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Seeds of Cynicism: The Struggle over Campaign Finance, 1956–1974

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 April 2009

Julian E. Zelizer
Affiliation:
State University of New York at Albany

Extract

“It is a cesspool, it is a source of infection for the body politic,” Senator Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn.) warned his fellow senators in 1973 about the private financing of elections. “[I]f it doesn't stop, there are going to be good men in this hall right here today who are going down the drain, not that you are guilty, not that you have done anything wrong, but that the public is disenchanted with all of us, and they are going to want somebody new and say I want a fresh one here.” From 1971 through President Nixon's resignation in 1974, Congress enacted the boldest campaign finance reforms in American history, including strong disclosure laws, public financing for presidential elections, contribution and spending limits, and an independent enforcement commission. Despite these reforms, after only a decade under the new laws, citizens still felt that campaign finance was corrupt.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA. 2002

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References

Notes

1. Minutes of the Senate Democratic Conference,9 May 1973,MMP,Google Scholar Collection 65: Mansfield–Mike–U.S. Senate, Series XXII: Leadership, Box 91, Folder 1.

2. I would like to thank Professor Alan Brinkley for suggesting that I use this puzzle to frame my analysis.

3. The best historical treatment of campaign finance reform, the only one, comes from political scientist Mutch, Robert E., Campaigns, Congress, and the Courts: The Making of Federal Campaign Finance Law (New York, 1988), 191Google Scholar. While his book provides the sole historical overview of this subject, it is unsatisfying for a historian since he organizes the book by topic. Besides its lack of a strong analytic argument, the structure obscures how the various components and factions of reform unfolded over time in relation to each other. By compartmentalizing each area of reform, the book fails to explain satisfactorily the chronology of how this issue unfolded–the major task of the historian. Mutch (see pages 188–89) acknowledges the fact that many reforms were proposed before Watergate, and he presents snapshots of the debates in his scattered topical history, but he does not incorporate this fact into any type of systematic analytical framework for understanding the history of the period. Mutch stresses the centrality of scandal to producing reform legislation, while I emphasize the importance of a reform coalition. Another useful, albeit brief, historical article is Corrado, Anthony, “Money and Politics: A History of Federal Campaign Finance Law,” in Campaign Finance Reform: A Sourcebook, ed. Corrado, Anthony, Mann, Thomas E., Ortiz, Daniel, Potter, Trever, and Sorauf, Frank J. (Washington, D.C., 1997), 2735Google Scholar. Although I take issue with his thesis, the best historical account of campaign finance reform that relies on the unintended consequences argument is Gillon's, Steven M.“That's Not What We Meant To Do”: Reform and Its Unintended Consequences in Twentieth-Century America (New York, 2000), 200234Google Scholar. The best nonhistorical overviews of campaign finance are Sorauf's, Frank J.Money in American Politics (Glenview, Ill., 1988)Google Scholar and idem, Inside Campaign Finance (New Haven, 1992); Sheppard, Burton D., Rethinking Congressional Reform: The Reform Roots of the Special Interest Congress (Cambridge, Mass., 1985)Google Scholar; Sabato, Larry J., PAC Power: Inside the World of Political Action Committees (New York, 1984)Google Scholar; Drew, Elizabeth, Politics and Money: The New Road to Corruption (New York, 1983)Google Scholar.

4. This reform coalition, and its broader efforts to change Congress, is the focus of my book, The Cost of Democracy (work-in-progress).

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34. Marvin Watson to President Johnson, 25 January 1967, LBJL, Files of Marvin Watson, Box 19, File: DNC/Financial Reports; John Criswell to William White, 16 November 1967, LBJL, Files of Marvin Watson, Box 19, File: DNC/Financial Reports.

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40. Record of Meeting, 22 October 1966, LBJL, Task Force Reports, Box 3, File: 1966 Task Force on Campaign Financing.

41. “Testimony of Senator Robert F. Kennedy On Campaign Financing,” 6 June 1967, LBJL, Office Files of John Robson and Stanford Ross, Box 15, File: Political Process.

42. Memorandum of a Telephone Conversation, 2 December 1966, LBJL, Task Force Reports, Box 3, File: 1966 Task Force on Campaign Financing.

43. Joseph Califano to President Johnson, 1967, LBJL, White House Aide Files: Papers of Joseph Califano, Box 57, File: Political Process.

44. Joseph Califano to President Johnson, 23 May 1967, LBJL, White House Aide Files: Papers of Joseph Califano, Box 57, File: Political Process.

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49. Mills v. Alabama, 384 U.S. 214 (1966).

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55. James Abourezk to Carl Albert, 22 September 1971, CAC, Carl Albert Legislative Files, Box 147, File 5.

56. U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Commerce, Subcommittee on Communications, Hearings: Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, 92d Cong., 1st sess., 2–31 March and 1 April 1971, 146–48.

57. Common Cause, “Making Congress Work,” November 1970, CCP, Box 216, File: Open-Up-The-System.

58. Bryce Harlow, Memorandum for the President, 6 October 1969, RNP, White House Central Files, Subject Files FG 31–1: Bryce Harlow, Box 5, Folder 4; Poff, Richard, “Diary of White House Leadership Meetings–91st Congress,” 7 10 1969Google Scholar, GFL, Robert Hartmann Papers, Box 106, File: White House–Congressional Leadership Meeting 7 October 1969.

59. Report by Tom Mathews, 1971, and “Statement of John W. Gardner Re Common Cause Lawsuit,” 11 January 1971, CCP, Box 27, File: Tom Mathews–1971.

