Bernie Sanders has spilled the beans on Congress. Sen. Sanders said, “The Congress of the United States of America is controlled by a handful of extraordinarily wealthy people and corporations.”
Tavis: To your point about Citizens United, one of the ways that we might push back on this money being the mother’s milk of all of our politics notion, one of the way to push back on that would be some real, some serious, campaign finance reform.
There was hope back in the day that the president might eventually get around to that, but both he and Romney, you know, just played by the rules the last time around. So the politics get flooded with $6 billion, $8 billion dollars of money into these various pots. So it raises this question. What evidence do you because I don’t see any as yet?
What evidence do you see that this president this time around is serious? I’ve not heard him in any interviews say anything about campaign finance reform as one of his priorities. How do we get to that if this president, with all the money he raised, won’t ever put campaign finance reform on the table?
Sanders: Well, Tavis, you’re raising exactly the right questions and the answers are difficult. To my mind, the only way we move this country, number one, in overturning Citizens United, number two, moving the public funding of elections, is through a very, very strong grassroots movement that gives the president an offer and members of Congress an offer they can’t refuse. People have got to understand that the issue in Congress is not what the media talks about on why can’t Democrats and Republicans get along.
That is not the issue. The issue is that, to a very significant degree, the Congress of the United States of America is controlled by a handful of extraordinarily wealthy people and corporations, Wall Street being at the top of that list. And unless we address that issue, I fear very much for the middle class. I fear very much for our kids, for low income people and for seniors.
Give you just one example, one example. You have this business round table which is the organization representing the CEOs of major corporations in America. These guys, without exception, make huge amounts of money.
Some of them are worth hundreds of millions of dollars. All of them have these great retirement packages that the average American could not even dream of. Couple of weeks ago, they made an announcement that it is their view that we should raise the Social Security age to 70 and the Medicare eligibility age to 70 as well.
Can you conceive of the arrogance of these people who are at the top one-tenth of one percent of the income stratum telling working families that, before they can collect Social Security, they got to be 70, before they can get Medicare? So all of this is about the continuation of a class warfare being perpetrated by people who have incredible wealth, incredible power. Citizens United makes it even worse.
And at the end of the day, unless we have a strong grassroots political movement which says, excuse me, we’re not going to maintain this incredibly unequal distribution of wealth and income in America. Excuse me, the United States government is supposed to represent all of the people, our kids and the elderly and workers, not just billionaires. Until we have that movement, I doubt very much that you’re going to see the kind of political changes in Washington that we need.
It is a not a stretch of the imagination to assume that the few wealthy people who control Congress are many of the same individuals who were on Sanders’ list of the 26 billionaires who tried to buy the 2012 election. Sen. Sanders was correct. The way to take back our elections is to get all of the special interest money out of politics.
The reason why the Republicans who control the House can blatantly ignore the will of majority of Americans is because the American people aren’t their constituency. The only constituents that matter to House Republicans are those right wing billionaires and corporations who keep the campaign coffers full.
If you want to get rid of ALEC, the Koch brothers, and the over sized political influence of the wealthy, public financing of our elections is the way to do it. The American people are frustrated by a paralyzed Congress, but they don’t seem to understand why Congress is stuck. Members of Congress mouth all sorts of platitudes and cliches about the democracy and the American people at election time, but in our current political system campaign donations matter more than people.
Sen. Sanders destroyed the illusion that Congress works for the people. The current Congress works for no one, but their donors. The needs of the people come last in this Congress, and Bernie Sanders was not afraid to tell you why.




Astrid Warner
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 6:01 pm
God Bless you, Senator Sanders – I hear you loud an clear.
We also need to get rid of Fox News and their lies. They do not publish news, they are as bad as the magazines you can buy at the super market. Freedom of Speech also support Freedom of Publishing Lies – the Devil’s Network.
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Middle Molly
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 6:14 pm
There is something just a bit disturbing about Sander’s comments. Now, to be fair, he is an independent, but almost all on his list of 26 billionaires who tried to buy the election are giving to Republicans.
