We Will Choose Your Representatives
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"our" federal government, and how to
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LeadersReport.com
Column - An American View (4/14/06)
Archive - An American View
LeadersReport.com copyright 2006 - All Rights Reserved
An American View column and blog by Bruce Green - conservative & moderate political discourse
Multiple attempts at campaign finance reform from Congress in the last
30 years, none with entirely 100% good faith intentions, have failed to
address a major corrupting element in deciding federal campaigns. It
has become common for Congressional candidates, especially long-
term incumbents, to accept more campaign money from outside their
state than from within. The increased sophistication in national party
fund raising, along with the desires of too many of our long-term
representatives to get re-elected by having more to spend on crucial
television ads, has made this common place. The same sometimes is
the case for statewide ballot initiatives. Why do we allow this?
We are further weakening the already near vacant citizen-legislator
tradition that served our nation well for over 150 years. This latest trend
puts in serious jeopardy our entire system of representative government
when people not from a Congressional district can be "the" deciding
factor in who represents you in Congress. Which people do our
representatives in the "Peoples House" or Senate really represent?

We don't require hundreds of lines of campaign finance reform verbiage
in yet another bill from Congress that merely nibbles around the edges
of the problem. Just a few sentences are necessary.

Section I, No national, state, regional or local political party nominee, a person requesting acceptance or
accepted to be placed on a ballot for the position of member of the U.S. House of Representatives or U.S.
Senate, shall accept monetary campaign contributions or other support contributions from any person or
other entity not residing in their state or having a primary place of business within their state employing 1 or
more persons.
Section II, A person, company, or other entity shall not contribute monetary or other support contributions
to a state-wide ballot initiative if said person, company, or other entity does not reside in the state voting on
the ballot initiative.

This will create better campaigns which require more time spent by the candidates in their district or state
in front of the people they are suppose to represent. Then we will be closer to our representative governing
tradition!