College Democrats | University of Wisconsin - Madison

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Green Voted for Key Bills Backed by Donors
Excerpted from the Rhinelander Daily News:
U.S. Rep. Mark Green, who has criticized Gov. Jim Doyle for taking contributions from businesses seeking contracts with the state, voted for key legislation in Congress backed by some of his major donors, an Associated Press review has found.

Green, Doyle's Republican challenger, voted for legislation to make it harder to file for bankruptcy and for a bill to overhaul pension rules. In his last House campaign, 2004, Green received more than $40,000 from political action committees supporting one or both of these bills.

Those donations are among the $468,000 that the state Elections Board has ordered Green's gubernatorial campaign to give up because the PACs are not registered in Wisconsin. An appeal of that ruling is pending with the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

Green also voted for two main pieces of legislation favored by drug companies: to create a new prescription drug plan under Medicare, and to ban reimportation of drugs from Canada. He received at least $38,000 from drug company and health company PACs supporting one or both of these bills in the 2004 campaign. All but $7,000 of that was from PACs not registered in Wisconsin.

Gary Ruskin, director of the Congressional Accountability Project, a government watchdog group, said that Green's voting pattern is symptomatic of what goes in Washington.

"It's no surprise in Washington that way too much is for sale," he said. "Votes are for sale, access is for sale, political power is for sale. These contributions are, you stick tokens into the token box, and out comes votes. And that's the way Washington works so often."
The article continues:
Donors to Green's last congressional campaign that backed the bankruptcy bill included PACs of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. ($8,000); the American Bankers Association ($6,000); and Credit Union National Association ($5,000), the AP review found. None of those PACs are registered in Wisconsin.

The bill, the most sweeping rewrite of U.S. bankruptcy laws in a quarter-century, had been pushed for eight years by banks and credit card companies. Green voted for an earlier version of the bill in 2003, in the same election cycle that he received those donations, and again last year, when the final version was signed into law.

Those donors also backed legislation overhauling pension and savings rules, giving companies seven years to shore up funding of their traditional pensions. Republicans said the legislation will help ensure that workers and retirees can count on their pensions; Democrats said the bill did too little to prevent employers from eliminating their defined-benefit plans.

Other Green donors backing this bill, or provisions of it, include the PACs of the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors ($4,500) and Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. ($8,942) _ neither of which are registered in Wisconsin. The House passed the bill 279-131 this year.
posted by Adam Lang at 4:26 PM

2 Comments:

Blogger proletariat said...

But then you have Herb Kohl voting for that bankruptcy bill and he received no donations.

It seems to me if one is looking at who each individual represents, Kohl's is the bigger injustice. It does not take much brainpower to suppose Green would support such a bill with or without the PAC money. Kohl on the other hand we'd suppose would have the back of working class Wisconsinites.

At least if Kohl took the money we could write it off as him being corrupted by the system. He can only assume his desire to screw Wisconsinites is pure and authentic.

October 29, 2006 9:30 AM  

Blogger Scott Resnick said...

It is unfair to criticize Kohl for his vote in favor of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention act.

This was an act to update bankruptcy laws to protect small credit agencies, alters credit card warnings, and provides special accommodations for those with medical conditions and active-duty members. Maybe the most significant action of this bill establishes a test to determine bankruptcy, limiting the scope of law that judges rule upon.

Although this bill could be interpreted as favoring business over fiscally unstable citizens, a renovation of our nation’s bankruptcy codes was necessary. In 2004, over 1.1 million declared for Chapter 7 bankruptcy – sometimes declaring multiple times. Prior, timetables for paying back money were ambiguous, often leaving creditors with no compensation.

Senator Kohl realized this bill balanced the interest of our state with that of business. He was not the only one. In fact, 17 democrats in the Senate agreed with Kohl to put aside party politics and vote in favor of this bill.

Green’s situation was different. If we follow the logic put forward in Interest Groups, Lobbying and Participation in America, we find a congressman who was conflicted between making an unpopular vote or following his party. What persuaded Mark Green? Try $40,000 in PAC contributions.



http://www.vote-smart.org/issue_keyvote_detail.php?vote_id=3480&can_id=S0981103
http://money.cnn.com/2005/04/20/pf/bankruptcy_bill/
http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=109&session=1&vote=00044

October 30, 2006 2:25 PM  

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