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The Broken Scandal-Reform Cycle
By Robert E. Mutch History News Service
Ever since Watergate, campaign finance reformers have
come to expect great legislative victories in the wake of
presidential funding scandals. After all, most federal
campaign finance laws on the books today were enacted in
response to just two scandals: Watergate in the 1970s and an
earlier scandal in Theodore Roosevelt's 1904 campaign.
Yet three years after the fund-raising scandal in Bill
Clinton's 1996 reelection campaign, the McCain-Feingold
reform bill, which would ban soft money, has once again gone
down in defeat. When earlier scandals erupted, an outraged
public demanded reform and got it. Today's reformers clearly
expected the scandal-reform cycle to repeat itself after
1996. Why hasn't it?
Because the disclosure requirement in the post-Watergate
reforms eliminated the crucial factor in the scandal-reform
cycle: secrecy. For 25 years, parties, candidates, and other
political committees have had to report their campaign
contributions and expenditures to an agency -- the Federal
Election Commission -- that was established to publicize
that information.
Scandal, by contrast, is bred in secrecy: Scandal is the
sudden revelation that prominent politicians have been
engaging in, and concealing, widely disapproved practices.
All three elements must be present: the practice --
corporate contributions to Theodore Roosevelt in 1904, large
personal gifts to Richard Nixon in 1972 -- must be one the
public finds improper, whether or not illegal; those engaged
in it therefore conceal their involvement; that involvement
is nonetheless revealed. The expose causes public outrage
and legislatures appease voters by passing reform laws.
This pattern can be seen as far back as the 1880s. After
the 1888 presidential election, when it was revealed that
the parties spent huge sums of money -- reportedly from
business corporations -- to bribe voters in key states,
state legislatures enacted the secret ballot laws that we
now take for granted. By making it more difficult to bribe
voters, the secret ballot was supposed to remove the
incentive to solicit, and to give, large campaign
contributions.
The same pattern appeared after revelations that Theodore
Roosevelt had financed his 1904 presidential campaign
largely with corporation money. This was the first proof of
the long-held suspicion that corporations had become the
chief sources of political funds, and it sparked the
formation of a national reform movement. Congress responded
by prohibiting corporate contributions.
In both cases, the reforms soothed the public's anger and
restored its trust. In both cases, the old financial
practices soon reappeared in new guises devised to fit the
new laws. Without effective disclosure laws, the old methods
could continue without disturbing the popular quiescence the
reforms had created. After Congress created the Federal
Election Commission, this was no longer possible.
The post-Watergate reforms also restored public trust.
But the disclosure component of those reforms focused the
bright light of publicity on campaign funding for the first
time. That meant that the rest of the familiar pattern --
the resurgence of old practices in new guises -- unfolded in
full view of the public. It was this development that put an
end to the scandal-reform cycle.
The elements of past scandals were present in Bill
Clinton's (and, to a lesser extent, Bob Dole's) 1996
campaign. Huge sums of money were collected in ways that
violated the spirit, and often the letter, of the law.
(Foreign contributions to the Democrats were the most highly
publicized example, but both parties raised three times more
soft money in 1996 than in 1992.) Much of this money was
then spent in ways that skirted, but did not quite break,
the law. (Both parties used "issue" ads that supported their
presidential candidates without triggering disclosure
requirements).
Why didn't these practices provoke the popular outrage
that erupted after previous scandals? Because, thanks to
disclosure, they were already old news by 1996. Unwelcome
news, to be sure, but drearily familiar. Although disclosure
gives us the same kind of dismaying news that was at the
heart of past scandals, it does so in a steady stream, week
after week, year after year, and so produces chronic,
low-level dissatisfaction instead of an explosion of popular
anger.
Partisan reform bills may still squeak through the House
or the Senate under such circumstances. What we don't see
are bills backed by the bipartisan majorities that propelled
earlier reform bills into law. Far from compelling
legislatures to pass appeasing legislation, persistent,
low-level discontent actually provides excellent cover for
legislators who don't want to act. Because public cynicism
arises from the assumption that new laws would be no more
effective than the old, anti-reform legislators can oppose
new legislation on the plausible ground that there is no
great popular demand for it. And, compared with past
scandals, there isn't.
Robert E. Mutch, an independent historian in Washington,
D.C., writes for the History News Service.
[Robert E. Mutch, 2100 Connecticut Ave., N.W., No. 404,
Washington DC 20008. Telephone: (202) 265-2308; e-mail: rmutch@compuserve.com.]
History News Service
Co-Directors:
Joyce Appleby: appleby@history.ucla.edu
Telephone: 310-470-8946
James M. Banner, Jr.: jbanner@aya.yale.edu
Telephone: 202-462-5655
Website designed and administered by Christopher
Bates.
This article was posted on October 21, 1999.
Pictured at top (left to right): King George III
of England, Harriet Beecher Stowe, "Surrender at
Appomattox", Albert Schweitzer, The sinking of the U.S.S.
Arizona at Pearl Harbor, Bill Clinton.
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