Reform campaign-finance system
As the Republican nominee for Utah House District 54, I support the measures these Utah legislators have proposed and I have signed the pledge. I fear, however, that the ethics pledge is a classic example of straining at a gnat while swallowing a camel.
The ethics pledge in my view fails to recognize the unavoidable relationship between donated gifts (such as meals or Utah Jazz tickets) and the checks that are constantly showered on our legislators' campaign bank accounts by corporations and lobby groups.
Any check that I receive from a lobbyist and deposit in my campaign account to pay for yard signs, newspaper ads or brochures means one less check that I have to write from our family's bank account, where we keep our money to buy groceries, gasoline and school clothes. The same is true for the value of any gifts that I receive. So the practical effect of both of these types of transfers is the same.
The value of gifts given to Utah lawmakers in an election year averages around $2,400 per legislator, but campaign contributions in the same time frame are approximately $15,000 per representative and more than $40,000 per senator. Although it is the gifts that are most loudly decried, the checks from lobbyists are by far the greater temptation.
I abhor even the appearance of impropriety created by a lobbyist writing a check to a legislator who may soon be voting on a bill that could mean a difference of millions of dollars to the lobbyist's employer. I therefore decided at the beginning of my campaign that I would not accept any money from lobbyists, special interest groups, or corporations that lobby the Legislature.
Instead, I asked for donations from friends, neighbors and co-workers none of them lobbyists. So far, I have received over $14,000 from these generous individuals. Still, my wife and I had to spend an additional $9,000 out of our own tight budget on our tough primary win, and the looming general election will cost another $10,000 or more.
After I won the primary election, I started receiving unsolicited checks in the mail from corporations and interest groups. I have been returning all of these checks back to the senders uncashed, along with a letter explaining my position.
As more and more of these checks arrive in the mail, and as other lobbyists call asking to meet with me, my wife and I are seriously tempted to abandon our personal pledge and subscribe to the standard mantra that accepting checks from interest groups is fine as long as all contributions are fully disclosed for the voters to see. Although we have thankfully started to receive another round of generous contributions from friends and supporters, I do not know how long I can ask them to keep assisting my campaigns financially if I am elected.
Campaign contributions are a venerable tradition in American politics. I do not know if we will ever eradicate the public's perception that our laws are influenced more by special interest money than by the will of ordinary citizens. What I do know, after six months of my first foray into politics, is that if I maintain my current stance of refusing to accept money from special interest groups, and no significant changes are made to Utah's campaign-finance system, the $6,000 per year salary that I will receive if I am elected to the state Legislature will soon make me a poor man.
Kraig Powell is the Republican candidate for state House District 54.
Recent comments
The problem with special interest groups is not that they are made up...
Jon W. | Oct. 6, 2008 at 2:00 p.m.
It seems to me that special interest groups are "ordinary" citizens....
Are special interest groups bad? | Oct. 6, 2008 at 11:12 a.m.
If you peruse Utahsright you will find that most legislators in the...
Utah Dem | Oct. 6, 2008 at 9:26 a.m.
- Parks nominee is in hot water 9:30 p.m.
- Burris bows out of 2010 race 9:30 p.m.
- Regulators close Wyoming bank 9:17 p.m.
- Bailout $ may aid small business 9:16 p.m.
- Facebook sued on control of content 9:15 p.m.
- Poor more likely to leave California 9:13 p.m.
- Montana guv blasts GM 9:11 p.m.
- GM exits bankruptcy quickly 9:10 p.m.
- Death near Rockville suspicious 9:09 p.m.
- May trade deficit dropped to $26B 9:08 p.m.
- LDS seminary principal arrested
- Jazz talking Boozer trade?
- Reactions on Boozer speculation
- Stadium of Fire flag burning was fake
- Jazz in back of line for free agents
- Blazers offer Millsap 4-year deal
- A primer for the 6th Potter film
- Okur signs two-year extension
- Jazz won't meet Lopez on Europe trip
- Restaurant destroyed by fire
- Letters: Palin mistreated
142 - Bronco collecting a galaxy of recruits
141 - Teachers struggle with district cuts
138 - Jazz talking Boozer trade?
136 - LDS seminary principal arrested
133 - Blazers may offer Millsap a contract
123 - Stadium of Fire flag burning was fake
93 - Fairness of BCS debated
81 - Chaffetz eyes challenging Bennett
74 - Letters: Single-payer system best
71
By now you've probably read about the investigation that showed just how...
Sen. Scott Jenkins was name-checked by Jay Leno Monday night during his...
time to get rid of both. we need Bosh from Toronto .....trade all 3 including...
Mary Coppins has a new slant these days. I am just so glad he has stopped...
Not one single "Jazz fan" has spelled the name Joel Przybilla correctly, in...
i had awesome this year and she was well....awesome =) i miss her so much...
Yes, I'm rooting for the Y against OK also. Any win by MWC over BCS benefits...
off the hook for this, because he did good things at other times. We are...
"So depending on where you look, you'll get your answer." Well...that's...
Apparently your allowed to bring politics into this "sports" story but if...
After 4 years of slick-talking-Obama-Mania, I think the time will come when...
I had Bro. Pratt his first year teaching. I cannot tell you what a...


