The Sun (San Bernardino)

Want to stop all the PACs? It’s simple.

- By John Seiler

As Election Day March 5 marches toward us, voters will get even more mail flyers than already. Video ads also will flood TV shows and social media posts.

But look carefully to see where they’re from. Here’s one I got in Irvine: “Republican Dr. Steven Choi Fights Taxes.” The former assemblyma­n is running for state Senate in the

37th District. The flyer is paid for by Uber Innovation Political Action Add Committee’s Top Funder.

Another flyer boasts, “Planned Parenthood Endorses Josh Newman for State Senate,” also for the 37th District. He’s the incumbent Democrat currently in the 29th District. Except the ad was paid for by Uber Innovation. Notice the different issues: taxes for Republican­s, abortion for Democrats.

The key here is Assembly

Bill 5 from 2019, which made many part-time “gig” workers, including Uber drivers, fulltime employees, a terrible law. Choi voted against it. Newman briefly was out of the Senate because he was recalled for supporting Senate Bill 1 in 2017, which raised gas taxes $5 billion a year. He was elected again in 2020.

Uber and Lyft spent $193 million in 2020 passing Propositio­n 22, which exempted themselves from AB 5. Now, Uber wants to cover both parties in the Nov. 5 runoff in the 37th.

How did we get here? Blame OC native son Richard Nixon. The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 mandated disclosing campaign contributi­ons. Then, as the Watergate scandal drove him from office in 1974, the Democratic Congress amended the act. The changes set up the Federal Election Commission and limited campaign contributi­ons by individual­s, political parties and political action committees.

In the 1976 Buckley decision, on First Amendment grounds, the U.S. Supreme Court exempted from the law individual contributi­ons to one’s own campaign – giving a big advantage to rich, self-financed candidates.

The 2010 Citizens United decision threw out any limits on independen­t expenditur­es by corporatio­ns, unions and their political action committees – PACs. Hence the Uber and many other PACs.

Today in California, the Fair Political Practices Commission lists limits that include $5,500 for the Assembly, state Senate and local offices; and $36,400 for governor. But political parties and PACs “may receive contributi­ons in excess of the limits.” The Federal Elections Commission says contributi­ons to U.S. House, Senate and presidenti­al candidates are limited to $3,300 per election.

Because campaign laws are so complex, and fundraisin­g so daunting, campaignin­g also has become a highly specialize­d profession run by a few experts. If you’re a small-time candidate, forget it.

This system is anti-democratic and gives vast advantages to millionair­es, incumbents, and the special interests. Wonder no more why the federal government is $34 trillion in debt and California is running a deficit this year of at least $38 billion. They call it “pay to play.” You pay the candidates, and they let you play with the taxpayers’ dollars.

What’s needed is a reform of the reform. First, keep the good part: contributi­on disclosure. Let us know who’s paying whom.

Second, throw out all the other laws. Although the courts have upheld the contributi­on limits, all limits violate the First Amendment guarantee against abridging “freedom of speech.”

Under this reform, most of the PAC and other independen­t schemes would vanish, as candidates would gather most or all of the money to themselves, with full disclosure. That’s real democracy.

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