Citizens United to End Political Bribery (Working Group)
Overview
Citizens United to End Political Bribery (CUEPB) is a Working Group pursuing the goal of getting corporate money out of politics. We focus on realistic actions in Massachusetts, but also extend our efforts to nationwide politics. This wiki page serves to collect information and discuss ideas before bringing proposals to Occupy Boston General Assembly. Everything here should be considered a draft, unless conspicuously labeled otherwise. To participate, come to one of our scheduled meetings or comment on the discussion tab for a page. You can also edit a page, but we'd like to know who's involved, so please introduce yourself.
- Contact us at citizensunited@occupyboston.org
- Sign up to join our email list by clicking here.
- Visit our website for a list of groups, events, and actions.
- View the schedule of our Rally-Summit that was held on the anniversary of Citizens United. Live streamed videos of some sessions are available.
Meetings:
Agenda for Jan 23 Discussion Conference Call at 5:30 pm in E5 (218-844-3377, access code 735433#)
Note, it will be impossible to get through all of this. Fortunately, the . Some of it will have to be carried over to a future meeting.
Congratulate ourselves on being awesome! The event was a huge success. Go around and tell success stories or good things we heard from others.
Do we have email addresses for Ellen Fine, Harmony Wu, and Jess Shuman?
- We should send out a thank you email to all speakers and breakout leaders and I'm missing those 3 emails. Also, I thought we might tell them about next steps including plans for Feb 28 (?) and the CU Boston Resolution Task Force. Also, some of them have livestreams online. We should ask for people to respond and tell us if they object to this as they weren't told this could happen ahead of time. You can see the livestreams following links on the rally-summit page.
Talk about what went well and what to improve (or make sure to do) for next time
- Be prepared on the day of event bringing markers, paper, tape, swiss army knife, ...
- Have big signs ready pointing out where meeting is
- Figure out what the heck to do about political candidates
- Have an OB table next to all the other tablers.
- Add a dryer next to the donation washer (Washer=General Fund, Dryer=CU WG)
Discuss next actions around Feb. 28 hearing for S772.
- In particular, who will take point on this and how to organize with Sunday Occupy Action meeting
Mention the CU Task Force for passing a Boston Resolution.
Discuss options for keeping track of members (Google group may not be ideal)
Brainstorm other next activities (if time is available).
- Feb 28! (See above)
- One idea is a 6-part-education-series every two months throughout the year
- Lecture/debate/panel, breakout groups, and end with outline of what we're planning next. We already have established contacts at MIT, Harvard, and Suffolk. There's potential at Northeastern. Community Church was also suggested (other ideas?). While rotating is more work, it gives us access to a wider audience.
- 6-part coalition building meeting
- On the months when we don't have a series, we could (maybe) try and arrange a coalition exploration meeting, inviting 1-2 members of each group we've engaged.
- Other Ideas?
- Write Grant Proposal to United Republic.
- If we do get any direct CU donations or grants, I think we should insist (or at least strongly recommend) that 10% (or some other number) of anything we receive go to the Occupy Boston General Fund. Just like academic research grants always have some portion go to the University, we should have some portion go to the General Fund to support meeting spaces (GAs, E5, etc.) and also to support all the other WGs that support us. \
Division of Labor - each task below can involve multiple people, but we should start assigning people
- EVENT JOBS
- Media (coordinate live streamer, press releases)
- Recruiting (OB info tent table, buttons, and keep track of sign in sheets)
- Food
- Event coordinator (MC event, make sure things are ok with room and know how to work AV equipment)
- Recording - Minute taker and time keeper
- ...
- ORGANIZATION
- Recruiting (maintaining member list(s))
- Event planning
- Coalition building
- Maintaining website
- Donations / Grant Writing
- ...
Minutes from Previous Meetings
- 2012, Jan 16 Rally and Summit Organizational Conference Call
- 2012, Jan 11 Rally and Summit Organizational Meeting
- 2011, Dec 22 CUEPB
- 2011, Nov 30 BAAC
- 2011, Nov 22 CUEPB
- 2011, Nov 16 CUEPB
- 2011, Nov 12 Open Discussion of Udall Amendment
Background Information:
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission Opinion
- The minority dissenting opinion quoted at this link gives arguments against the Supreme Court's majority opinion. After a summary, the opinion continues (not quoted here,) describing in detail the laws and rulings related to corporate personhood.
- Under U.S. law, a corporation is a "corporate veil," protecting individuals inside a company from being prosecuted for the actions of the business. In 1886 the U.S. Supreme Court decided that corporations are entitled to many rights accorded to citizens, in its decision of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Rail Road Co.
- In 1907 Congress passed the Tillman Act, prohibiting corporations from donating money directly to national political campaigns. This still holds, but in January 2010 the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 (in Citizens United v. FEC) that corporations can spend unlimited amounts on political advertisements as long as they don't directly coordinate that spending with an actual candidate.
- The Citizens United v. FEC decision invalidated protections that had existed in Massachusetts General Law, according to a March, 2010 ruling of the Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance. Many bills are now being introduced in Massachusetts and at the federal level to counteract the wide effects of last year's Supreme Court decision by restricting corporate money from influencing politics.
Campaign Finance Legislation (passed and pending)
- Click here for a list of legislation
Additional Resources
- The Campaign Finance Institute
- How to End Corruption (according to Jack Abramoff)