Sunday, January 27, 2013

Do 501c-4s support or undermine our Democracy?


Last week I used this space as a Discussion Forum for the NMP 665 Law, Policy, Government Relations, and Nonprofit Course I am currently teaching. The experiment worked well so I am going to do it again. 

I want to reference a front-page article in the 1/27/13 edition of the Sunday NYTIMES titled: Secret Donors Finance Fight Against Hagel.  It is available at:  

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/27/us/politics/secret-donors-finance-fight-against-hagel.html?ref=todayspaper

The article discusses the recent creation of numerous 501c4 nonprofits that are waging a media and public opinion campaign against the confirmation of Chuck Hagel, President Obama’s nominee to be head of the Defense Department. 

In this week’s course readings, we are focusing on the positive role nonprofits play in promoting a healthy democracy by helping common citizens influence the public policy and legislation decisions of their government.   But we are also learning that some elites create so-called “astro-turf” nonprofits to promote their own policy and legislative interests in the guise of speaking for the “common man.”

In light of this NYTIMES article and this week’s readings, what do you think are the pros and cons of 501c-4 organizations being able to lobby as much as they want AND not being required to make public who is financing their activities?  Does something (legally) have to change?  Why or why not? 

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