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Carnegie
Forum on Money and Politics
January
26, 2004
On January 26, 2004, Carnegie Corporation of New York held a Forum
on Money and Politics, with Senator John McCain (R-AZ) as the featured
speaker. A panel discussion followed Senator McCain’s keynote
address; it focused on the future of campaign finance reform and
included Corporation grantees Charles E. Kolb, president, Committee
for Economic Development; Chellie Pingree, president, Common Cause;
and Trevor Potter, general counsel, The Reform Institute.
One
month before the forum took place, the U.S. Supreme Court issued
a landmark decision that essentially upheld Congress' right to limit
the influence of money in politics. The ruling meant that most of
the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act—more popularly known as
the McCain-Feingold law, after the two senators who sponsored it—McCain
and Russell Feingold (D-WI)—would stand, and would apply to
the 2004 presidential election.
Over
the past 11 years, The Corporation’s investment in campaign
finance reform—approximately $16 million—is viewed by
many as having had a major role in building the “modern”
campaign financing reform movement. In introducing Senator McCain
to the approximately 100 policymakers, leaders in the nonprofit
field, voting rights and other activists gathered at the forum,
Vartan Gregorian said, “Campaign finance reform is not a Democratic
or Republican issue—it is an American issue. To keep our democracy
strong and vital, we all have to work toward clean elections, toward
reducing the influence of money and special interests in the choices
available to us as citizens.”
Echoing
Gregorian’s concerns, McCain pointed to the Supreme Court
decision, saying the Court had made it clear that “money is
not free speech.” He also credited much of the success of
the McCain-Feingold legislation to the fact that “enough Americans
were aroused by the issues that they demanded that we bring about
change” in the way we fund election campaigns. He concluded
his remarks by saying, “There is great dissatisfaction throughout
the country with the state of politics in America,” and called
for bipartisan reform in a number of other areas, including Social
Security and Medicare.
Photos
from the Forum:

Senator John McCain
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Panel of speakers at the forum:
Charles E.M. Kolb, President,
Committee for Economic Development; Chellie Pingree, President,
Common
Cause; Trevor Potter, General Counsel, The Reform Institute
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Vartan Gregorian, President of Carnegie Corporation of New
York, introducing Senator McCain
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Former Congresswoman and Vice Presidential Candidate Geraldine
Ferraro asking a question at the forum
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