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(108,903 posts)
Sat Mar 30, 2013, 09:18 AM Mar 2013

Why Mandate Disclosure? Because Corporations Lie On Voluntary Political Transparency

http://www.thenation.com/blog/173590/why-mandate-disclosure-because-corporations-lie-voluntary-political-transparency


Chamber of Commerce President Thomas Donohue at a press conference. Major health insurers have given the chamber millions of dollars to campaign against healthcare reform but reported almost none of the transactions. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin.)

The Securities and Exchange Commission took a bold step in considering new rules that would require publicly traded companies to disclose political donations. This is a good idea because since the Citizens United decision, corporate entities have moved away from disclosed campaign committees, and instead have begun funneling cash into secret campaign funds, mostly 501c nonprofits.

Last year, The Nation published an investigation that debunked the idea that corporate money has flowed mostly to so-called Super PACs in the wake of Citizens United. Rather, big business has embraced nonprofit trade associations and issue advocacy groups to pour hundreds of millions into direct campaign advocacy. The distinction is important because Super PACs, for all their problems, at least disclose their donors and spending records; trade associations and issue advocacy groups do not.

To the credit of reformers, particularly the Center for Political Accountability and several investor groups, many large corporations have voluntarily adopted transparency measures. While we should applaud corporations that go beyond the letter of the law in disclosing these funds, a system based on voluntary participation does not come close to solving the problem of secret political slush funds. In some cases, voluntary disclosure actually obscures the truth.

Take health insurance companies. Aetna, Aflac and WellPoint are among several that have adopted voluntary disclose rules to provide the public and shareholders with a window into their giving patterns. There's one problem: they aren't truthful.
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