• Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask us anything about Moneyocracy!
banner
Hello there,
We’re now working very hard on the documentary part of the Moneyocracy-project. It’ll be 90 min long and will include a wide range of interviewees who will drive us into the campaign finance system that the 2010 Supreme Court decision “Citizens United v.FEC” created. Here’s the list of the people included in our documentary:  
Campaign Finance Expert, Former Commissioner & Chairman of Federal Election Commission and Attorney, Trevor Potter (@thetrevorpotter)
Former FEC Data analyst and Senior Fellow at the Center for Responsive Politics, Bob Biersack (@rbiersack)
Senior Counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice, Adam Skaggs (@jadamskaggs)
Co-founder of Creative Commons and law professor, Lawrence Lessig (@Lessig)
Political Columnist Walter Shapiro (@waltershapiroPD)
Managing Director at Civic Forum Strategies & Co-Founder of ProjectVirginia and Chairman of CivicForumPAC, Ford O’Connell (@FordOConnell)
Co-Founder and Executive Director of Free Speech For People, John Bonifaz (@johnbonifaz)
Reporter @HuffingtonPost covering campaign finance, Paul Blumenthal (@PaulBlu)
Lawyer and policy advocate for Demos.org, Adam Lioz (@Demos_org)
Chair of Political Science at the Baldwin-Wallace University (OH), Tom Sutton.
Stay tuned for more, the release date and promotional material.  Thanks for your support!
Pop-upView Separately

Hello there,

We’re now working very hard on the documentary part of the Moneyocracy-project.
It’ll be 90 min long and will include a wide range of interviewees who will drive us into the campaign finance system that the 2010 Supreme Court decision “Citizens United v.FEC” created. 

Here’s the list of the people included in our documentary:  

  • Campaign Finance Expert, Former Commissioner & Chairman of Federal Election Commission and Attorney, Trevor Potter (@thetrevorpotter)
  • Former FEC Data analyst and Senior Fellow at the Center for Responsive Politics, Bob Biersack (@rbiersack)
  • Senior Counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice, Adam Skaggs (@jadamskaggs)
  • Co-founder of Creative Commons and law professor, Lawrence Lessig (@Lessig)
  • Political Columnist Walter Shapiro (@waltershapiroPD)
  • Managing Director at Civic Forum Strategies & Co-Founder of ProjectVirginia and Chairman of CivicForumPAC, Ford O’Connell (@FordOConnell)
  • Co-Founder and Executive Director of Free Speech For People, John Bonifaz (@johnbonifaz)
  • Reporter @HuffingtonPost covering campaign finance, Paul Blumenthal (@PaulBlu)
  • Lawyer and policy advocate for Demos.org, Adam Lioz (@Demos_org)
  • Chair of Political Science at the Baldwin-Wallace University (OH), Tom Sutton.

Stay tuned for more, the release date and promotional material.  
Thanks for your support!

    • #citizens united vs F.E.C
    • #super PACs
    • #documentary
    • #movie
    • #barack obama
    • #mitt romney
    • #501c4
    • #money
    • #politics
    • #citizens united
    • #Lessig
    • #Trevor Potter
    • #Bob Biersak
    • #Adam Skaggs
    • #Walter Shapiro
    • #Ford O'Connell
    • #Paul Blumenthal
    • #The Huffington Post
    • #John Bonifaz
    • #Adam Lioz
    • #Tom Sutton
  • 5 months ago
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
And here it is! The first chapter of the Moneyocracy transmedia documentary project is now online on www.moneyocracy-project.com. Combining a comic experience, a serious game and a documentary, ROOM 501C4 immerses you into a secret organisation that prepares the next election cycle. Influence, money, secret, discover what made the 2012 U.S elections so special. ROOM 501c4 is an introduction to an upcoming documentary focusing on the place of money in politics & the U.S democracy. Super PACs, Citizens United v. FEC and donors disclosure are among the topics these two segment will try to explain. 
Don’t hesitate to like our facebook page or follow or twitter account for more informations and updates.  
Pop-upView Separately

And here it is! The first chapter of the Moneyocracy transmedia documentary project is now online on www.moneyocracy-project.com. Combining a comic experience, a serious game and a documentary, ROOM 501C4 immerses you into a secret organisation that prepares the next election cycle. Influence, money, secret, discover what made the 2012 U.S elections so special. 

ROOM 501c4 is an introduction to an upcoming documentary focusing on the place of money in politics & the U.S democracy. Super PACs, Citizens United v. FEC and donors disclosure are among the topics these two segment will try to explain. 

Don’t hesitate to like our facebook page or follow or twitter account for more informations and updates.  

