Published on The Smirking Chimp (
http://smirkingchimp.com)
By Brent Budowsky
Created Mar 21 2009 - 11:11am
Let's ban political contributions to any candidate, of any party, for any office by any company that receives bailout money, until the money is paid back in full. Taxpayer money should not be used to pay for political donations designed to influence how the taxpayer money is spent. It is ridiculous for political leaders to take political campaign donations with one hand while they hand out taxpayer dollars to the donors with the other.
And let's bring back Eliot Spitzer to a position in the government involving reform of our financial system. Sure, Spitzer made a whopper of a mistake. But on the great issue of today and tomorrow, fixing the problems of our financial system, the world should have listened to Eliot Spitzer. He was brilliant, he was visionary, he was ahead of his time, and he was damned right.
These are issues I will deal with in an upcoming column in the paper. For now, enough of these lame pseudo-reforms that keep good people out of government but do virtually nothing to reform the system -- and, in some cases, make the system worse.
Want a reform that will have immediate impact? Ban political contributions from companies that receive bailout money until the money is paid back. I suspect the Supreme Court will find this a constitutional limit on how federal aid is spent. But just in case, here is Plan B: Elected officials can state today that with or without a new law, they will not accept campaign money from bailed-out firms.
The very idea that taxpayer money would be so abused -- i.e., by using it to influence the terms of distribution of taxpayer money -- is absurd.
The very idea that last year, as it was first being bailed out, AIG was dishing out the dough, while negotiations for the bailout were under way, to Obama, to McCain and to leading members of both parties in Congress, is totally ridiculous.
Let me emphasize that if this ban goes into effect, every company should have every right to lobby every day. The problem is not the lobbying. Lobbying with information and perspective is valuable, including from Wall Street and banks. The problem is the money, the buying and selling of influence and (let's be honest) the buying and selling of votes. Let's break the money link. Let's enact the one reform that really matters.