Opinion

Saturday, Jan 21 2012 11:01 PM

OUR VIEW: Who's behind that ad? A fair question

Corporations are people. We know this because the U.S. Supreme Court told us so. The historic 2010 ruling meant corporations and unions could spend on political campaigns without limits. What followed that decision changed the nature of political campaigns in a profound and damaging way.

Huge donations such as those we now see so-called super PACs making in the presidential campaigns came to be increasingly common, creating outsized influence by essentially anonymous entities.

If super PACs can spend millions to influence our votes, shouldn't we know who's truly behind them? It's easy enough to find out by checking with the Secretary of State's office, but few voters actually do so. So they accept the simplistic names these super PACs invent, never bothering to investigate their possible motivation.

Now California lawmakers have an opportunity to do something about the situation: The California DISCLOSE Act, sponsored by Assemblywoman Julia Brownley, D-Los Angeles, would compel the sponsors of political advertisements on TV, radio, mailers or websites to prominently list the three main donors to the political action committee financing the ad. AB 1148 successfully passed through the Assembly appropriations committee last week.

Political ads that play fast and loose with facts are an ongoing problem in California. In 2010, moneyed interests spent more than $235 million on state ballot measure advertisements. Says the California Clean Money Campaign, which pushed hard for this bill, most ads were financed by groups of dubious origin that had benign-sounding names.

Take this group: Californians Against the Wrong Prescription, which spent $123 million to defeat a 2005 state prescription drug-discount program. Few knew, but its members were three huge drug companies.

Money will always be a part of U.S. elections. One of the few effective solutions we can come up with is this sort of transparency.

My Yahoo Print

Advertisement

Hot Topics: Popular stories from The Californian's Opinion section

Most commented stories from the opinion sections

  1. Would tobacco tax money go out of state? (4)

    Both sides of the Proposition 29 debate are making a big deal about whether or not the cancer research that would be funded by the proposed tobacco tax will go exclusively to California labs or be distributed, in part, to research centers elsewhere.

  2. In Bakersfield, a piece of the past slips away (3)
  3. UFW must refocus its efforts on helping farmworkers (1)
  4. Vote yes on housekeeping measures D, E, F