    • #super PACs
    • #money
    • #barack obama
    • #mitt romney
    • #Citizen United v. FEC
    • #citizens united
    • #politics
    • #elections
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #2012 elections
    • #501c4
    • #super pac
    • #superpacs
    • #stephen colbert
    • #serious games
    • #interactive documentary
    • #documentary
    • #documentaries
    • #GetMoneyOut
    • #Trevor Potter
    • #opensecret.org
    • #Paul Blumenthal
    • #Ford O'Connell
    • #Bob Biersack
    • #Lawrence Lessig
    • #Comics
    • #Josh Templeton
    • #lemonde.fr
    • #Le Monde
  • 6 months ago
  • 1
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
thenationmagazine:

Never mind the Super PACs: A new must-read investigative report in The Nation reveals how Big Business is buying the election with secret money.
Pop-upView Separately

thenationmagazine:

Never mind the Super PACs: A new must-read investigative report in The Nation reveals how Big Business is buying the election with secret money.

(via sunfoundation)

Source: thenationmagazine

    • #super PACs
    • #501c4
    • #secret donations
    • #citizens united vs F.E.C
    • #citizens united
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #2012 elections
    • #US Chamber of commerce
  • 8 months ago > thenationmagazine
  • 162
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
'\x3ciframe width=\x22500\x22 height=\x22375\x22 src=\x22http://www.youtube.com/embed/jRpg8eXFzGo?wmode=transparent\x26autohide=1\x26egm=0\x26hd=1\x26iv_load_policy=3\x26modestbranding=1\x26rel=0\x26showinfo=0\x26showsearch=0\x22 frameborder=\x220\x22 allowfullscreen\x3e\x3c/iframe\x3e'

First glimpse of the Moneyocracy Documentary

    • #2012 elections
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #501c4
    • #Republican Party
    • #barack obama
    • #citizens united
    • #citizens united vs F.E.C
    • #democracy
    • #democrat
    • #mitt romney
    • #opensecret.org
    • #super PACs
    • #politics
  • 9 months ago
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

As of today, spending reported to the Federal Election Commission by groups that aren’t required to disclose the sources of their funding has nearly tripled over where it stood at the same point in the 2010 election cycle, according to research by the Center for Responsive Politics.

Read More
View Separately

As of today, spending reported to the Federal Election Commission by groups that aren’t required to disclose the sources of their funding has nearly tripled over where it stood at the same point in the 2010 election cycle, according to research by the Center for Responsive Politics.

Read More

    • #super PACs
    • #501c4
    • #non disclosure
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #2012 elections
    • #U.S.A
    • #FEC
    • #citizens united vs F.E.C
    • #Federal Election Commission
  • 9 months ago
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
motherjones:

Chart of the Day: We really have no idea who’s paying for campaign ads.
Pop-upView Separately

motherjones:

Chart of the Day: We really have no idea who’s paying for campaign ads.

    • #501c4
    • #super PACs
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #2012 elections
  • 9 months ago > motherjones
  • 137
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

Karl Rove's Catch-22 | Mother Jones

justinspoliticalcorner:

For all the headlines and hand-wringing about super-PACs, it is dark-money nonprofits like Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS and Americans for Prosperity that dominate the political money wars. These politically oriented groups, which keep their donors secret, outspent super-PACs 3-to-2 in the 2010 elections. Through the spring of 2012, 91 percent of advertising by independent groups came from nonprofits and big business trade groups. And a growing pile of evidence suggests that it’s these nonprofits, notsuper-PACs, hauling in the bulk of corporate political cash.

But come Saturday, the dark-money nonprofits face a dilemma. A high-profile court case known asVan Hollen v. FEC threatens to shine an unwelcome beam of sunlight on donors bankrolling these organizations. Nothing’s stopping Crossroads GPS or AFP from running more “issue” ads hitting Obama and other Democrats (that is, ads that don’t explicitly say “vote for” or “vote against”). Except now nonprofits will have to reveal who funded those spots.

ark-money nonprofits don’t want to name names. Their pitch to donors includes the promise of anonymity and a shield from public scrutiny. This means that Crossroads GPS and other politically active nonprofits—which aren’t supposed to make politicking their primary purpose—have to rethink their ad strategy, election experts say. Do they shift money to super-PACs? Go dark in the months before the election? Find another loophole to run ads and keep their donors secret?

Tax and election law experts say that, short of shutting down, any new strategy carries significant risks. Run-ins with the Internal Revenue Service or the Federal Election Commission, the federal elections watchdog, could be on the horizon. “It’s a tough strategic choice for these groups,” says Joseph Birkenstock, an election law attorney and former chief counsel at the Democratic National Committee.

