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Coalition suspects campaign funding swayed votes on House health reform bill

By Diana Manos

Representatives who voted against the House healthcare reform legislation late Saturday night have received $2.3 million more in campaign donations from health insurance interests than those who voted in favor of the legislation to overhaul of the nation's healthcare system, according to  a coalition of campaign reform groups.

"The healthcare debate shows that our campaign finance system is as much in crisis as our healthcare system," said David Donnelly, national campaigns director of the Public Campaign Action Fund, the watchdog group that conducted the analysis for the coalition. "As measured in campaign donations, it clearly pays to be against reform and with the health insurance interests."

The health insurance industry donated $12.5 million to the political action committees of 215 members of Congress who voted against the House healthcare legislation. Members voting against the legislation received, on average, 24 percent more in campaign money than those who voted yes, according to analysis of campaign contribution data from the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

"Members of Congress are, by and large, good people caught in a bad system," said Donnelly. "With so much time dedicated to fundraising and with insurance and other special interests providing the cash, our elected officials are placed in an untenable situation. It's time to change how we pay for campaigns and pass the Fair Elections Now Act."

The Fair Elections Now Act (S.752, H.R.1826) would provide qualified Congressional candidates with public financing once they demonstrate broad public support by raising a large number of small donations. Once in office, candidates would be freed from the influence of special interest campaign contributions.

The bill was introduced by Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.) and has 114 co-sponsors, more than half of the 218 lawmakers needed to pass the legislation. The Senate companion bill was introduced by Senate Assistant Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-Ill.).

The coalition includes Common Cause, Democracy Matters, Public Campaign Action Fund and Public Citizen. Three-dozen additional organizations have endorsed the Fair Elections Now Act.