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Jewish World Review Oct. 8, 1999 /28 Tishrei, 5760
George Will
The Supreme Court says that because political money is essential to political communication, regulation of such money can only be justified by the compelling need to prevent corruption or the appearance thereof. Recently McCain was asked if he or any other Republican he could name has ever been corrupted by the Republican National Committee. He replied: "Not by the Republican National Committee, but all of us have been corrupted by the process where big money and big influence--and you can include me in that list--where big money has bought access which has bought influence. Anybody who glances at the so-called 1996 Telecommunications Reform Act and then looks at the results, which are increases in cable rates, phone rates, mergers and lack of competition, clearly knows that the special interests are protected in Washington and the public interest is submerged." He was asked again if soft money to the party "leads to the corruption of Republicans." He said, "Of course." Well. Contributors are indeed apt to have an advantage in gaining access to, and therefore having influence upon, legislators who influence the creation and distribution of wealth. However, is this necessarily corruption? Today legislators of both parties feel few compunctions about regulating the economy. By constantly putting their thumbs on the scales of economic justice, they become complicit in what economists call "rent-seeking"--the process whereby private parties try to bend public policy to their advantage. But what are the various economic interests affected by legislation supposed to do while legislators legislate? Should they maintain a decorous silence, trusting the legislators to act as Platonic guardians--as unlobbied philosopher-kings in splendid isolation? Understandably, economic interests usually spend substantially more on lobbying ($1.42 billion in 1998 alone) than is contributed in "hard" money ($781.3 million from all sources in the two-year election cycle 1997-98), and more is contributed in "hard" than in "soft" money ($242 million, 1997-98). Besides, studies of legislative voting strongly support the conclusion that constituents' views and the legislators' ideologies are more important than campaign contributions in determining legislators' behavior. That is, contributions are influenced much more by the tendencies of legislators than legislators' tendencies are influenced by contributions.
In any case, what has the making of the 1996 telecommunications bill to do with outlawing "soft money"? It is already illegal to use such money to influence a federal election. Such money is put into each party's "nonfederal account" for a variety of uses--transfers to state parties, contributions to state and local candidates, voter registration, get-out-the-vote efforts--not tied to particular campaigns. So: What evidence, aside from the fact that McCain (probably sensibly) does not like the pattern of winners and losers produced by the telecommunications act, does he have that "soft" money shaped the act? Whatever the defects of the act or of the process that produced it, those defects are no reason to make the existing regime of speech-rationing even worse. In the 1997-98 election cycle, when McCain was, as he is now, chairman of the Commerce Committee (which produced the telecommunications bill) and was running for reelection, communications and other interests with business before his committee contributed large sums to his Senate campaign. Today communications interests have contributed more than any other business category to his presidential campaign.
There is no reason to question McCain's rectitude generally, or to suspect
that he has been "corrupted" by such contributions. Still, he is worried
about being, or appearing to be, corrupted. However, instead of adding to
the government's regulation of speech, he could spurn such money. But
that would be unfortunate, because it would effectively limit his political
speech, which is bracing and admirable, at least when he is not talking
about limiting political
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