Here’s the quick-and-dirty version of how nonprofits including Crossroads GPS, Americans for Prosperity, and pro-Obama Priorities USA, among others, ended up in this bind. Until recently, nonprofits had exploited a federal loophole allowing them to run issue ads without disclosing the sources of their funding. These so-called social welfare organizations may also run ads directly backing or opposing candidates, but can’t run too many of them at the risk of running afoul of the IRS for being too political.

In 2011, Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) and pro-reform advocacy groups sued the Federal Election Commission to close that loophole. This March, a federal district court judge agreed with Van Hollen, and a second federal judge refused to stay that decision. The loophole was gone. (The case is currently on appeal.)

In other words, the rule book has changed mid-election for politically active nonprofits, and the first effects will be felt Saturday. Now, if AFP or Priorities USA runs a TV or radio ad mentioning Obama or Romney without endorsing or opposing a candidate, the group’s donors must be named. Starting in early September, if they mention any federal candidate, donors must be named.

One dark-money heavyweight, the US Chamber of Commerce, has already said it will change its game plan. As Chamber president Tom Donohue explained in May, the Chamber will no longer run the thinly veiled “issue” ads mentioning a candidate that it did in 2010 and 2011. Instead, the group—which says it’ll spend $50 million during the 2012 cycle—will run ads outright urging voters to oppose or support a candidate. The Chamber can get away with this because, after decades of conservatives and libertarians chipping away at the law, a loophole opened letting donors escape disclosure for “vote for” and “vote against” ads by nonprofit groups.

h/t: Andy Kroll at Mother Jones

    • #karl rove
    • #super PACs
    • #American Crossroads
    • #501c4
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #2012 elections
    • #crossroads GPS
    • #barack obama
    • #mitt romney
  • 9 months ago > justinspoliticalcorner
  • 6
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
campaignmoney:

Via Tom Toles.
Pop-upView Separately

campaignmoney:

Via Tom Toles.

    • #Campaign Finance Reform
    • #Campaign Finance laws
    • #secret donations
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #2012 elections
    • #501c4
    • #non disclosure
  • 10 months ago > campaignmoney
  • 7
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

Inspired by the “Keep calm and Carry on” poster (src:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keep_Calm_and_Carry_On) This series edited by the Moneyocrat party reminds you what’s important.

(Design Gerald Holubowicz - 2012)

    • #super PACs
    • #politics
    • #501c4
    • #2012 presidential campaign
    • #2012 elections
    • #Keep calm an carry on
    • #keep calm
    • #poster
  • 10 months ago
  • 2
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
Here’s a very interesting piece wrote by Matt Bai in the New York Times magazine section.
“How Much Has Citizens United Changed the Political Game?”
Citizens United and a couple of related court decisions changed all of this in two essential ways (…) First, the Supreme Court wiped away much of the rigmarole about “express advocacy” and “electioneering.” Now any outside group can use corporate money to make a direct case for who deserves your vote and why, and they can do so right up to Election Day. The second change is that the old 527s have now been made effectively obsolete, replaced by the super PAC. The main difference between a super PAC and a social-welfare group, practically speaking, is that a super PAC has to disclose the identity of its donors, while social-welfare groups generally do not.
Read more on the New York Times
Pop-upView Separately

Here’s a very interesting piece wrote by Matt Bai in the New York Times magazine section.

“How Much Has Citizens United Changed the Political Game?”

Citizens United and a couple of related court decisions changed all of this in two essential ways (…) First, the Supreme Court wiped away much of the rigmarole about “express advocacy” and “electioneering.” Now any outside group can use corporate money to make a direct case for who deserves your vote and why, and they can do so right up to Election Day. The second change is that the old 527s have now been made effectively obsolete, replaced by the super PAC. The main difference between a super PAC and a social-welfare group, practically speaking, is that a super PAC has to disclose the identity of its donors, while social-welfare groups generally do not.

Read more on the New York Times

    • #politics
    • #super PACs
    • #501c4
    • #disclose act
    • #donor disclosure
    • #citizens united vs F.E.C
    • #citizens united
    • #McCain Feingold
    • #supreme court
    • #money
    • #Campaign Finance laws
    • #campaign fundraising
    • #indenpendent expenditures
  • 10 months ago
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet
← Newer • Older →
Page 1 of 3

Logo

About

Moneyocracy is a transmedia documentary taking place during the 2012 U.S Presidential race. Its goal is to look at the impact of current U.S campaign finance laws on the elections and political communications. Moneyocracy aims to offer a nonpartisan view on the current state of the U.S democracy. This production is totally independent an relies on a journalistic work.

Moneocracy elsewhere

  • @moneocracy on Twitter
  • user9524607 on Vimeo
  • moneyocracy on Youtube

Twitter

loading tweets…

Following

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask us anything about Moneyocracy!
  • Mobile

Copyright 2011-2012 Gerald Holubowicz | Jean Nicholas Guillo. Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr