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Kudos to Arizona’s Sen. John McCain for stepping up to co-sponsor the Honest Ads Act, which would force Facebook, Google and other online companies to play by the same rules as older media, and disclose who’s paying for political advertising.

The bill’s Democratic sponsors, Sens. Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) and Mark Warner (Va.), are motivated by fury in their party over Russian meddling in an election that Hillary Clinton lost. But in reality, this is about far more than stopping foreign interference in US politics.

Back when today’s disclosure rules were written in 2002, Internet ads weren’t a factor. Now they are: Indeed, Trump campaign guru Kellyanne Conway cites the Clinton team’s ineptness with them as a key to the outcome.

More than $1 billion-with-a-b went for digital political ads last year, and the figure is sure to soar in the future. It would be insane not to demand transparency going forward.

Online firms may claim it’s particularly hard for them to enforce or execute disclosure — but that’s their problem. They reap endless benefits from their no questions asked as long as you’ve got the cash approach; too bad if it doesn’t serve them well here.

Facebook has actually claimed that figuring out whether an ad is commercial or political is just too challenging. Write some algorithms, folks. Or hire some more live bodies if the robots just can’t hack it.

Big Tech knows it can’t continue to fly under the radar here — but its lobbyists are at work looking to minimize the impact of new laws. Ironically, one top fixer is Marc Elias, a senior adviser to the Hillary campaign, who for years has been helping Google and Facebook request exemptions from Federal Election Commission rules.

In addition to the Senate bill, the FEC is taking a fresh look at how its regulations apply to Internet ads. It plainly needs to move past its 2006 ruling that these involve “a unique and evolving mode of mass communication and political speech that is distinct from other media in a manner that warrants a restrained regulatory approach.”

But Congress should act, too — and other Republicans should join McCain in insisting on it. This is too important to let the tech lobbyists score continued special treatment.

Whether the Trump presidential campaign colluded with Russian agents to tip the 2016 presidential campaign is an open question, but there is no doubt of Russian interference.

One of the main ways that Russian agents attempted to influence the election was through tightly targeted ads on social media sites such as Facebook. For example, Facebook has turned over to Congress about 3,000 ads steeped in political dirty tricks. One purported to be in behalf of a nonexistent Muslim group supporting Hillary Clinton, another falsely claimed to represent Black Lives Matter. Facebook alone said it had identified 470 pages and accounts engaged in the activity, which generated about $100,000 in ad revenue.

Identifying the true sources of political advertising is in everyone’s interest. A candidate who benefits from such a campaign today could be stung by it tomorrow. And voters, as a general principle, deserve to know the actual sources of the pitches that they receive.

Wednesday, Sen. John McCain of Arizona became the first Republican to cosponsor the Honest Ads Act, which was introduced by Democratic Sens. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Mark Warner of Virginia. It would create disclosure standards for online political ads.

Congress should approve the bill and use it as a catalyst to eliminate “dark money” by establishing full disclosure of all contributions used for political advocacy.

In a letter sent to Senators today, 27 reform organizations and experts called on Senators to “to co-sponsor and support the Honest Ads Act, bipartisan legislation introduced by Senators Amy Klobuchar, Mark Warner and John McCain, to address the need for new rules to expose efforts undertaken by foreign interests to intervene in U.S. elections.”

According to the letter:

The integrity of our elections and the protection of our democracy are at stake in effectively addressing the kinds of attacks on our political system carried out by Russia. Preventing a foreign adversary from sabotaging our constitutional system of representative government is a matter of the highest urgency.

The letter stated:

In order to address the problems involved here, two avenues need to be pursued.

First, legislation is necessary to ensure that the American people are informed about online election-intervention activities taking place on the Internet, whether undertaken by Russia or by any other foreign interest seeking to interfere in our elections. The Honest Ads Act addresses this pressing need and, where possible, the need to prevent these activities.

Second, in addition to legislation, Facebook, Google, Twitter and other platforms that were used by the Russians have a critical role to play in solving this problem. These platforms were used to distribute fake and misleading political information to the American people. They need to recognize their corporate responsibility to play a lead role in exposing and, where possible, preventing these activities in the future.

The letter concluded:

Our organizations urge you to support and cosponsor the Honest Ads Act, and thereby to publicly commit to taking action to prevent Russia or any other foreign interest from intervening in or manipulating future U.S elections.

