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As a Montana newspaper editorial succinctly put it: “The greatest living issue confronting us today is whether the corporations shall control the people or the people shall control the corporations.”
That was written in 1906, as Montanans were rising up against out-of-state mining corporations known as the “copper kings.” Those corporate powers were exploiting Montana’s workforce, extracting its public resources, and routinely extending bribes to control its government. In 1912, however, the people passed the Corrupt Practices Act, a citizens initiative that outlawed direct corporate expenditures in elections for state office.
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The law broke the copper kings’ legislative chokehold, and a century later it was still working to put people power over money politics. Even today, the average cost of state senate races in Montana stands at only $17,000 – allowing candidates to spend more time talking to everyday folks, and that produces one of America’s highest rates of voter turnout.
How positive – a model of democracy in action! Until an out-of-state corporate front group rode in like copper kings to sue the state. With a pack of high-dollar lawyers and a bundle of corporate funding, the group wailed that Montana’s anti-corruption law discriminates against poor corporations, denying them their First Amendment “right” to have the biggest voice in government that money can buy. And now, the five corporate hacks controlling the Supreme Court have ratified the ridiculous argument of the front group, imperiously shoving Montana’s law into the ditch, and re-imposing the rule of special interest money over the people’s will.
To stop this court’s coup against our democracy, We The People must pass a Constitutional amendment overturning these decisions. To help, go to: www.United4ThePeople.org.
“Montana seeks to preserve its election finance system,” Austin American Statesman, June, 2012.
“Court stands firm on political spending rule,” Austin American Statesman, June 26, 2012.