The end of the article seems to indicate that the Republicans are the ones who are really buying the elections, and the Republicans in Congress are really the problem, but the quote from Sanders doesn’t make that clear.
I’m not saying that the Dems are perfect, but anyone who wants to buy into the “Both parties are the same; both have been bought off by corporations and rich guys”, etc., needs to look at the link that includes the 26 guys who tried to buy the election.
I agree completely on the need for campaign finance reform, but we’re not going to get it with the current make up of the Supreme Court and the Congress.
We need to take Congress back, and that means getting rid of the Repubs as the majority in the House. Only then can we lean on the Dems to get them to become more progressive.
But that doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t start a grassroots effort.. except that I remember such an effort a year and a half ago, and it went nowhere.
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Jonathan Burton
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 9:24 pm
Things are going to have to get intolerably worse for a vast majority of Americans to wake the fuck up. By then it may be too late. I sometimes wish I was just another ignorant suburban proll like the rest of them. At least I wouldn’t be walking the plank with eyes wide open. I am moving my family to a place where I can grow my own food, have a safe separate water source and enjoy air that is not filled with industrial pollutants. I will hunker down for the next several decades while all hell breaks loose in suburbia and the inner city. What a desperate reality show that will be. Not for me!!
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Robert Chapman
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 6:50 am
Best of luck with your plans, Jonathan, but if you read history you will find that the sort of Daniel Boone actions that you are proposing is exactly what led to the US contempt for nature and for normal social boundaries.
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Jane Solorzano
Feb. 10th, 2013 at 11:09 pm
what???
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ProudPrimate
Feb. 11th, 2013 at 8:10 am
Bernie would agree with you, Molly. I listen to him an hour a week on Fridays, “Brunch With Bernie” on the Thom Hartmann program (podcast), and he says what you’re saying, as does Thom.
Remember, even top Democrat Dick Durbin said last year, “The bankers own this place”, i.e., the Senate. Remember also, Belafonte told Tavis the story of FDR sitting on the dais at a speech by A. Phillip Randolph, where the latter accused the president of failing to stand up for the Negro.
Continuing the story, Belafonte recounted what FDR replied upon hearing Randolph’s remarks: “You know, Mr. Randolph, I’ve heard everything you’ve said tonight, and I couldn’t agree with you more. I agree with everything that you’ve said, including my capacity to be able to right many of these wrongs and to use my power and the bully pulpit. … But I would ask one thing of you, Mr. Randolph, and that is GO OUT AND MAKE ME DO IT.”
This story was retold by Barack Obama at a campaign fundraiser. After recounting the Randolph story, OBAMA SAID HE WAS JUST ONE PERSON, AND HE COULDN’T DO IT ALONE. Obama’s final answer: “Make me do it.”
Obama quoted this story in his 08 campaign, because he is cognizant and realistic about it. There’s only so much he can do. Only one power is great enough to stand up to these tyrants, these “Economic Royalists” as FDR called them, these “malefactors of great wealth” as Teddy his cousin called them. Only the great mass of the people are strong enough, and they only in substantial solidarity.
The answer is to do what Bernie is doing, and get more people on board — carry this message and generate understanding. Thanks to you for posting, to this website for publishing, and to Bernie — truly the best of the Senate, and of our country today.
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Royella Jaynes
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 6:37 pm
Senator Sanders was very clear to include both parties in his dialogue regarding campaign contributions, which are an embarrassment to this country, considering our national debt and our inability to provide for our citizens the basic of services. We all need to contact our representatives to have the rules changed, and get big business and their pay-offs out of our political system, beginning with the NRA and their millions contributed to (predominately) republican candidates supporting their agenda. We, as a society, are being held hostage by the mafia-like mentality of the uber-wealthy, and we need to take our country back!!
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Sanders
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 10:14 am
The NRA doesn’t stand for National Republican Assoc and it backs those in congress who strongly support the 2nd Amendment. They don’t donate to anybody’s apolitical comparing, they merely run ads. So get your facts straight before posting your garbage.
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Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 10:23 am
Certainly you are smarter than what you have just shown
http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/summary.php?id=D000000082
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Just A Dumb Fireman
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 7:19 pm
That’s not a secret – but thank you as always, Senator Sanders (one of the very few worthy of the title) for always being on the side of the hard truth and the right thing to do.
