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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 file in Adobe Acrobat
2/8/02
Shays-Meehan:
Ending 225 Years of Stability in American Politics
House campaign reform bill undermines Madisonian system of controlling
factions within government.
WASHINGTON -
When campaign finance reform surfaced as an issue in the early 1990s,
many of Washington's representatives and senators saw an opportunity
to brandish a clean vote of integrity to their constituents back in
America. As elected policy-makers know, perception matters.
But as the movement
popularized over the decade, diverse groups - from academics to labor
unions to civil rights advocates to grassroots activists - have joined
together in opposition to campaign finance reform, viewing it as an
affront to free speech and an assault on the political stability that
constitutional author James Madison envisioned.
America's constitutional
system is more than a set of checks and balances between three branches
of federal government. It is also a set of checks and balances between
the interests or factions that attempt to gain favor with that government.
In Federalist 10, James Madison states that "there are two methods
of removing the causes of faction: the one, by destroying the liberty
which is essential to its existence: the other, by giving to every citizen
the same opinions, the same passions, and the same interests."
Yet, when House
members vote on the Shays-Meehan campaign reform legislation next week,
lawmakers are indeed left with the same timeless choices recognized
by James Madison himself. They can (1) vote to destroy the liberty essential
for faction, or (2) keep in every citizen's hands the same power to
lobby the federal government.
James Madison
deliberately constructed a political system where opposing factions
would battle it out in Congress. Madison knew that curtailing their
liberty would confer too much power to the State, but their political
maneuvering would eventually achieve equilibrium in the policy-making
process. Yet, departing from the 225 years of stability wrought by Madison's
system, Shays-Meehan destroys the very liberty that citizens, businesses,
trade unions, and other groups use to lobby the federal government,
by limiting their means of advocacy.
Taxpayer advocate
Grover Norquist, who heads Americans for Tax Reform in Washington, agrees.
"The Shays-Meehan legislation is flawed in numerous ways: It is
an affront to free speech; it arbitrarily empowers some interest groups
over others; it limits the ability of a candidate to advocate for himself;
but most importantly, Shays-Meehan disrupts the very foundation of the
Founders' system, which gave America such remarkable stability over
time. America's tradition of campaigns and elections has given her people
the stability to enjoy the highest standard of living the world has
ever known. Why should lawmakers risk the Founders' proven system with
such radical, untested reform measures?"
This paper
is the second in a four-part series on the perils of campaign reform
published by Americans for Tax Reform.
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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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