This story originally provided by The Nation
June 1, 2004
Clean Elections Work
Arizona's pioneering system of full public financing of political candidates,
called the Clean Elections Act, is under
fierce attack by wealthy special interests with deep pockets and national
conservative ties that run all the way from Tom DeLay to
Bush's fundraising machine. They've raised hundreds of thousands of dollars to
put a constitutional referendum on the November ballot that could crush
America's best hope for people-powered democracy.
As the lead
editorial in the new issue of The Nation argues, progressives now
need to rally like-minded citizens to defend Arizona's exemplary model of civic
empowerment.
Thousands of small contributions can help beat back this big-donor funded
attack on democracy. The Public
Campaign Action Fund is asking people to contribute the manageable sum of
five dollars (or more) to help keep Arizona "clean" and, if you have
the time, to ask your friends to pitch in too.
Why five dollars? Under the Clean Elections Act,
five dollars is the most a voter can give a candidate. Small donors mean as much
to candidates as big donors because candidates take no big money from special
interests whatsoever. Talk about the great equalizer. The bank president can't
give more than the teller in his bank. Now you can understand why well-heeled
developers, insurance companies, Bush "Pioneers" and corporate
lobbyists are so hellbent on overturning the Act.
Please help thwart their efforts to undo a terrific democratic reform in
Arizona. And check out The Action Fund's homepage
for a range of ways you can help decrease Big Money's choke-hold on politics in
the US today.
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