User login

Who's online

There are currently 8 users and 60 guests online.

Online users

  • JT
  • The Fire Inside
  • memetic_alchemy
  • benny
  • Zero_One
  • security_six
  • jlw
  • JulieM

Support OlyBlog

OlyBlog is run by volunteers who care about Olympia. If you like what we're doing, make a donation:

OlyBlog is powered by:

Who's new

  • memetic_alchemy
  • cfs
  • davefromcarolina
  • v4mp1r3
  • setty

    Creative Commons License
 
Submitted by Rob Richards on Mon, 02/25/2008 - 12:47pm.
Mar 2 2008 - 12:00pm
Mar 2 2008 - 2:00pm
A group of Olympians have been talking in various forums about getting together to organize a Public Financing Initiative in the City of Olympia. Enough people are excited about it that we want to go ahead and form a planning group.

We'll be meeting at noon on Sunday, March 2nd at 1845 Centerwood Dr. SE.

This will be a strategy meeting, and we'll be having volunteer meetings in the future if you're interested in helping us get signatures.

Let's Level The Playing Field!

»

What is a public financing initiative?

One of the great non sequiturs of the left is that, if the free market doesn't work perfectly, then it doesn't work at all-- and the government should step in.

Thomas Sowell

»

It has to do with campaigns for elected office.

Basically, it would make it so that you would have just as level a playing field monetarily as someone who could pull out $40,000 to run against you.

Right now there is a bill before the legislature that would allow cities to institute public financing, and we're organizing now so that when it passes we can get it on the ballot as soon as possible.

image
»

So if someone can raise money...

They can't use it because the government has to pay for election campaigns? C.

One of the great non sequiturs of the left is that, if the free market doesn't work perfectly, then it doesn't work at all-- and the government should step in.

Thomas Sowell

»

Say you're running for mayor,

and the person you're running against has the support of all the local developers and contractors and gets big donations from them. It's really hard to run a grass roots campaign against somebody who can cough up $40,000 easily, it makes having money a qualifier for winning office, instead of experience, ideas, or the content of your character. This not only affects the amount of outreach you can do to voters, but it affects how seriously people take your campaign. No politically active person is willing to publicly support the non-establishment candidate, even though they may agree with them on everything, simply because the other person has money, which equals power.

The current system is unfair to the average working class person. Democracy should be accessible to all, not just to those who can afford it. Good ideas don't grow out of wealth, they grow out of life experience.

image
»

So you can only use tax payer money?

Or tax payer money will be used to match private money? Or only taxpayer money can be used and private money will be excluded? C.

One of the great non sequiturs of the left is that, if the free market doesn't work perfectly, then it doesn't work at all-- and the government should step in.

Thomas Sowell

»

Lets say...

Each person qualified to be mayor, does all he is required to mount an effort to run for mayor, will receive $10,000.00 to use for the campaign for six months before the election. Then you have 50 people who meet the requirements, will the city government be required to spend the half million dollars? C.

One of the great non sequiturs of the left is that, if the free market doesn't work perfectly, then it doesn't work at all-- and the government should step in.

Thomas Sowell

»

The details.

Will be up to us, in essence, once these bills pass. Each city that wants to do this will work out the details, if it is through the initiative process, then the people will figure out those details.

Realistically, we've never had that many people run for any office here. While this will encourage people to run, there will certainly be standards that have to be met in order to qualify for public financing.

image
»

Here's a bit about it.

Local Choice Public Funding of Campaigns

for Cities and Local Jurisdictions

Why Local Choice / Local Option?

Campaigns for local office have become too expensive! The result? Too few candidates can afford to run. Voters are denied basic democracy: a wide choice of candidates and views.

Public funding of campaigns levels the financial playing field and allows anyone to run – so that elections are about issues and voters, not about who is winning the campaign money race.

Should local government appear to be for sale?

Increasingly, candidates for local office must raise campaign cash from special interests that expect access and political favors in return: quid pro quo, in decisions affecting land use, development, and priorities for use of local public resources. Advocates for human services, for environmental sensitivity, for good government – cannot match the campaign resources of developers, who often seek short-term profit rather than long-term community stability.

Local Option is NOT a Mandate! – it’s Local Choice!