The reform organizations and experts signing the letter include:

American Oversight

Brennan Center for Justice

Campaign Legal Center

Center for American Progress

Center for Popular Democracy

Center for Responsive Politics

Coalition for Integrity

Common Cause

CREW

Democracy 21

Demos

End Citizens United

Every Voice

Florida Consumer Action Network

Free Speech for People

Issue One

League of Women Voters

Kathleen Clark

Norm Eisen, chief White House ethics lawyer for President Obama, 2009-2011

People For the American Way

Public Citizen

Represent.Us

Revolving Door Project

Richard Painter, chief White House ethics lawyer for President Bush, 2005-2007

Small Planet Institute

Stand Up America

Sunlight Foundation

U.S. PIRG

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By Lawrence Norden and Ian Vandewalker

Thanks to a recent revelation from Google, we now know that Facebook, Twitter and YouTube—three of the most prominent online platforms in the U.S.—sold political ads to the Russians ahead of the 2016 election.

Congress has long been concerned about foreign spending in our elections, which it sees as a national security issue: It banned such spending in the 1966 congressional amendments to the Foreign Agents Registration Act. But the law hasn’t kept up with technology, creating a loophole that allowed the Russians to purchase ads without detection in 2016.

The loophole exists because the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, which was passed in 2002, only refers to broadcast, cable, and satellite communications in its definition of “electioneering communications”—that is, political advertisements that attack or praise a candidate without explicitly urging the viewer to vote for or against her. BCRA required the purchaser of such advertisements on TV or radio to be disclosed, and amended the original Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974 to prohibit foreign nationals (and governments) from engaging in such political spending. But BCRA didn’t mention internet advertisements—which is unsurprising since they barely existed at the time.

The revelations about Russian ads online have fueled calls for Congress to revisit campaign finance law as it applies to the internet and make sure we find a way to prevent Russia, or any other foreign power, from spending on political ads in the United States again.

On Thursday, we took a step in the right direction. Minnesota Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar, and Republican Arizona Sen. John McCain, and Virginia Democratic Sen. Mark Warner have introduced the bipartisan Honest Ads Act. The bill creates a framework for updating campaign finance law for the 21st century, making a broader swath of online activity subject to transparency requirements and the ban on spending by foreign nationals.

The Honest Ads Act does this by expanding the definition of “electioneering communication” to include paid political advertisements online. It also requires major internet platforms to maintain a public database of all such communications purchased by a person or group if they spend more than $500. The company would include a digital copy, a description of the audience targeted, and the rate charged for each ad. Finally, the act requires online platforms to make all reasonable efforts to ensure that foreign citizens and powers are not purchasing political advertisements, just as radio and television broadcasters are already required to do.

Of course, the Honest Ads Act is not a silver bullet. The ad purchases on Facebook, Google, and Twitter were a brazen undertaking. The act would close off some avenues that the Russians used in 2016, but Moscow could in the future—and let’s not kid ourselves, may have in 2016—also purchase political ads through “dark money” groups. Thanks in part to Supreme Court decisions like Citizens United, these groups can take unlimited contributions from donors without having to disclose them.

The good news is that this problem, too, has a legislative solution. The DISCLOSE Act, versions of which have been introduced in Congress since 2010, would eliminate dark money as we know it. At its core, the legislation would require any group that spent above a threshold amount on elections to disclose its major donors of $10,000 or more.

Even without the passage of the DISCLOSE Act or similar legislation, the Honest Ads Act can play an important role in exposing and limiting the influence of Russian and other foreign election propaganda online. That is in large measure thanks to the work of nongovernmental organizations and the media, which have begun to expose how Russian political propaganda is influencing the political discourse in the United States.

A year ago, the Honest Ads Act would have zero chance of passage.
To take one example, the Alliance for Securing Democracy, an initiative from the German Marshall Fund, recently debuted a web resource called Hamilton 68, which tracks the spread of Russian propaganda on Twitter based on a list of 600 accounts that have amplified Russian state messages in the past. If we were to combine that tool with the repository of political ads that the Honest Ads Act would create, we should be better able to see how messages being pushed by the Kremlin are making their way into political ads and which potential voters are seeing them.

Of course, whether the Honest Ads Act will pass is far from clear. A year ago, the bill would have zero chance of passage and would have been firmly opposed by the major social media platforms. Today, with growing public disgust at Russia’s ability to covertly purchase political ads, there just may be an opportunity to close a gaping loophole that should never have existed in the first place. The New York Times reports that the “[t]ech Industry is mobilizing an army of lobbyists and lawyers … to help shape proposed regulations,” but the uniform opposition from the platforms themselves may have broken. Erin Egan, Facebook’s vice president for United States public policy, seemed to concede the possibility of a change in the law, telling the Times, “We look forward to continuing the conversation with lawmakers as we work toward a legislative solution” to “achieve transparency in political advertising.”

