Letter to the 115th Congress - Call for Sweeping Reform Bill

Letter

By: Betsy Rader, Ann Kirkpatrick, T.J. Cox, Mike Levin, David Shapiro, JD Scholten, Paul Davis, Matt Longjohn, Angie Craig, Kyle Horton, Josh Welle, Perry Gershon, Dana Balter, Danny O'Connor, Jr., Chrissy Houlahan, Jana Sanchez, Julie Oliver, Leslie Cockburn, Dan Kohl, Alyse Galvin, Greg Stanton, Gil Cisneros, Diane Mitsch Bush, Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, Betsy Londrigan, Jared Golden, Andy Levin, Joe Radinovich, Kara Eastman, Xochitl Torres Small, Antonio Delgado, Hiral Tipirneni, Katie Hill, Joe Neguse, Mary Barzee Flores, Brendan Kelly, Jesse Colvin, Elissa Slotkin, Ilhan Omar, Kathy Manning, Deb Haaland, Max Rose, Aftab Pureval, Kendra Horn, George Scott, Veronica Escobar, MJ Hegar, Jennifer Wexton, Mallory Hagan, Jessica Morse, Katie Porter, Jason Crow, Lucy McBath, Mel Hall, Matthew Morgan, Haley Stevens, Cort VanOstran, Chris Pappas, Susie Lee, Tedra Cobb, Ken Harbaugh, Madeleine Dean, Ron DiNicola, Sri Kulkarni, Ben McAdams, Lisa Brown, Clarke Tucker, Josh Harder, Harley Rouda, Nancy Soderberg, Carolyn Bourdeaux, Liz Watson, Rob Davidson, Dan Feehan, Kathleen Williams, Andy Kim, Steven Horsford, Anthony Brindisi, Theresa Gasper, Mary Scanlon, Joe Cunningham, Gina Ortiz Jones, Elaine Luria, Kim Schrier, Anita Malik, Andrew Janz, Ammar Campa-Najjar, Lauren Baer, Sean Casten, Sharice Davids, Gretchen Driskell, Dean Phillips, Dan McCready, Tom Malinowski, Liuba Shirley, Nathan McMurray, Rick Neal, Susan Wild, Lizzie Fletcher, Sylvia Garcia, Abigail Spanberger, Jill Schiller, Scott Wallace, Jessica King, Joseph Kopser, Colin Allred, Carolyn Long
Date: Oct. 4, 2018
Issues: Elections

Dear Members of the 115 th Congress:

American confidence in our government is at an all-time low. Accountability in our politics is in woefully short supply. Perhaps most concerning of all, a majority of the American people -- once relentlessly optimistic and hopeful about the future -- are now as likely to conclude America's most prosperous and productive days are behind us.

We decided to run for Congress because we know America's best days are still ahead, but confidence in our government and democracy must be restored. To do so, we must all acknowledge the corrosive role money and special interests have played in shaking the American people's faith in the system.

This is why we write to you today: to put Congress on notice. We are determined to reform the system and spark this restoration of American confidence should we be given the humble honor of serving our respective districts in the United States Congress.

We share the American people's impatience and frustration over the lack of reforms and transparency and the role of money in our politics. We hear day in and day out that special interests are drowning out the voices of everyday citizens -- to the point where many Americans no longer believe their votes even count.

Restoring faith in our elections and in the integrity of our elected officials should be a top priority that all members of Congress can agree upon. Without these reforms we will be unable to truly regain the public trust or tackle the challenges of our day, like the costs of health care and prescription drugs, the opioid epidemic, or building an economy that is strong for working families.

For those reasons, these reforms must be sweeping, and they must be bold. They must be the very first item Congress addresses. We must not yield on this demand, the American public is counting on us.

We are committed to:

● limiting the influence of big donors on campaigns, quashing the political influence, real or perceived, special interests currently have in our government and providing incentives for donors to make small contributions to federal candidates;

● finally requiring genuine accountability through disclosure of all political spending and ensuring foreign money has no way of influencing our elections;

● shutting the revolving door between elected officials and the professional, special-interestlobbying industry;

● strengthening congressional ethics laws and their enforcement, including the adoption of harsher penalties for breaking the law and betraying the public trust;

● ending the imbalanced and divisive practice of political gerrymandering that currently allows the undemocratic practice of politicians picking their voters, rather than ensuring that voters pick their representatives; and

● removing, once and for all, the deliberate and partisan barriers that prohibit millions of Americans from freely and fairly exercising their right to vote.

If the American people do elect a Democratic majority this November, we must heed their call to finally and categorically change the way Washington works.

Our system is badly broken, our institutions are at the brink and our democracy is demonstrably at risk. However, to us, America remains the "shining city upon a hill," and should it be the will of the American people this November, we will commit ourselves to strengthening that city and restoring the faith of the American people in our great country and its political system.

Signed,


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