A crippling blow could be dealt to Citizens United
as legislatures in four states are debating bills that would require
shareholders to approve corporate political spending.
According to The Center For Public Integrity:
Lawmakers in at least four states are considering a back-door way to dampen corporate political spending: Require shareholders to approve it.State legislators in Maine, Maryland, New York and New Jersey have introduced bills that demand that a majority of shareholders approve corporate gifts to political committees or candidates.“The whole thesis of Citizens United is that the companies are just speaking for the shareholders,” said state Senator Jamie Raskin, a Democrat who is sponsoring the bill in Maryland. “If this is going to be anything more than a cynical fiction, then state legislatures need to act to make it real.”
Raskin has received interest from a dozen
legislators in other parts of the country who are interested in his
bill. Huge corporations are big spenders in elections at all levels, but
that all could change if corporations would have to get approval of
their shareholders before they could spend a dime.
Currently, there is no accountability for corporate
dark money political spending. Corporations can ignore their
shareholders at will. If a corporation had to get approval from their
shareholders before they spent millions of dollars on an election, the
whole process would change.
Decision makers would have to justify their
political spending. Shareholders would have to sign off on it. The whole
process of getting shareholder approval would lead to information
becoming public that mostly politically active corporations would not
like their customers to know.
Details about the hidden dark money that big
corporations don’t want their customers to know about would be exposed,
and a backlash would be inevitable. Citizens United has allowed
corporations to hide their repugican political advocacy through dark
money contributions. Some of the nation’s biggest corporations have been funding repugican dark money efforts.
The bill being discussed in the states is a nifty
backdoor effort to stop Citizens United. Shareholders deserve a say in
how a company spends their money. The state level legislation doesn't
conflict with the Supreme Court’s decision, but it would have a damaging
impact on the flow of corporate money into repugican campaign coffers.
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