Obama Warns of 'Corporate Takeover' of American Democracy

http://blogs.alternet.org/speakeasyURL to article:
http://blogs.alternet.org/speakeasy/2010/09/17/obama-warns-of-corporate-takeover-of-american-democracy/
This post originally appeared at the Political Animal.
We talked earlier this week about far-right interest groups collecting
millions for attack ads, all in support of Republican candidates, and
financed through shadowy groups awash in undisclosed donations. The NYT
raised the specter of "a relatively small cadre of deep-pocketed donors,
unknown to the general public … shaping the battle for Congress."
It's not an issue Democrats spend a lot of time talking about — they
have plenty of other items they're trying to emphasize — which is why
I was glad to see President Obama take some to talk about this at an
event last night in Connecticut.
"I want you to consider this — right now, all across the country,
special interests are planning and running millions of dollars of attack
ads against Democratic candidates. Because last year, there was a
Supreme Court decision called Citizens United. They're allowed to spend
as much as they want without ever revealing who's paying for the ads.
That's exactly what they're doing. Millions of dollars. And the groups
are benign-sounding: Americans for Prosperity. Who's against that? Or
Committee for Truth in Politics. Or Americans for Apple Pie. Moms for
Motherhood. I made those last two up."None of them will disclose who's
paying for these ads. You don't know if it's a Wall Street bank. You
don't know if it's a big oil company. You don't know if it's an
insurance company. You don't even know if it's a foreign-controlled
entity. In some races, they are spending more money than the
candidates…. They're spending more money than the parties.
"They want to take Congress back and return to the days where lobbyists
wrote the laws. It is the most insidious power grab since the monopolies
of the Gilded Age. That's happening right now. So there's a lot of talk
about populist anger and grassroots. But that's not what's driving a lot
of these elections.
"We tried to fix this, but the leaders of the other party wouldn't even
allow it to come up for a vote. They want to keep the public in the
dark. They want to serve the special interests that served them so well
over the last 19 months.
"We will not let them. We are not about to allow a corporate takeover of
our democracy."
Voters may not mind a corporate takeover of our democracy; at this
point, it's hard to say. But given the number of attack ads the public
will see from these "independent" groups, it's a message voters should
probably be aware of.

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