts prove effective, maybe
that will start a trend of Democrats voluntarily embracing less
expensive campaigns.
Unfortunately, past individual pledges
have not led to a broader cultural shift. Jamie Raskin does not take
corporate money and Marc Elrich does not take developer funds, but that
has not started a stampede of candidates following their lead.
Better
Transparency
The easiest reform would be to improve
transparency. Except Clarence Thomas, who even believes disclosure is
too much government regulation, people of all political stripes pay lip
service to improving disclosure and transparency. At the federal level,
Congressman Van Hollen’s imperfect DISCLOSE Act sought, among other
provisions, to strengthen disclosures of who is funding political ads.
Republicans, as has become typical, failed to put their money where
their mouth was and all but two voted against it.
At the state
level, there are some improvements that could be made. Although it
would make the job of campaign treasurer more difficult, I would like to
see a publicly accessible database showing donations in almost as real
time as possible. If a candidate receives a donation, that should be
uploaded within some set period of time so the public can see it if they
choose to. Thanks to the University of Maryland the state already has a
useful database
for reports, but it should be shifted to real time. Maryland already
has a fairly lax process for amending reports and that should continue
for honest mistakes made in the name of faster reporting.
Short
of that, there is currently a black hole in Maryland campaign finance
reporting schedule
between January and August. With an early September primary, where
many of the political decisions are made depending on the district, that
is most of the election. Maryland should require at least one
additional report during that time so reports can be scrutinized and be a
part of the political debate where appropriate.
Luedtke is
right. We need campaign finance reform. These are just a few ideas,
none mutually exclusive, to pursue that goal.
To view the article from its source, click here
