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Vermont Town Meetings Model People-Driven Democracy
Town resolutions and small 'd' democracy challenge Citizens United and 'Corporate Personhood'
Update: (Wednesday, March 7 - 6:03 AM EST) Vermont Public Radio reports:
Vermonters rally at their state capitol on January 20 to protest Citizens United and support Sen. Lyons' call for an amendment to overturn it. Over 70 Vermont Towns Want Corporate Personhood Amendment
Voters in at least three dozen towns want Congress to amend the U.S. Constitution to make clear that corporations aren't people.
They adopted a nonbinding resolution on Town Meeting Day asking that the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision be overturned.
That's the 2010 ruling that recognized the rights of corporations to participate in campaigns.
Kevin Rushing in the town of Chittenden says the ruling has distorted campaigns, and he wants Vermont's congressional delegation to act.
(Rushing) "I hope Bernie Sanders and Pat Leahy and Peter Welch get involved in this and push it and keep the super PACs from controlling the presidency."
Senator Sanders has been a strong backer of the resolutions.
Earlier:
Voters in ten states take to the polls today for a 'Super Tuesday' focused mostly on the Republican race for the presidential nomination. As they do so, the national media busies itself cataloging the now requisite speculative horse race play-by-play while giving audience to uninvited strategic advice from political operatives and paid partisans. Quietly, however, in the thinly populated New England state of Vermont, a wonderfully quaint and seemingly-forgotten practice is taking place: democracy.
Tuesday, March 6th is Town Meeting Day for most Vermont cities and towns. Meeting day often doubles as election day for local officials, but they also offer a chance to discuss issues of public importance, help to set municipal budgets, and allow towns to make collective stands on policy or social issues of state, national, or even global, importance. This year, in addition to the various local issues, at least 52 towns in Vermont will be voting on town resolutions calling attention to the woeful influence that corporate money has come to exert over all levels of US government.
The Associated Press reports:
States and communities from Maine to Hawaii and Florida to Alaska have considered similar calls, but tiny Vermont — with its penchant for using its annual testament to participatory democracy to offer the world opinions on issues way beyond the town budget — is making the most concerted effort.
The goal is to get rid of the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court's Citizens United decision, which allowed corporations, unions and wealthy people to raise and spend unlimited campaign funds via political action committees known as "super PACs" as long as they don't work directly with a candidate.
At the heart of the debate is "corporate personhood," the U.S. legal concept that gives corporations rights like those of an individual. Critics say that it poisons the electoral process and that the only way to trash the practice is by amending the U.S. Constitution.
"People are starting to put the pieces together; they're all doing it all at the same time, all across the country," said Bill Butler, of Jericho, who helped write the proposal being considered by many Vermont towns.
"You start putting these together, I think you have the beginning of the most dynamic political movement in this country. It's because people are realizing they have to do it and they have to do it now."
For critics who say that small village meetings are not the place to address national issues, members of the 'end corporate personhood' have a ready response.
"You've got to start somewhere," said Montpelier attorney Anthony Iarrapino, who helped get the issue on his city's Town Meeting Day ballot. "A process of amending the Constitution has to start somewhere and like the Constitution itself, the process of amendment should start with the people and there is no better forum for voicing the will of the people than Town Meeting."
John Nichols, writing at The Nation, adds:
The "Vermonters Say Corporations Are Not People" campaign is part of a [much larger] movement. National groups that are backing the amendment strategy -- including Public Citizen, Common Cause, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom and Move to Amend -- are helping the town-meeting push, as are the Vermont Public Interest Research Group, the Peace and Justice Center of Vermont and Occupy Vermont.
According to a new poll by the Castleton Polling Institute, 76 percent of Vermonters favor amending the Constitutional to limit spending on political campaigns. Notably 57 percent of Vermonters who identify as Republicans support such an amendment.
Jessica Pieklo, writing at Care2, describes the various town efforts in Vermont and a singular state resolution:
In this Jan. 20, 2012 photo, people hold signs during a gathering on the anniversary of the Citizens United decision in Montpelier, Vt. First, it was the Vermont senator with socialist leanings. Then it was Jerry of Ben & Jerry's ice cream fame. Now there are about 50 Vermont communities ready to chime in on a proposal to pass a Constitutional amendment to clarify that corporations do not have the same rights as human beings. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot)
The initiatives call on the Vermont Legislature and congressional delegation to support a constitutional amendment that clarifies that money is not speech and corporations are not people. If passed such an amendment would make it possible for Congress to limit election-related expenditures by for-profit corporations, nonprofits, unions and individuals.
“Vermonters are taking a lead in the growing movement for a constitutional amendment to limit the influence of big money and corporations in our democracy,” said Aquene Freechild, senior organizer with Public Citizen’s Democracy Is For People campaign. Public Citizen – along with Move to Amend/Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Vermont Peace and Justice Center, VPIRG, Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility, Rural Vermont, Common Cause Vermont, Occupy Burlington, Vermonters Say Corporations Are Not People, Vermont Action for Peace, Vermont Workers Center, and Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield (co-founders of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream) – has worked with Vermont activists to collect signatures and get the resolutions on town meeting agendas.
The towns with ballot measures challenging corporate personhood include Albany, Barnet, Brattleboro, Bristol, Burlington, Calais, Charlotte, Chester, Chittenden, Craftsbury, East Montpelier, Fayston, Fletcher, Greensboro, Hardwick, Hinesburg, Jericho, Lincoln, Marlboro, Marshfield, Monkton, Montgomery, Montpelier, Moretown, Mount Holly, Norwich, Plainfield, Putney, Richmond, Ripton, Roxbury, Rutland City, Rutland Town, Sharon, Shrewsbury, South Burlington, Starksboro, Sudbury, Thetford, Tunbridge, Waitsfield, Walden, Warren, Waltham, Williamstown, Williston, Winooski, Windsor, Woodbury, Woodstock and Worcester. The list is also available at www.citizen.org/Towns.
