Posted on November 26, 2007 - 9:15pm.
from: Madison.com
Cable bill proves campaign reform need urgent
Dave Zweifel — 11/23/2007 9:54 am
On Sunday the State Journal ran a front page story that suggested the new "cable reform" legislation might not save consumers money after all.
So what else is new?
The story confirmed what opponents of the legislation had been repeatedly saying as loudly as they could for months and months while AT&T and others filled campaign coffers in the state Legislature.
It's what we said in numerous editorials leading up to the final vote in the state Senate earlier this month and what several in-depth reports by our reporter Judith Davidoff revealed several weeks ago. Not only is this new law unlikely to save cable TV customers any money, it severely weakens the consumer safeguards that have been in place in Wisconsin since cable TV arrived on the scene.
A majority of the state Senate thumbed its nose at the consumer advocates, who wanted some safeguards written into the bill. Those advocates wanted to protect things like the funding of public access channels, which cable TV firms are required to provide now.
If the Assembly concurs in a few changes made by the Senate and Gov. Jim Doyle signs the measure, and the betting is that he will, local control of cable will be taken away. The state's Department of Financial Institutions, a department led by political appointees, will provide oversight instead.
In what has to be the irony of ironies, the supposedly corrupt state of Illinois enacted a much more consumer-friendly cable law when that issue came before its Legislature earlier this year. It remains a mystery why Wisconsin legislators couldn't insist on at least the same safeguards.
And when the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, the organization that monitors campaign contributions, detailed the largess senators received from AT&T and others supporting the legislation, there were howls of indignation from the politicians. It's irresponsible, one Senate staffer wrote me, after we printed the WDC's report that the 23 senators who voted in favor of the bill received $1.2 million in contributions from the special interests backing the legislation.
No, what's irresponsible is the Legislature's continued failure to fix this system that allows special interests to ply government officials with huge sums of money and, in the end, get what they want at the expense of the public interest.
Even if this were all somehow just a coincidence, the public perception is clear -- our government is for sale to the highest bidder.
That's a terrible statement for our democracy. If this latest example of the role money plays in the halls of our public institutions doesn't get the governor and the legislators off their butts to enact meaningful campaign reform, what, pray tell, will?
Dave Zweifel is the editor of The Capital Times.