Under the Local Choice / Local Option bills, the legislature simply removes an inappropriate ban, so that local voters and councils can establish local programs – and only if they choose to! Why prevent local control? Local jurisdictions - cities, counties, PUDs, and ports – should be allowed to provide public financing for campaigns, at their option, for local elections.

What would it cost?

At the state level – nothing! Any public financing for local campaigns would be up to local jurisdictions and voters. Locally, it is affordable: Seattle’s program cost less than $1 per voter, a pittance, to make sure local government works for the people, not special interests.

History of Public Financing for local jurisdictions in Washington State

The City of Seattle had the first-in-the nation program, approved in 1978, providing public matching funds, one-to-one, for the first $50 raised by any candidate for city council. The program was challenged in court, and the State Supreme Court approved the program.

However, in 1992, statewide Initiative 134 was enacted, prohibiting local public financing programs. Portrayed as “campaign finance reform,” I-134 contained a little-known provision that prohibited using public funds for state or local campaigns. This provision wiped out Seattle’s public matching program and a program offered by King County – and ever since has prevented local jurisdictions from enacting a program of public financing for local races.

Meanwhile, the cities of Portland, Oregon, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, have successful and popular programs of public financing for local office. These programs provide full public funding of campaigns for candidates who qualify by gathering signatures of local voter support.

Legislative Proposals (introduced in January, 2007)

In the 2007 legislative session, companion bills SB 5278 / HB 1551 were introduced by Senator Rosa Franklin and Representative Joe McDermott, to restore permission to localities to design and enact public financing of campaigns for local office, at their option. Neither bill was approved in the Senate or the House before the cutoff date in March.

»

Opt In

There should be no requirement for a candidate to participate in campaign financing.  There is a difference between public financing and campaing financing to some degree.  What you are describing here is public campaign financing.

Should a candidate choose campaign financing, that's it, no going back to private funds.  But, there should be no requirement that a candidate use the public system over the private system we use today.

Chris exposed one of the problems in campaign financing.  Potential costs.  If you are talking about resources, not just donated money, like equal airtime and low rates, I can get behind that.

»

This usually costs less than a dollar per person per year.

Also, I think everyone should have to play by the same rules, and those rules should make things fair for everyone.

image
»

Understood

Does the bill in the leg require public campaign financing or just allow it?  Sorry, I haven't read the entire bill, just a quick scan.  Surely you can't be required to use public campaign financing.

Off topic, McCain is trying to slither his way out of public financing at the federal level.  Did Gore bail on public financing in 2000?  I tried a few searches but the Internet connectivity here in Eindhoven, Netherlands is crap.  Olyblog works, though.

»

allows it

If you feel you can raise enough money or use enough of your own money to fund your campaign, you don't have to participate.
»

Good to Know

Maybe this calls for a new thread but since Rob brought up the mayor reference, is the feeling that with more money Meta may have created a closer race or victory?

»

The organizing now is about the future.

It's true, with more money Meta would have had a better chance, but we can't dwell on that. We learned a lot from that campaign.

This is about making sure that the average person has access to public office. Many people feel that's the way it's supposed to be.

image
»

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

OlyBlog.net

OlyBlog is devoted to hyperlocal news and discussion specifically about Olympia, Washington. Contributors to OlyBlog are citizen journalists who care about their community and are tired of corporate media.

If you'd like to contribute, please register for an account. Here is a list of local news beats that need to be covered. You can post your news as a personal blog entry, and it will be reviewed (and possibly edited) for promotion to the front page. You can also send news via email. All members of OlyBlog agree to abide by our Social Contract. You should also look at our comment and fair use policies. If you are frustrated about something said in a comment thread, go here.

Olyblogger of the Month:

decorabilia

Sponsored by:

Docents are fellow citizen journalists who volunteer to be at your service in order to help with any blog-related issues. They are:

Rob Richards
Interests: community building; participatory art, democracy and economics; local politics; citizen journalism.

emmettoconnell
Interests: City Council, developing a local issues forum.

enpen
Interests: OlyBlog calendar, Oly street art, local artist interviews, his family, poetry and stuff.

Robert Whitlock
Interests: peace, justice, nature, nonviolence, media, environment

Rick
Interests: citizen journalism, hyperlocal media, the knowledge commons.

Get Firefox!

OlyBlog is a site for news and discussion about Olympia, Washington.
free hit counter