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Posts by Anthony Kammer

The WSJ’s Anonymous Defense of Anonymous Corporate Political Spending

Posted 62 days ago by Anthony Kammer

The Wall Street Journal ran a rather disingenuous and misleading opinion piece on Sunday evening titled The Corporate Disclosure Assault, arguing that “[u]nions and liberal activists are using proxy rules to attack business political speech.”  The piece—exactly like the undisclosed corporate money it’s pandering to—doesn’t even have an author listed.  And its main point is that shareholders seeking transparency over the ways their money is spent on politics are committing “an abuse of the proxy process” by voting for increased disclosure.

According to the article’s mystery author, calling for shareholder disclosure of corporate political expenditures is not “the effort of public-spirited believers in shareholder rights and transparency.”  No, these are “unions, left-wing activists, and their factotums” who disagree with Citizens United, who allegedly want to “expose and then vilify companies that disagree with them.”  The author claims to have uncovered a left-wing conspiracy, a “broad network of unions, green investment funds, public pensions and ideological bucket shops.”  And what is the goal of this nefarious campaign?  “The specific target is to get companies to publicly disclose what they spend on politics.”

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Citizens United Was Just an End-Zone Dance

Posted 129 days ago by Anthony Kammer

Jeffery Clements was at Demos this morning for an event marking the New York launch of his new book, Corporations Are Not People. As a lawyer and cofounder of Free Speech for People, Clements has been one of the leading voices in the campaign for a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United. But this book, rather than simply providing a limited guide on the harms of corporate political spending in elections, offers a much more profound reexamination of the role corporations play in American public life.

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Reimagining the Corporate Form: Toward a More Democratic System of Corporate Governance

Posted 189 days ago by Anthony Kammer

The American system of corporate governance is one that privileges management’s interests at the expense of other actors. The current corporate form has played a role in producing some of the elements creating dramatic imbalances in our economy, such as excessive risk-taking, stagnating wages, and the spike in executive compensation. However, there are alternatives that can address failings of the existing system.

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The Learned Helplessness of the Rational Voter

Posted 217 days ago by Anthony Kammer

By applying rational choice theory to voting, one unavoidably concludes that voting to affect electoral outcomes is almost never worth the time and effort. To their credit, proponents of rational voter models have responded in recent years to accommodate an expanded view of ‘rational,’ self-interested behavior in order to better explain voter turnout and voter apathy. Nonetheless, there are inherent limits to an individualized approach that emphasizes private incentives . . . .

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Debt Forgiveness as Economic Stimulus

Posted 245 days ago by Anthony Kammer

The political turmoil in Europe, the subprime/foreclosure crisis, and the student loan/unemployment disaster facing the United States all boil down to the same issue. Creditors made a lot of bad, risky loans leading up to the financial crisis in 2008. But rather than take losses for those loans, what we’ve seen across Europe and the U.S. has been an attempt to use the legal system and political pressure to make sure these creditors get 100 cents on the dollar. Borrowers and, in many cases, taxpayers (in the form of austerity programs) have been tapped to make sure that debt does not get written down. In the U.S., politicians have proven more willing to see homeowners foreclosed on than ask banks to start refinancing mortgages, and student loans were made virtually unforgivable in 2005 when the bankruptcy code was amended.

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Now that the debt ceiling has been raised, can we get around to abolishing the debt ceiling?

Posted 291 days ago by Anthony Kammer

The country may be suffering from a bit of debt ceiling fatigue at the moment, but given the harm that the past few weeks have done, the United States needs to get around to abolishing the debt ceiling before this situation repeats. It would be a good signal to markets and remove political uncertainty that’s likely to keep US interests rates up, and it’s important for the continued stability and civility of our political system.

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The Debtor-Creditor Divide

Posted 313 days ago by Anthony Kammer

Several weeks ago, Bob Kuttner published an excellent 1-page piece called “Debtor’s Prison” in the American Prospect. The distinction he offers now seems quite clearly to be one of the fundamental battle grounds in American politics—between rentier creditors and debtors.

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What New York’s Gay Marriage Law Reveals About American Democracy

Posted 329 days ago by Anthony Kammer

On Sunday, the New York Times ran an important piece by Michael Barbaro called “Behind N.Y. Gay Marriage, an Unlikely Mix of Forces.” Many publications, rightly so, are celebrating New York’s long-overdue passage of same-sex marriage legislation.

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Pushing Boundaries toward Fairer Redistricting

Posted 335 days ago by Anthony Kammer

Following two landmark ballot initiatives, California transferred the power to draw legislative districts from the state legislature to an independent commission, the Citizen Redistricting Commission. And on June 10, the commission unveiled its first proposed maps for CA’s State Assembly, State Senate, and U.S. Congressional seats.

Rather than focusing on the particulars of these new maps, good government advocates watching from other states should seek to understand the dynamic produced by this new quasi-independent redistricting system.

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Crowdsourcing a Beer Company Buyout

Posted 346 days ago by Anthony Kammer

Two advertising executives attempted to raise $300 million from online investors in order to purchase Pabst Blue Ribbon. Rather than approaching large investors, they came up with a rather brilliant method for crowdsourcing the buyout.

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