A state resolution – introduced by state Sen. Virginia “Ginny” Lyons and currently in the Senate Government Operations Committee – calls on the Vermont delegation to support an amendment clarifying that corporations are not people under the U.S. Constitution. Lyons was also a leader in starting the town meeting effort, working with diverse groups to put forth sample language.
Lyons' resolution, JRS 11, is a “joint resolution urging the United States Congress to propose an amendment to the United States Constitution for the states’ consideration which provides that corporations are not persons under the laws of the United States or any of its jurisdictional subdivisions.” The resolution continues:
“Whereas, free and fair elections are essential to American democracy and effective self-governance, and
Whereas, individual persons are rightfully recognized as the human beings who actually vote in elections, and
Whereas, corporations are legal entities that governments create and can exist in perpetuity and simultaneously in many nations, and
Whereas, they do not vote in elections and should not be categorized as persons for purposes related to elections for public office, and
Whereas, corporations are not mentioned in the United States Constitution as adopted, nor have Congress and the states recognized corporations as legal persons in any subsequent federal constitutional amendment…
Whereas, the Court in Citizens United has created a new and unequal playing field between human beings and corporations with respect to campaign financing, negating over a century of precedent prohibiting corporate contributions to federal election campaigns dating to the Tillman Act of 1907, and
Whereas, the Citizens United decision has forced candidates for political office to divert attention from the interests and needs of their human constituents in order to raise sufficient campaign funds for election, and
Whereas, corporations are not and have never been human beings and therefore are rightfully subservient to human beings and the governments that are their creators, and
Whereas, the profits and institutional survival of large corporations are often in direct conflict with the essential needs and rights of human beings, and
Whereas, large corporations have used their so-called rights to successfully seek the judicial reversal of democratically enacted laws passed at the municipal, state, and federal levels aimed at curbing corporate abuse, and
Whereas, these judicial decisions have rendered democratically elected governments ineffective in protecting their citizens against corporate harm to the environment, health, workers, independent business, and local and regional economies, and
Whereas, large corporations own most of America’s mass media and employ those media to loudly express the corporate political agenda and to convince Americans that the primary role of human beings is that of consumers rather than sovereign citizens with democratic rights and responsibilities, and
Whereas, the only way to reverse this intolerable societal reality is to amend the United States Constitution to define persons as human beings and not corporations, now therefore be it resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives that the General Assembly urges Congress to propose an amendment to the United States Constitution for the states’ consideration which provides that corporations are not persons under the laws of the United States or any of its jurisdictional subdivisions…”
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21 Comments so far
Show AllWhat if these town meeting were adopted nationwide and made virtual and continuous? IT can easily achieve this today. Why should politicians make our laws according to corporate campaign graft? In an inevitable future, people will be able to propose laws on par with fast changing times and vote them up or down online at the town, state, national and global level, continuously, with maximum public participation. Why depend on millionaires to make the laws of the land when we could make the laws direct democratically?
Representative government is technologically obsolete. It is easily corrupted and fails at every level. Unlike rigged propositions held once every four years or so, Swiss direct democracy has proved corruption-proof. Its continuous nature makes it easy to promptly correct any part of onerous or counterproductive laws made by mistake. Government by electronic consensus is the future. As participation increases, so will its influence, until it replaces the oligarchy's system.
Politicians will fight direct democracy tooth and nail as if their jobs depend on it. We can't expect them to make the first moves toward direct democracy. so We the People have to make it happen. We need a dedicated website (OWS?) where everyone can propose laws and vote them up or down. We need it now.
The oligarchy's system of representative government is rigged and has left us with no good choices. The sooner We the People begin to practice direct democracy, the sooner we can change this obsolete system of government.
Direct democracy
One advantage of discussing things here is that we are able to better gather our thoughts and express our views dispassionately. Were we face to face, it would be difficult for me not to lose my cool and call you a condescending asshole.
I do, however, post my mostly futile posts here at CD, perhaps to leave a digital record that I didn't participate in the violence and insanity of our Empire, but also because I think getting your thoughts out to others matters at least to some degree.
We don't have town meetings where I live, so I have no experience. But I lived in Switzerland for 6 months and have visited it many times. I have to agree with ezeflyer about its success, but his rant against you puzzled me.
The "supreme court" is only as supreme as you allow it to be in your own heart and mind. It's MUCH preferable to allow your own personal court to reign supreme. Notice that when you do, it turns institutions in Washing-town into little groveling serfs, waiting to do your bidding for crumbs. This is not a liberal idea, but it is the ONLY way that institutions can possibly work for the people. Remember - little groveling serfs - worthy of our pity, and nothing more. Contrary to liberal dogma, the reality on the ground is it's going to inevitably be a master/slave relationship, between the people and the institution. Exceptions to this rule are themselves shackles on our wrists. Monstrous excuses for a monstrous status quo. We need rules, contrary to liberal dogma, but VERY specific ones that serve our BETTER interests. The inevitability of the master/slave relationship between the people and the institution is such a rule, that must be the basis of our personal policies/agendas. These rules exist, like laws of physics. They are based solidly on human nature, something liberalism keeps in a shroud of fog. So we the people are now remodeling our worldviews, in which we the people see all, understand all, and act accordingly, outside the liberal shroud of fog. The big news of the day is the people are fast learning that they can and should be Collective MASTER of Institutions, and as a result, masters of their own destinies.
Where are our Bolshevik ranters now, demanding we must live in a centralized police state under tight ideological control with all dissenters to be ruthlessly purged?