From: ron-paul-2008.blogspot.com
Letter to Editor: Ron Paul Votes Against Reform Measures - Response
I found this letter to the editor questioning why Ron Paul voted against some reform measures...
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"Since it appears to have gone unnoticed, 14th Congressional District voters should be advised that their representative, Ron Paul, voted against two lobby reform measures that were voted on in the House of Representatives two weeks ago.
On one vote, on a lobbyist oversight bill, Paul was one of 22 congressmen who voted in the negative. (The bill passed, 396-22.)
The other bill, which tightened requirements for delivery of campaign contributions by lobbyists, passed 382-37.
Paul’s vote was against the bill.I hope Paul gives us an explanation for these votes before the Republican primary in March."
Joseph Ahern Galveston
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Dear Joseph,
I'm not Ron Paul, obviously, but I thought I'd help out on your concerns. I did a simple Google search for 'Ron Paul lobby reform measure' and found the below excerpt from Wiki.
"In 2002, he spoke before the Congress in opposition to campaign finance reforms that place any restrictions on citizens and businesses making campaign contributions to the candidate of their choice. He based his argument on the First Amendment, Separation of Powers, and Constitutional Authority, and the belief that such efforts are also counterproductive in reducing entrenched powers."
Thanks for giving me the chance to address this and show you how to find such information for yourself.
Have a wonderful day and please write with more questions,
WillyPete
I think if you wanted to sum up in a small sound byte you could simply say that "removing the opportunity of those who don't have big money to support the candidate of their choice only further opens the field for greater campaign finance unfairness."
Consider the impact of PACs. Bottom line is big money will find a way around reform whereas the "little guys" like you and I would be left stuck without the ability to directly support a specific candidate.