Tuesday, October
30, 2001
Issue 6
subsidizes candidates
Aims to reform
process
By Robert Anglen
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Cincinnati
taxpayers might have to pick up part of the tab for City
Council candidates running in the next election. And if this
year's field of 30 competitors is any measure,the public bill
could top $3 million.
That's because of a pro posal
which seeks to limit campaign spending by offering public
subsidies to candidates that voters will be asked to approve
on the Nov. 6 ballot.
But voters who were asked about Issue 6
appear unfamiliar with the proposal.
I don't know, I've never heard
anything about it, said Ronnie Trimble of Covedale. Just
don't know.
Mr. Trimble, who said he tries
to stay on top of issues and plans on voting next week, can
see the merits and the pitfalls of the measure.
Most people who give to a
campaign want something back. You've heard of rebating,
right? he said. But why should taxpayers give money to
somebody to do their jobs?
Issue 6 has largely become lost
among other campaign issues, particularly the highly
publicized civil-service reform, which would change how
Cincinnati's police and fire chiefs are hired.
Supporters of Issue 6 say its
passage is critical to ensure a fair election process and to
put all candidates on a level playing field.
In addition to rewarding
candidates who voluntarily limit their contributions, Issue 6
would: require candidates to file more contribution
disclosures; limit the amount of donations every candidate can
receive; penalize those who go over the limit; and create an
oversight board.
Sure this is going to cost
some money, said Bill Woods, a member of the Citizens for
Fair Elections campaign. But it is worth it in terms of the
city owning the election process.
He said the system now
intimidates people from running for office, because many know
they can't raise themoney it takes to win an election. He said
incumbents have the advantage and that limits challengers.
This year 30 people sought
election to city offices: four for mayor and 26 for council.
The September primary eliminated two mayoral candidates but
that left a pool of 28 candidates.
Campaign disclosure reports
show only five City Council candidates have raised more than
$100,000. Nine candidates have raised between $10,000 and
$92,000. Eleven candidates have raised less than $10,000.
In the mayor's race, incumbent
Charlie Luken has raised $355,585 and challenger Courtis
Fuller has raised $64,081.
We're asking taxpayers to
subsidize viewpoints they don't agree with, said Councilman
Pat DeWine, who is opposed to Issue 6. Under this reform, any
KKK, racist or other yahoo is eligible for ($111,400) of
public money.
Mr. DeWine, who with $309,508
has raised more than any other council candidate, says there
are loopholes in the ordinance.
Chief among them, he said, is
that the mayor who is subject to penalties is charged with
appointing members of the oversight board. He also said Issue
6 does nothing to stop special-interest groups from helping
candidates through indirect campaigns.
Issue 6 mirrors an ordinance
passed by Cincinnati City Council in 1997 but rescinded a year
later. Under Issue 6, candidates who agree to limit campaign
spending to three times their elected salary would get $2 in
public funds for every $1 they raise.
Contributions from political
action committees or political parties would not be matched.
To qualify, council candidates
must raise $5,000 from at least 150 contributors and mayoral
candidates must raise $10,000 from 300 contributors.
There is a cost to the status
quo, said Catherine Turcer of the Citizens Policy Center in
Columbus and an Issue 6 supporter.
In an analysis of campaign
spending in Cincinnati, Ms. Turcer said her agency found that
more than half of the top 25 contributors in 1997 and 1999
Cincinnati elections had contracts with the city.
She said incumbent candidates
raised 1.5 times more than challengers in the 1999 election
and 3.6 times more in 1997. She also said the analysis found
that winning candidates spent at least three times more than
the losers in those elections.
Ms. Turcer said there is a
clear benefit to wealthy individuals who contribute to
campaigns.
Chris Finney, a lawyer and a
member of the Issue 6 opposition group, No Taxes for City
Council Campaigns Committee, calls the proposal goofy.
First of all, buying elections
and buying influence is illegal, he said. Enforce the laws
that exist.
He said Issue 6 seeks to punish
people for wanting to involve themselves in the election
process by donating to a campaign. Instead, he said, they
should focus on increasing voter participation.
The entire thrust of what they
are trying to do is wrong, Mr. Finney said.
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