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Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 7:47 pm
Thanks to Bernie, but what he says has been blatantly obvious for a long time.
Its time to make the billionaires money worthless
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Sanders
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 10:18 am
Obama and Bernanke are working overtime on making their money worthless. Unfortunately they are making ours worthless as well.
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Nwofaked
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 8:16 pm
The only billionaire I know that I give a crap about is Bill Gates.
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PSzymeczek
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 11:26 am
Warren Buffet is on my list of billionaires with a conscience, as well.
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tz
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 8:58 pm
Big news flash . . . . not.
To my mind this is basically stating the obvious.
It is good to have someone at least give voice to this reality.
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Retired Ron
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 10:35 pm
I really appreciate Senator Sanders. It is time we quit thinking of this government as a democracy and recognize it for what it has become, an oligarchy. An oligarchy is a form of government where a few wealthy or powerful families make the decisions for the country. We are in a transition from democracy to oligarchy and I seriously doubt that the direction can be changed. Even worse, with Homeland Security and all the three letter agencies, someday we may well have a tyrant instead of a president.
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Joe Manchik
Feb. 5th, 2013 at 11:06 pm
I display the American flag upside down on Facebook because I am truly in fear for my country! We The People of the United States are in EXTREME DISTRESS, and proper flag etiquette dictates that I display the American flag upside down. Today, the government of the United States of America has been completely overthrown and taken complete control of, in a hostile coup d’etat by this PRIVATE organization known as ALEC. WE THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES NO LONGER OWN OUR GOVERNMENT!
I am truly ashamed of many of the ugly things that the government of the United States of America is doing today. We The People of the United States no longer have any control over what our government does because this control was purchased from our elected officials with bribery money supplied by the GOP run American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which is partly funded by and operates on behalf of the military industrial war machine complex in America. ALEC has bribed our elected officials to start wars throughout the entire world so that the extremely wealthy ALEC corporate members can get their hands on billions of American tax dollars by manufacturing the weapons of war, and then allowing the wealthy ALEC oil company members to STEAL the oil reserves from the innocent people of those countries.
Do you really believe that The Civil War ended slavery in America? The GOP run ALEC, along with it’s supporting corporate members, are responsible for promoting slavery throughout the ENTIRE WORLD TODAY! Extremely wealthy ALEC corporate members, like Walmart, Toshiba and Cisco, own and operate sweat shops and slave labor camps in third world countries that employ children at slave labor wages to manufacture the products that they sell today.
Today it is critically imperative that We The People of the United States wage a moral and political war against ALEC if we ever want to take back our government that was stolen from us with bribes paid to our elected officials by ALEC.
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david nery
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 9:29 am
My suggestion for radical campaign finance reform is: That only citizens who are eligible to vote for a candidate may contribute to that candidate’s campaign; there needn’t be limits on those contributions, as long as any of prescribed amounts be fully published. This way politicians would be beholding to their actual constituents and, as long as they’re going to be bought, others will know who owns the politicians.
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Tom E.
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 10:34 am
I’m surprised that someone would vote down Mr. Nery’s comment – he has hit the nail on the proverbial head. Outlaw outside contributions and allow only individuals to make political contributions to campaigns. This would remove the undue influence of SuperPACS, corporations, and unions on our elections. Brilliant.
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Steve
Feb. 6th, 2013 at 1:23 pm
I voted up Mr. Nery’s comment because I appreciate most of it, but I STRONGLY disagree with the no-limit part. A fixed limit would be a great equalizer; otherwise there is nothing that will stop the top 0.01% from buying elections just like we experience now.
Bernie’s thoughts on the matter were better: Bring on publicly financed elections and end dark money.
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JerryA
Feb. 9th, 2013 at 8:30 pm
Some aspects of Senator Sander’s comments are correct. There is an unholy alliance between big business and big government (elected, appointed and hired) officials. The heirarchy of unholiness rests first with the Administration, then the Senate, followed by the House and Judiciary. Cut as much money off as possible to improve the situation.
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