Breaking Free With Fair Elections
3/27/2007
Executive Summary
Fair Elections – systems with full public financing of elections –
would help improve the openness, honesty, and accountability of
government. They would also free public officials to respond to the
interests of voters without worrying about hurting their ability to
raise money from deep-pocketed donors. Most observers would agree
that money plays far too large a role in elections – and that
politicians spend too much time fundraising, detracting from the time
they spend developing good public policy. If we want to protect
the environment, design a better health care system or improve our
energy policy, we need a political system that encourages lawmakers to
listen more to voters than to oil and gas companies, pharmaceutical
giants and other industries.
Fair Elections are a bold solution
to the problem of money in politics. Three states – Maine, Connecticut
and Arizona – have instituted the systems for statewide and legislative
elections. Publicly financed elections for some public offices,
including judgeships, exist in four additional states, and the solution
has been implemented in two major cities. Other states, such as
Maryland, are actively considering similar proposals for their state
elections.
The systems work. Public funding systems in the
states today draw rave reviews from lawmakers while producing more
diverse fields of candidates. They also provide voters with immediate
return on their small investment of faith and money: lawmakers who run
under the systems spend significantly less time raising money than
those who do not, giving them more time to do the work of the people. This
momentum is now spreading to Washington. Bills have been introduced in
the House and Senate to provide full public financing for congressional
elections. The proposed congressional systems and those in
effect in the states are variations on a theme. They require that
candidates agree to accept little private money and to abide by spending limits. In exchange, candidates with demonstrated support qualify for enough public money to run viable campaigns. The
systems are sensible. They are entirely voluntary and impose no new
restrictions on the campaign fundraising or spending of those who do
not participate. And they transform elections into true contests of
ideas and merit, rather than fundraising prowess. The cost of a
full congressional Fair Elections system would be tiny in the scope of
the overall federal budget, which is nearing $3 trillion. And the
program would accrue enormous savings by reducing wasteful
expenditures, such as earmarks arranged by lobbyists. Democratic,
Republican and independent voters all support Fair Elections. Nearly 75
percent of respondents – including 80 percent of Democrats and 65
percent of Republicans – said in a mid-2006 poll that they supported a
voluntary public funding system. Meanwhile, public approval of Congress plunged to historic depths. Implementing
a public funding system for Congress would make elections more open and
empower voters. Americans are clamoring for a change – one that puts
them in charge.
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