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Home arrow eBook Categories arrow Politics arrow Better Parties, Better Government: A Realistic Program for Campaign Finance Reform

Better Parties, Better Government: A Realistic Program for Campaign Finance Reform

Monday, 12 October 2009

Better Parties, Better Government: A Realistic Program for Campaign Finance Reform, download free eBook, pdf format.Today's campaign finance system, by preventing parties from financing their candidates, unfairly protects the interests of incumbents. Wallison and Gora clearly showcase how the American political process can refocus on satisfying the needs of its citizens simply by returning authority to the political parties. Better Parties, Better Government points to the one campaign finance reform that can actually bring reform to American politics. --Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives

Every federal campaign finance reform law enacted since 1971—ostensibly intended to keep politicians honest and limit the influence of contributors—has in reality protected incumbents by reducing the funds available to challengers.

 Although the courts have struck down many of the most egregious incumbent-protection measures enacted by Congress, important ones still remain—particularly restrictions on what political parties can spend in support of their candidates. These restrictions explain why reelection rates for incumbents are so high—up to 98 percent in recent years—despite record-low approval ratings for Congress.

The most effective way to change this pro-incumbent system is to lift the restrictions on political parties, allowing them to become both the principal vehicles for political fundraising and the principal sources of campaign funds for their candidates. This would improve funding resources for challengers, strengthen the parties, reduce the appearance of corruption inherent in the current candidate-centered fundraising system, and ultimately strengthen American democracy.

In Better Parties, Better Government: A Realistic Program for Campaign Finance Reform, Peter J. Wallison and Joel M. Gora guide us through the complex tangle of laws, rules, regulations, exceptions, exemptions, and safe harbors that constitute our current campaign finance regime, and explain how to reform the system with a single change: ending the restrictions on spending by political parties in support of their candidates.

This single reform will make elections more competitive, improve the candidate and policy choices available to voters, and thereby transform American politics.

Visit Better Parties, Better Government: A Realistic Program for Campaign Finance Reform Download Page

You can download Better Parties, Better Government: A Realistic Program for Campaign Finance Reform in PDF format.

Paperback: 200 pages
Author: Peter J. Wallison and Joel M. Gora
Publisher: AEI Press (May 25, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0844742716
ISBN-13: 978-0844742717

INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY
The campaign finance system in the United States is unusual in one major respect: it is candidate-centered. The candidates themselves, rather than the political parties, must raise the necessary funds to run a campaign. The political parties, which choose the candidates—or at least run the process under which their candidates are selected—are severely restricted in their ability to finance their candidates’ campaigns.

As a system purportedly designed to reduce corruption and undue influence—and upheld against First Amendment challenges on this basis—a candidate-centered fundraising system seems, to say the least, rather odd. Among other things, it places the candidates and officeholders who need campaign funds in exactly the position they should not be occupying—as supplicants, seeking financial support from those who are trying to influence them. ...

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Peter J. Wallison is the Arthur F. Burns Fellow in Financial Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. A former general counsel of the U.S. Treasury department, he was also counsel to Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller and White House counsel to President Ronald Reagan.

Joel M. Gora is a professor at Brooklyn Law School and former legal counsel to the American Civil Liberties Union. As an ACLU lawyer, he represented the plaintiffs in the Buckley v. Valeo case, arguing that the requirements of the Federal Election Campaign Act violated the rights protected by the First Amendment and heavily favored incumbents.

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