60. For the best existing work on Common Cause, see Andrew S. McFarland, Common Cause: Lobbying in the Public Interest (Chatham, N.J., 1984), and Rothenberg, Lawrence S., Linking Citizens to Government: Interest Group Politics at Common Cause (Cambridge, Mass., 1992)Google Scholar.

61. Mutch, Campaigns, Congress, and Courts, 46.

62. Adamany and Agree, “Election Campaign Financing,” 207.

63. McFarland, Common Cause: Lobbying in the Public Interest; Sorauf, Money in American Politics, 229.

64. Polsby, Nelson, Consequences of Party Reform (New York, 1983), 131156Google Scholar; Shafer, Byron E., Quiet Revolution: The Struggle for the Democratic Party and the Shaping of Post-Reform Politics (New York, 1983), 410413Google Scholar.

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68. Mutch, Campaigns, Congress, and Courts, 45.

69. Zelizer, “The Constructive Generation”; Sabato, Larry J., Feeding Frenzy: How Attack Journalism Has Transformed American Politics (New York, 1991), 2526Google Scholar.

70. Numerous examples can be found in U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Commerce, Subcommittee on Communications, Hearings: Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, 220–79.

71. U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Rules and Administration, Subcommittee on Privileges and Elections, Hearings: Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, 92d Cong., 1st sess., 24–25 May 1971, 92–93.

72. Ibid., 189.

73. Press Release, 23 June 1971, CAC, Box 147, File 91; Democratic Advisory Council, Democratic National Committee, “Report to the DNC Executive Committee,” 19 July 1973, DNCP, Box 22, File: Democratic Advisory Council 1973.

74. Robert Strauss to Democratic Senators and Representatives, 13 May 1974, CAC, Tom Steed Collection, Box 62, File: Democratic Party 1 of 2.

75. Lawrence O'Brien to Members and Friends of the Democratic Party, 27 December 1970, CAC, Tom Steed Papers, Box 43, File: Democratic 2 of 3.

76. Andrew Biemiller to Edward Kennedy, 9 June 1971, GMA, Department of Legislation, Box 7, File 20.

77. Weaver, Warren Jr., “Nixon Shift Seen on Campaign Bill,” New York Times, 17 03 1971Google Scholar.

78. Lowell Beck to John Gardner, 21 June 1971, CCP, Box 28, File: Tom Mathews–1971 III.

79. John Gardner to Senator Frank Moss, 27 June 1971, CCP, Box 28, File: Tom Mathews–1971 III.

80. Robert E. Gallamore to John Gardner, 23 July 1971, CCP, Box 28, File: Tom Mathews–1971 III.

81. Larry Gold to Tom Harris, Ken Young, and Mary Zon, 1 June 1973, GMA, Department of Legislation, Box 7, File 20.

82. Bill Frenzel to John Gardner, 7 July 1971, CCP, Box 23, File: 1971.

83. U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Committee on House Administration, Subcommittee on Elections, Hearings: To Limit Campaign Expenditures, 92d Cong., 1st sess., 1971, 28.

84. Al Barkan to George Meany, 11 November 1971, GMA, Office of the President: George Meany Files, Box 95, File: Political Education, 1970–72.

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87. Editorial, “Nixon's Responsibility…” New York Times, 30 March 1972.

88. Democratic Study Group, “The Most Corrupt Administration in History,” 13 October 1972, Issue Report No. 13, DSGP, Box 22, File: Issue Report #13.

89. Common Cause, Press Release, “The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971–Is It the Real Thing, or Only a Sham?” 24 February 1972, CCP, Box 136, File: January–March 1972; Minutes of the Executive Committee Meeting of the Policy Council,22 October 1971, CCP, Box 30, File: 09 197001 1972Google Scholar.

90. Minutes, Executive Committee Meeting of the Policy Council,”20 January 1972, CCP, Box 30, File: 13 09 1972Google Scholar.

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93. Jack Conway to Carl Albert, 20 September 1972, CAC, Box 134, File 19.

94. John Gardner, Memorandum, 3 October 1972, CCP, Box 23, Folder 1972.

95. Gardner, John W., “We, The People of the United States and Common Cause: Remarks Delivered to Common Cause Membership Meeting,” 1 02 1973Google Scholar, CCP, Box 25, File: Speeches–March 1973.

96. Pipefitters v. United States 407 U.S. 385 (1972).

97. Alexander, Money in Politics, 171.

98. Larry Gold to Tom Harris, Ken Young, and Mary Zon, 1 June 1973, GMA, Department of Legislation, Box 7, File 20. See also “Alice in Wonderland of Campaign Reform,” Memo from COPE, 24 June 1974, DSGP, Box 27, File: Unmarked.

99. U.S. Congress, Senate, Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities, Hearings: Presidential Campaign Activities of 1972, 93d Cong., 1st sess., 17–24 May 1973.

100. Ibid., 14–21 December 1973.

101. Ibid., 5–24 October, 12–19 November, 4 December 1973, and 28 January 1974.

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126. Minutes, Governing Board of Common Cause, 28–29 September 1973, CCP, Box 31, Folder: 20 July–10 November 1973.

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128. White House, Press Release, 15 October 1974, GFL, Philip Buchen Files, Box 14, File: Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments–1974.

129. Congressional Quarterly, The 1974 Election Report, 12 October 1974, 2714.

130. ABC Nightly News, 5 November 1974, GFL, Weekly News Summary, Tape F134.

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