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Kudos to Rep. Caduano's "Shareholder Protection Act" to rein in Corps' Political Spending:

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amborin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 12:42 PM
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Kudos to Rep. Caduano's "Shareholder Protection Act" to rein in Corps' Political Spending:
Edited on Fri Jan-29-10 12:42 PM by amborin



Capuano’s Shareholder Protection Act Is Excellent First Step – Let Shareholders, Not CEOs, Decide How Their Money Is Spent on Politics

A stunning blow of a court ruling deserves a strong response. We have that in a measure introduced late Wednesday by Rep. Michael Capuano (D-Mass.) to counter last week’s U.S. Supreme Court campaign finance ruling. In a powerful rejoinder to a court decision that allows corporations to spend unlimited money on pet political causes and candidates, Capuano has introduced legislation that requires CEOs to receive shareholder approval for each and every corporate political expenditure. Public Citizen enthusiastically supports Capuano’s “Shareholder Protection Act” and applauds his initiative in working to rein in the damage the court is causing by unleashing unlimited corporate spending in politics.

Last week, the court reversed 100 years of political tradition and ruled in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission that corporations are “persons” under the First Amendment, entitled to spend unlimited amounts of corporate treasury funds to support or attack candidates. Never mind that corporations are not people, do not vote and were never envisioned by the Founding Fathers as “persons” under the Constitution. Five justices have taken it upon themselves to give corporations the same constitutional rights given to human beings.

The courts have held that one of those rights is to spend unlimited amounts of your own money in politics. The problem with granting this right to corporations is that the CEOs can spend unlimited amounts of other people’s money – money from shareholders. This means money from the 401(k) retirement accounts of millions of Americans.

Capuano’s legislation requires that these CEOs fully inform shareholders of candidates and causes to be supported or opposed, and receive shareholder approval for any political expenditure. All shareholders would get a chance to vote; board members and retirement fund managers could not simply vote secretly on their behalf.....

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http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2010/01/28-25
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