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 here for a list of groups, events, and actions.
Main Events on January 20-21
On the January 20–21 anniversary of the Citizens United decision, a wide coalition of groups will stand together for GETTING MONEY OUT OF POLITCS! Here is a list of events taking place on those dates
Meetings:
Minutes from Previous Meetings
- 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)