Current Campaigns
Campaign Finance Reform
The high cost of campaigns—approximately $2.8 billion in 2006—invites corruption, reduces the number and diversity of candidates for public office, and forces the concerns of average citizens behind those of wealthy donors in a Congress that is heavily reliant on campaign contributions from powerful interests. A new system for financing campaigns is necessary to restore the promise of our democracy, one that allows qualified candidates who agree to spending limits and refuse private contributions to receive a set amount of public funds. Read more.
Lobby Reform
Recent congressional scandals demonstrate the role of powerful interests and their lobbyists, as they engage in unseemly practices from accepting gifts and travel junkets to outright bribery. Read more.



