Public Municipal Campaigns: Taxpayer-Funded Campaigns Fail to Deliver Benefits

House Bill 120 is slated for the Senate floor today, and its approval would be based on false promises.

HB 120 (Short Title: Public Municipal Campaigns) would grant city councils with population in excess of 50,000, the option of initiating taxpayer-financed campaigns for municipal election campaigns in their city.

Often referred to as “clean elections” or “voter-owned elections,” this system of government coercion is hailed as a silver bullet for all that ails our political system.

Advocates of taxpayer-financed campaigns claim it will eliminate the corrupting influence of special interest groups, encourage more candidates to run for public office, and help citizens feel that their vote matters.

Experience, however, proves these expected results never materialize.

Failed Experiment in Arizona

Taxpayer-Funded Campaigns Do Not Decrease Special Interest Influence, May Actually Increase the Influence of Special Interest Groups

Taxpayer-subsidized campaigns do not improve the public’s confidence in government

Conclusion
In light of a struggling economy, high unemployment and budget deficits for local governments across the state, North Carolina lawmakers should not seek to take more money from taxpayers to fill their campaign coffers. In short, House Bill 120 would merely expand a welfare program for politicians, forcing citizens to subsidize ideas they may completely oppose. 

Thomas Jefferson once declared, “To compel a man to furnish funds for the propagation of ideas he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.”

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