Harvard professor and author Lawrence Lessig discusses the need for campaign funding reform in America, and argues that a constitutional amendment is needed to curb unlimited corporate contributions to Super PACs.
Posts Tagged ‘Lawrence Lessig’
Prof. Lawrence Lessig on How Money Corrupts Congress
Posted: February 3, 2012 in Capitalism, PoliticsTags: Citizens United, Lawrence Lessig
#OWS Occupy The Courts – A Conversation with Lawrence Lessig and Chris Hedges
Posted: January 26, 2012 in Capitalism, Politics, The People's HistoryTags: #corporatism, #dsot, #OWS, #p2, Chris Hedges, Lawrence Lessig
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On January 20th, occupiers across the country rallied together in protest against the insidious influence of the corporations over the judiciary. Shortly before the rally in Foley Square, New York CIty, Lawrence Lessig and Chris Hedges met in front of Occupy TVNY’s cameras to discuss their vision of change.
Lawrence Lessig Supports Plan to Get Money Out of Politics as States Take on Citizens United
Posted: January 14, 2012 in Capitalism, Politics, The People's HistoryTags: #corporatism, #Courts, #Law, #OWS, #p2, #warprofiteers, Citizens United, Lawrence Lessig, Mitt Romney, Oligarchy
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democracynow.org — California and New York City lawmakers are introducing measures today calling for a constitutional amendment overturning Citizens United, the controversial 2010 Supreme Court ruling that characterizes political spending as free speech and opened the floodgates for unlimited corporate spending on election campaigns. Similar measures have passed in Los Angeles, Oakland, Albany and Boulder. Democracy Now! speaks with Harvard Law School Professor Lawrence Lessig, author of a new book that examines how money buys results in Congress and fuels campaigns that put the powerful in office. Lessig argues that both Democrats and Republicans suffer from the undue influence of corporate lobbying and unlimited campaign financing, and lays out a strategy to fight it, including a call for a constitutional convention that could propose an amendment for publicly-funded elections.




