From Deseret News archives:

Beholden to special interests?

Utah campaign funding 'unhealthy'

Published: Sunday, Dec. 3, 2006 12:36 a.m. MST
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For every $100 in donations raised by incoming Utah legislators in their latest races, $95.70 of it came from special interests or members' own pockets.

In fact, 30 of the 104 legislators who will take office next month raised every cent of their campaign money from special interests or their own pockets. That's a 50 percent increase over the 19 lawmakers who were "100 percenters" two years ago, according to a computer-aided study by the Deseret Morning News. And most of that increase comes in donations from political action committees, businesses and individuals outside of lawmakers' districts.

As special-interest cash increases, political experts say it raises concerns about whether lawmakers are more beholden to the voters who elect them or the special interests that pay for campaigns.

Utah's campaign finance system "is not healthy," says Kirk Jowers, head of the Hinckley Institute of Politics at the University of Utah. "Two previous national studies" on campaign finance "gave Utah an 'F' and a 'D-," said Jowers. "Everyday Utahns are disenfranchised through the special-interest giving" to legislators.

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Tony Musci of Utah Common Cause, a government watchdog group, says Utah has some of the "loosest campaign finance laws" in the nation. "We have an open-door policy to giving" in local campaigns — and as the cost of campaigns rise, "there is even more tension" as candidates seek bigger and bigger donations from special-interest groups.

Deseret Morning News graphic

DNews graphic

Special-interest donations

Requires Adobe Acrobat.

"The people of Utah have been wanting some kind of controls over (campaign) giving," said Jena Edvalson, executive director of UPNet, a local public service advocacy group.

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Most members of the Utah Senate, pictured in session, receive less than 10 percent of their campaign funds from constituents.

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