Policy Letter

POGO Joins Groups in Supporting Transparency in Government Contracting E.O. Contractor Accountability?

The Hon. President Barack Obama

The White House

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW

Washington, D.C. 20500

RE: Move ahead promptly with the proposed transparency in government contracting executive order

Dear President Obama:

The undersigned organizations, on behalf of our members and supporters, write today to express our strong support for the April 13th draft executive order that would require full disclosure of campaign spending and contributions by business entities that seek federal government contracts. We encourage you to move ahead promptly with the executive order.

While federal and state laws generally attempt to prevent any action to reward or penalize government contractors based on their political expenditures, there is a widespread public perception that companies and their executives who provide the most generous campaign financial support to winning candidates are rewarded with the most lucrative contracts. On far too many occasions that perception has been validated by scandal and the disgrace, resignation or even conviction of some governmental officials.

The proposed executive order attacks the perception and the reality of such “pay-to-play” arrangements by shining a light on political spending by contractors. It simply requires that a business entity, as a condition of bidding on a government contract, disclose the campaign contributions and expenditures of the company, its senior management and affiliated political action committees for all to see, so the public may judge whether contracts are being awarded based on merit rather than campaign money.

Transparency of campaign money in the government contracting process is nothing new at the state level. In response to numerous contracting scandals, more than a dozen states have imposed specific campaign finance disclosure requirements on government contractors.

At the federal level, many government contractors already are required to disclose some of their campaign finance activities as they are required to disclose their PAC contributions and expenditures. The executive order would also require government contractors to disclose their newly-permitted campaign finance activities that were authorized by the Supreme Court decision in the Citizens United case.

The Supreme Court in Citizens United strongly supported disclosure for these new campaign finance activities stating that disclosure requirements “do not prevent anyone from speaking.”

The Supreme Court also said in supporting disclosure:

“Shareholders can determine whether their corporation’s political speech advances the corporation’s interest in making profits, and citizens can see whether elected officials are ‘in the pocket’ of so-called moneyed interests.”

The flip side of transparency is secrecy and the specter of hundreds of millions of dollars in secret campaign cash coming from companies that derive much of their wealth from government contracts.

In order to keep in check actual or perceived corruption in government contracting, it is imperative that there be full disclosure of campaign contributions and expenditures by federal government contractors.

Sincerely,

Campaign Legal Center

Center for Corporate Policy

Center for Media and Democracy

Central Conference of American Rabbis

Citizen Works

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW)

Common Cause

Consumer Watchdog

Corporate Ethics International/Business Ethics Network

Democracy 21

Democracy for America

Democracy Matters

Democrats.com

Dēmos

Illinois Campaign for Political Reform

League of Women Voters of the United States

Michigan Campaign Finance Network

National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC)

Ohio Citizen Action’s Money in Politics Project

OMB Watch

OpentheGovernment.org

Oregon State Public Interest Research Group (OSPIRG)

People for the American Way

Project On Government Oversight (POGO)

Public Campaign

Public Citizen

Sanford Lewis, Counsel, Investor Environmental Health Network

SEIU

Social Equity Group

TakeAction Minnesota

Union of Concerned Scientists

U.S. PIRG

Wisconsin Democracy Campaign

Wisconsin Voices