Reform the FEC to protect democracy

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

On Aug. 7, the United States intelligence community issued a dire warning — Russia and China are actively interfering with the world’s oldest democratic system. The two global superpowers are using rudimentary techniques, like fake Twitter accounts and bogus news stories, to sway the American populace for their own agenda in advance of the 2020 presidential election.

This seepage of lies into our democracy is a now all-too-familiar nightmare, one we’ve come to ignore. Indeed, we failed to pay attention to the 2019 Mueller report, which highlighted the failure of critical domestic institutions to ensure a legitimate electoral process.

Now we approach a presidential election that is sure to be tainted, just as it was in 2016. There’s no doubt that electoral reform is necessary, but who’s protecting American democracy in the meantime?

The simple answer is the Federal Electoral Commission. The FEC was created in 1975 with the goal of adequately enforcing campaign finance law in a bipartisan manner shortly after the Watergate break-in. This is a critical institution, and one that would enforce some of the solutions to election tampering.

Yet, shockingly, the commission on which U.S. democracy itself rests is in complete shambles. Just months before the 2020 election, only three members reside on the FEC’s board, and three seats are vacant. One member, Ellen Weintraub, is still serving on the board more than a decade after her term has expired due to the lack of a confirmed replacement.

As foreign governments, namely Vladimir Putin’s Russia, aim to hijack online political advertising to sway the election, a dormant FEC shows America’s electoral vulnerability. Corporate entities, like Facebook and Twitter, have disproportionate influence on the voting public, and regulation is currently impossible with an executive branch chronically disinterested in protecting American democracy.

One cannot expect for-profit social media companies to self-police. Mark Zuckerberg, in a 2019 editorial for The Washington Post, asked for federal regulation himself, calling for increased restriction on commercial speech and a definition of political ads.

Efforts to bolster the safety of America’s electoral process have all proved futile. A bipartisan proposal named the Honest Ads Act has failed to come to a vote in either chamber of Congress, nearly three years after it was introduced. When a call to regulate social media companies came up at the FEC in 2016, the partisan members couldn’t reach a majority consensus.

Our normally steadfast American institutions failed us in 2016. They are sure to fail us again in 2020, regardless of who wins the presidency. With our own eyes, we saw past election interference and stood pat for four years. Now, as we approach the 2020 election, we’re standing in the dark, and have yet to flip the ever-so obvious switch.

There’s simply no denying that the longest-standing democracy in the world is currently under attack. The foundations on which our republic has stood on for centuries are being eaten away by the termites of corporate greed and domestic inaction. We must use our power to fix them while the fight is still winnable.