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Big Money Wins in the Big Skies of Montana

By Amy Goodman with Denis Moynihan


“I never bought a man who wasn’t for sale,” William A. Clark
reportedly said. He was one of Montana’s “Copper Kings,” a man who used
his vast wealth to manipulate the state government and literally buy
votes to make himself a U.S. senator. That was more than 100 years ago,
and the blatant corruption of Clark and the other Copper Kings created a
furor that led to the passage, by citizen initiative, of Montana’s
Corrupt Practices Act in 1912. The century of transparent
campaign-finance restrictions that followed, preventing corporate money
from influencing elections, came to an end this week, as the U.S.
Supreme Court summarily reversed the Montana law. Five justices of the
U.S Supreme Court reiterated: Their controversial Citizens United ruling
remains the law of the land. Clark’s corruption contributed to the
passage of the 17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Now, close to
100 years later, it may take a popular movement to amend the
Constitution again, this time to overturn Citizens United and confirm,
finally and legally, that corporations are not people.
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission is the case in which
the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that corporations can contribute unlimited
amounts of funds toward what are deemed “independent expenditures” in
our elections. Thus, corporations, or shadowy “super PACS” that they
choose to fund, can spend as much as they care to on negative campaign
ads, just as long as they don’t coordinate with a candidate’s campaign
committee. That 2010 ruling, approved by a narrow 5-4 majority of the
court, has profoundly altered the electoral landscape—not only for the
presidential election, but also for thousands of races around the
country. According to a summary of the ruling’s impact, prepared by the
National Conference of State Legislatures, “While the ruling does not
directly affect state laws, there are 24 states that currently prohibit
or restrict corporate and/or union spending on candidate elections.”
Montana, with its long history of banning corporate contributions,
was alone among the states to defy those five U.S. Supreme Court
justices. Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia filed a brief
in support of Montana, noting that state elections are different. Their
supporting brief read, “States—particularly resource-rich States with
small populations, like Montana—face the risk that nonresident
corporations with discrete and well-defined interests will dominate
campaign spending in state and local election contests.”

Montana is not known for bipartisanship these days. Democratic Gov.
Brian Schweitzer says his veto pen has run out of ink from the number of
“crazy” Republican bills that he has had to veto since taking office.
Lacking ink, he now takes bills from the Republican-controlled
legislature onto the Capitol steps and emblazons them with a red-hot
branding iron that says “Veto.” So it was significant that, after the
Supreme Court decision this week, Schweitzer and his lieutenant
governor, John Bohlinger, a Republican, stood together before the
Capitol.
Bohlinger said, “Now, Republicans and Democrats don’t always agree on
policy matters, but there’s one thing we do agree on, and that is,
corporate money should not influence the outcome of an election.” To
which Schweitzer added: “Here in Montana, we have a proud, 100-year
history of keeping corporate money out of our elections. Corporations
aren’t people, and they should not control our government. Montana stood
up for democracy, here at home and on behalf of America, by fighting to
keep our ban on corporate campaign spending. The United States Supreme
Court blocked our state law, because they said corporations are people.
I’ll believe that when Texas executes one.”
John Bonifaz is co-founder and director of Free Speech for People,
one of a coalition of groups organizing for a constitutional amendment
that specifies that “People, person, or persons as used in this
Constitution does not include corporations, limited liability companies
or other corporate entities.” He told me: “We’ve seen a growing
mobilization across the country of people calling for an amendment to
reclaim our democracy. Four states are now on record—Hawaii, Rhode
Island, Vermont, New Mexico—calling for an amendment. Other states are
likely to join that fight soon. Montana [has a] statewide ballot in
November for an amendment. Hundreds of municipalities across the country
have called for an amendment. Over a thousand business leaders have
joined that call. And now there are some dozen amendment bills pending
in the United States Congress calling for an amendment, with hearings to
be held before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee this July.”
Perhaps the only silver lining in the Supreme Court’s decision to
send Montana back to the age of the Copper Kings is that a mass movement
is building to assert the rights of people over the power of money in
politics.

 
Poll

Added: Jul-4-2012 Occurred On: Jun-28-2012
By: chuck norris FTW
In:
Regional News
Tags: Big, Money, Wins, in, the, Big, Skies, of, Montana
Location: United States (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 1324 | Comments: 8 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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  • So far this poll shows that one third of you are complete idiots.

    Posted Jul-4-2012 By 

    (1)

  • "and confirm,
    finally and legally, that corporations are not people."

    "Poll
    is a corporation a person ?"

    Are you even sure of what you are writing about?

    Legalese. Bastardisation of kings' english. Stop bitching about it and learn it, there's plenty of other words just the same in common usage, that have different meanings at law. Do you want to change them all, because a large swath of misinformed people are too lazy to pick up a book? In some situations they are defined More..

    Posted Jul-4-2012 By 

    (0)

    • @N4CR And you must be one of the idiots. Blacks law is a dictionary for the legal society which we are not a part of. Therefore we cannot be held to their rules. While the US has attempted to make us all corporate citizens in it's attempt to own us, this does not make us corporations. Please get you head out of your kool aid drinking ass.

      Posted Jul-4-2012 By 

      (-1)

    • @The Cell Tribe
      I never said you or anyone was a corporation. I never said anything about blacks law, there are other references than just that too.

      I merely tried to point out the legal difference (from the legal society who administers the courts) between person and man.

      So you'd go and tell doctors that their words don't count anymore because you are not a member of their society? It's not that you are a member of their society it's that this is how their area of expertise is spoken!

      Posted Jul-4-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @N4CR Yes when ever you want to close the doors to knowledge you use secret languages and charge or apprentice people to learn them. We call others like this MCSE's PHD, ESQ, DR.

      They simply choose to use another definition for words then any other human might?

      Neither is right both are wrong, happy now?

      (See if "we" use our own, rather then the common definition of words? And issue no warning that those words are being used differently, then they would be normally? Then "we& More..

      Posted Jul-4-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @DemocratWithDerringer
      Hehe you do raise a very valid issue and I agree! It shouldn't have got to this in the first place with multiple definitions but willpower and freedom of speech allows it. I can understand specialised terms for various professions as it is merely what they deal with in detail.

      E.g. I could discuss continuous wave, neodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet lasers. Which are called CW Nd-YAG for short, for that reason.


      Law is an interesting one though. Law tends to have ke More..

      Posted Jul-4-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @N4CR That happens in many different places..

      in the old Testament Moses complained that his own scribes were of secret society and that had he not secured the meanings of the word in the Greater and Lesser Mesora(SP?מסורה

      He would not even have been able to keep the Law known to the Hebrews...

      Still the truth manages to seep through in most of the holy books.

      I will have to read of Waitangi I know the indigenous people around a lot of different places often get short shifted (bad deal More..

      Posted Jul-5-2012 By 

      (0)