No doubt the odds of passing a new rule with teeth are long. But the bipartisan introduction of the bill, with the joint participation of McCain, is an encouraging sign. It was his leadership in the early 2000s that led to the passage of BCRA, the last major piece of campaign finance legislation passed by Congress.

As a relatively new medium for mass communication with few international boundaries, the internet (especially social media) presents unique challenges to the long-standing American interest in limiting the ability of unfriendly foreign governments to interfere with our elections. Ultimately, responding to this threat is going to take a multipronged effort involving both government and civil society, including the social media platforms and search engines themselves.

The passage of the Honest Ads Act would not make it impossible for the Russians or others to interfere in our next elections. But it would be a critical component of our effort to fight back by both eliminating opportunities for hidden foreign spending and providing American audiences with vital information on who’s trying to manipulate them. And having our leaders come together to strengthen our democracy’s defenses would send a powerful signal that we’re serious about addressing that threat.


This article is part of Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona State University, New America, and Slate. Future Tense explores the ways emerging technologies affect society, policy, and culture. 

WASHINGTON – Amid reports of a tentative, short-term deal to extend the debt ceiling and government spending until mid-December, U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA), a member of the Senate Budget and Finance committees, delivered a floor speech today about the longer-term fiscal challenges which still face the nation. Warner, a former business executive and Virginia governor, urged his colleagues to avoid fiscal gimmicks we’ve seen before and to work for comprehensive, bipartisan solutions.

“Fiscal discipline should not depend on who sits in the White House. Fiscal discipline also should not depend on who controls the Congress,” said Sen. Warner in a speech on the Senate floor. “And the longer we wait to address our fiscal issues, the problem only gets worse, and we become more limited in the tools available to solve the problem.”

Video of Sen. Warner’s speech on the Senate floor can be found here and a transcript follows.

 

 

Transcript (as prepared for delivery):

Mr. President, as a member of the Budget Committee and the Finance Committee, I wanted an opportunity to speak about the looming convergence of several important fiscal deadlines.

The government’s ability to continue borrowing money – the debt ceiling – must be raised this fall. And the budget year runs out on September 30th.

Meanwhile, the White House continues to talk about working on comprehensive tax reform this fall, even though Senate Republicans are making it pretty clear they’re going to rely on a more modest approach – or at least one that will only require 51 votes. That sounds like it may end up being more of a tax cut rather than tax reform.   

In mid-July, President Trump told an interviewer – quote -- “After health care, taxes are going to be so easy.” Well, we’ll see… Making the numbers work, getting the incentives right, making the appropriate tradeoffs: rather than being easy, as the President says, comprehensive tax reform actually is more like solving a Rubik’s Cube.

How this body chooses to act in the face of these deadlines – the debt ceiling, budget expiration, and tax reform - will tell us a lot about the fiscal priorities of the House and Senate leadership -- and the priorities of the current Administration – in responsibly addressing America’s long-standing challenges.

 

Here are some hard truths:

Non-defense discretionary spending made up only 16 percent of our budget in 2016.  By contrast, Social Security and Medicare make up 39 percent, and will account for 51 percent of spending growth over the next ten years.   

We cannot dramatically boost military spending, cut taxes, invest in infrastructure, AND leave our two largest spending programs -- Social Security and Medicare – untouched.  That just means that programs for people who work for low wages or otherwise struggle to get by are cut. For example, in his FY2018 budget blueprint the President proposed eliminating all funding for the Appalachian Regional Commission, an economic development organization that has invested millions in communities throughout Appalachia. The President also zeroed-out funding for a program that helps struggling families heat their homes during the coldest months of winter. 

 

 

Here are some additional facts:

  • Our national debt is approaching $20 trillion, and debt held by the public as a percentage of GDP is the highest it has been since we emerged from World War Two.
  • The federal government spends more money than it collects in revenue. By 2029, every dollar of tax revenue will go to auto-pilot spending – mandatory programs like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. That means by 2029, every dollar we spend on roads, education, research and defense will be borrowed money.

 

 

  • We have an inefficient and outdated tax structure. It hasn’t been updated in more than three decades. There is a bipartisan agreement that our tax code needs to be fixed.
  • I think we can all agree that we have a backwards tax system.

