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We have a flawed electoral and campaign finance system that unfairly stacks the odds in favor of the wealthy few who can give large political contributions.

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Attribution
Sean McMenemy
As a result, many of our lawmakers make decision in favor of narrow interests rather than the public interest, thereby weakening our democracy.

We must take back politics, build integrity, and restore faith in democracy.

The Role of Big Money in Politics

Our democracy is built upon the idea that every citizen has equal voice and political representation, but corporate special interests and voter suppression continues to undermine the will of the American people. More money than ever before is being spent on elections, and marginalized communities of color are being denied access to the ballot despite the passage of the Voting Rights Act more than 50 years ago.

As people of faith we seek a community where every person’s potential may be fulfilled. Active and informed civic participation in the political and electoral process is essential to the proper functioning of government.

Researchers have found that the total amount of money in congressional elections increased more than 600 percent from 1980-2012. The 2018 midterm election cycle was the most expensive midterm on record, with spending surpassing $5.2 billion. That trend is expected to continue.

What accounts for this massive uptick in political spending? The Supreme Court’s ruling in Citizens United vs. FEC contributed to the expansion of Super PACs and the ability of corporations and wealthy individuals to shape election outcomes and set the agenda in Washington, D.C.

This complex system of influence and electioneering privileges the wealthy few while undermining the interests of the people. Because corporate interests can immensely outspend average people and labor groups in elections, the political agenda is disproportionately driven by concentrated corporate wealth, which serves to maintain status quo rather than the needs of the public.

Voter Suppression

Voter suppression continues to be a serious problem across the United States, one that particularly impacts people of color and those living in poverty. Voter suppression tactics including the purging of voter rolls and strict voter ID laws, have become widespread. These changes to voting laws are frequently advanced under the guise of addressing voter fraud, a virtually nonexistent problem. In reality they create barriers to people exercising their right to vote.

Congress Must Act to Restore Our Democracy

Congress should pass bold reforms that will strengthen our democracy and put political power in the hands of the American people. Congress must fully restore and modernize the Voting Rights Act and pass bold reforms to restore small donor financing of campaigns, disclosure requirements on campaign spending, and increased transparency.

As people of faith we seek a community where every person’s potential may be fulfilled. Active and informed civic participation in the political and electoral process is essential to the proper functioning of government.

We hope you’ll attend candidate forums and town halls and raise these and other important issues with candidates. Our democracy can live up to its potential only if it ensures open access to public office and the electoral processes, curbs the influence of money and corporate power, safeguards the integrity of the voting process without raising unnecessary barriers, and provides full participation for disenfranchised people. All people should be able to exercise their right to vote and have a government that represents their interests.