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PRESS RELEASE FROM AMERICANS FOR TAX REFORM
Contact: John Kartch (
jkartch@atr.org or 202-785-0266)
Click
here for a copy of this document in Adobe Acrobat.
2/07/02
Shays-Meehan
to Union Workers: Pay Up.
As written, campaign reform bill does nothing to protect union workers
from political coercion.
WASHINGTON -
House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) announced yesterday that the Shays-Meehan
campaign finance reform bill would be taken up next week by the U.S.
House of Representatives. But without Paycheck Protection, a measure
designed to protect union workers from being forced to pay dues used
for political ends, the measure faces a serious lack of credibility
in the eyes of unionized workers.
"Campaign
Finance Reform without Paycheck Protection is not real reform at all,"
said taxpayer advocate Grover Norquist, who heads Americans for Tax
Reform (ATR) in Washington. "Rather, it's a raw political power
play designed solely to benefit one political party at the expense of
another."
Supporters of
the bill saw the scandal surrounding Enron Corporation's bankruptcy
as a chance to move forward with their reform plan. Enron gave roughly
$2 million in campaign contributions to candidates from both political
parties in the 2000 election cycle, resulting in a surge of support
to bring the bill to the floor.
But in the same
election cycle, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME) gave roughly $8 million in campaign contributions
- 90% of which went to Democrats. Moreover, while testifying before
the Senate Committee on Rules in April 2000, AFL-CIO Associate General
Counsel Laurence Gold admitted that most of his union's political activity
doesn't involve soft money. Voter identification activities, direct
mail to union households, voter turnout activities, union workers receiving
paid "holidays" to campaign for union-supported candidates,
are all unaffected by the Shays-Meehan legislation.
"This bill
is heralded by the leadership of one party, and for the benefit of one
party," continued Norquist. "But the bill does absolutely
nothing to stem Big Labor's influence on the political process - influence
gained from the money they coerce from employees who often oppose their
policies."
Campaign reform
emerged as an issue in the early 1990s, when many politicians saw an
opportunity to brandish a "clean vote" to their constituents.
Others, like Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), saw campaign reform as an opportunity
to bury skeletons from past years of unethical activity - in McCain's
case, the Keating 5 scandal.
"Politicians
who take up campaign reform without addressing Paycheck Protection are
running in front of television cameras to flaunt integrity that they,
in fact, don't have," concluded Norquist.
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Americans for Tax Reform is a non-partisan
coalition of taxpayers and taxpayer groups who oppose any and all federal
and state tax increases. For
more information, or to arrange an interview with Mr. Norquist please contact John Kartch at (202)785-0266 or by email at
jkartch@atr.org.
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