March 7, 1998
ARREST WARRANT ISSUED AGAINST BUNDLER
Rest home mogul Steve Price, one of the subjects of a Democracy South complaint
to the State Board of Elections, has been charged by the SBI with violations
of North Carolina's campaign law. At the heart of the charges lies the practice
of "bundling": the grouping of contributions by employees and families
of a company or industry to be presented en masse to candidates. Pierce, his
relatives and business associates gave over $200,000 in bundled contributions
to state candidates in 1996.
Bundling checks from different donors of the same industry to the same candidate
on the same day is not necessarily illegal as a practice, but it is a violation
when the money isn't really the donors' own, involves corporate resources, or
it is used to circumvent NC Election laws, which require groups of donors to
form PACs or political committees.
The practice of bundling is particularly sinister because it allows special
interests to secretly collect and channel money outside the context of a PAC.
By bundling, the donors can avoid the contribution limits and disclosure rules
imposed on PACs, yet impress the recipient candidate with their collective financial
muscle.
Like other wealthy donors, bundlers give for many reasons. Most simply, they
give when the candidate needs help in order to gain access to ask for something
they need help with -- a tax break, key appointment, regulatory relief, a bill
amended, or some other special favor.
The SBI's investigation, and the charges filed against Pierce are at once both
a breakthrough and a beginning. It is a real victory for the voters of this
state to see officials taking a more serious approach to enforcing our existing
campaign laws. It is just the beginning, however, as the example of Pierce's
wrongdoing are but the tip of a very large iceberg that underpins the whole
of North Carolina politics.
The exposure of the widespread practice of bundling, in two reports issued by
Democracy South in 1997, was instrumental in winning the passage of Senate Bill
1, The Full Disclosure Act. Now that donors will be required to list their employer,
and candidates will be required to file more timely reports, practices such
as bundling will be much more easy to spot.
It is very important now for our state's leaders to recognize the fact that
disclosure of campaign contributions, while a positive step for the public's
right to know, only provides a better view of what is clearly a sick and broken
system. As the mountains of evidence pile up, it is becoming painfully clear
that big money politics has in its grip virtually all aspects of politics and
decision making in this state.
The time has come to fix the system, not just one board or division at a time,
but to fix the problem at the root of all the other symptoms: our system of
campaign financing must be changed. Senator Wib Gulley's NC Clean Elections
Act (SB 381) , approved by the key Senate Judiciary Committee last year, represents
an historic opportunity for North Carolina to establish real change in our state's
campaign financing.
The Clean Elections Act will provide a critically needed alternative to today's
privately financed campaigns by offering candidates a choice. Candidates who
accept serious limits on campaign spending will have the option of cutting their
dependence on big money donors by using Clean Money (from a fund set up by the
state) to finance their campaign.
By offering this choice, passage of the Clean Elections Act will allow candidates
run for office regardless of their access to personal or private wealth. Elected
officials will finally be able to pursue the job of representing the voters
without being sidetracked by the need for fundraising, and without the risk
of finding themselves tainted by a campaign financing scandal (as has Sen. Purdue
with the charges against Pierce). Voters will be able to choose candidates that
they know are not beholden to private interests.
As we now get a clearer view of the corruption that pervades our current system,
the need for change becomes more urgent. Don't the citizens of this state deserve
better? The NC Clean Elections Act will let each candidate and voter choose
for themselves.