We have the highest statutory rate, but the United States is one of the lowest taxed nations. The United States ranks 31st out of 34 industrialized nations when it comes to revenue collection as a percentage of GDP. 

 

 

  • The federal government must pay interest on our $20 trillion debt.  Since 2009, we’ve had the advantage of record-low interest rates -- but those rates are starting to creep up. 
  • Even a one-percentage point increase in interest rates will cost the federal government an additional $160 billion in annual interest payments on the debt. $160 billion: that’s more than we currently spend each year on the Departments of Education and Homeland Security -- combined.

 

 

And here’s a final truth: Fiscal discipline should not depend on who sits in the White House. Fiscal discipline also should not depend on who controls the Congress.  And the longer we wait to address our fiscal issues, the problem only gets worse, and we become more limited in the tools available to solve the problem.

Neither party comes to the issues of deficit and debt with entirely clean hands, and I know memories conveniently tend to be short in this town. So in the coming weeks, as we head toward the possible convergence of the debt ceiling, government funding, and tax reform,  here’s what I urge my colleagues to pay close attention to: 

First: The White House and my Senate colleagues should avoid using rosy scenarios, just to make their proposals look fiscally responsible when they aren’t.

Over the next decade, the Congressional Budget Office – Congress’s official scorekeeper – projects real GDP growth to average a little bit above 1.8 percent per year. The Trump Administration budget is based on seven straight years of three-percent growth: achieving that level of growth is very, very unlikely. These rosy – and unrealistic -- economic assumptions allow the Administration to claim a fictional $3 trillion in tax revenue over ten years .The Administration then uses this fake revenue to cloak additional tax and spending cuts under the banner of fiscal responsibility. That’s wrong.

Second: The Administration cannot shift costs to others and then claim it as a savings.  Look no further than what the Trump budget does with federal programs for the poor:  over the next decade, it calls for slashing more than $600 billion from Medicaid -- and this doesn’t even include the dramatic cuts that were included in some versions of the Senate’s healthcare bill. Medicaid is a partnership between the federal government and states, so a $600 billion cut at the federal level has a direct impact on state Medicaid responsibilities: it simply “squeezes the balloon,” forcing states to either make up that difference, or by cutting health care, or by making cuts to other priorities.

Third: The Administration claims that their tax reform plan will pay for itself and stimulate so much economic growth that it won’t add to the deficit.

Here’s a basic problem with that: the Trump tax plan is not comprehensive tax reform at all. It’s actually a two-page wish list of tax cuts. A grocery store receipt has more details. 

Every time we have promised tax cuts will pay for themselves – it hasn’t worked out that way.

Let’s remember that Ronald Reagan’s 1981 tax cut provided a short-term stimulus – but then deficits ballooned and President Reagan had to raise taxes in 1982 and 1984. Likewise, George W. Bush’s tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 provided a quick “sugar high” but ultimately had little impact on economic growth. The Bush tax cuts also produced large deficits instead of the budget surpluses that he inherited.

Fourth: Paying for tax cuts through deficit spending is a really, really bad idea. It will make reaching any responsible fiscal goal that much more difficult. Also, studies show that tax cuts that add to deficits are worse for growth over the long run than those that are paid for – and can reduce growth over time. So any lawmaker who says they support not paying for tax cuts should also have to explain why they think adding to our national debt is a good idea.

And fifth: It would be foolish to try to balance the budget by short-changing investments that actually strengthen our economy and our competitiveness over the long run. The budget proposals we’ve seen from the administration and the House Republican leadership takes a meat cleaver to R&D, education and workforce training, and infrastructure. As a former business person, I would never spend less than 10% of revenues on these critical investments in the future. That is not the way for our country to make responsible investments, either.

Finally, Mr. President, we can achieve fiscally responsible and bipartisan tax reform, and I look forward to working with my colleagues from across the aisle to achieve these reforms.

I also would strongly suggest that nothing could help our economy more than bipartisan agreement on a responsible roadmap that begins to return our nation to fiscal health.

Thank you Mr. President, and I yield the floor.

 

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Fast Company - Sen. Warner: The American Dream Is Fading For Millions Of Freelancers. Portable Benefits Could Save It

Senator Mark R. Warner says the U.S. needs a fresh wave of innovation around how benefits are delivered in the modern workforce. “We’re already behind the curve.”

Jul 05 2017

Senator Mark R. Warner says the U.S. needs a fresh wave of innovation around how benefits are delivered in the modern workforce. “We’re already behind the curve.”