Sunday, March 29, 2015

Congressman Patrick Murphy shows President Obama dirty St. Lucie River water, but will he take "the no money from Big Sugar pledge"? … by gimleteye

When President Obama stepped off Air Force One yesterday in St. Lucie, he was greeted by aspiring US senator Patrick Murphy holding a bottle of polluted water.
US Rep. Patrick Murphy clutching a jar of polluted water from the Indian River
"What have you brought me, a present?" President Obama quipped on the tarmac. In 2012 Congressman Murphy (D-Jupiter) narrowly defeated Republican lightening rod, Allen West, in the most costly US House race in history.

The real present would be for Congressman Murphy to announce that in his campaign to succeed Marco Rubio in the US Senate, he will be taking "the no money from Big Sugar pledge".
“In 2009, (sugar) crop producers spent more than $20.5 million on federal lobbying.” (“How Big Sugar Gets Its Way”, The Florida Independent, Sept. 11, 2011) That is the tip of the iceberg. Sugar producers and related industries cumulatively spend billions through dark money channels in political campaigns and “independent” expenditure committees supporting their candidates at all levels of government: from the smallest fry in Florida counties, to the state capitols wherever sugar can be grown. (“Koch-backed political coalition, designed to shield donors, raised $400 million in 2012″, Washington Post, 1/7/2014) Sugar money in American politics disappears through the figments of campaign finance law and filaments of law enforcement. The United States is that special snow flake fallen on a pile of white sugar, melted golden by corporations more powerful than people.
"The Killer Politics of Big Sugar", Counterpunch, Jan 10 2014

Marco Rubio and Jeb Bush, both, won office thanks to massive inputs of campaign cash from Big Sugar.

Who will be Florida's first state-wide politician to reject Big Sugar's polluted campaign contributions?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Stuart News OPED, August 2013

Stuart News Editorial

The seeming hypocrisy is infuriating.

Big Sugar has been one of the biggest impediments to the creation of the best viable, long-term solution to the discharges of polluted water from Lake Okeechobee into the St. Lucie River and Indian River Lagoon. That solution? A flow-way south of the lake to carry water into and through the Everglades to Florida Bay.

Not only does Big Sugar own and control huge tracts of land in the Everglades Agriculture Area south of Lake O it also receives federal price supports, quota and tariffs that artificially prop up sugar prices.
Not only does Big Sugar own and control huge tracts of land in the Everglades Agriculture Area south of Lake O it also receives federal price supports, quota and tariffs that artificially prop up sugar prices.
That solution would be as close to the way Mother Nature had it plumbed before people messed it up.

Not only does Big Sugar own and control huge tracts of land in the Everglades Agriculture Area south of Lake O – land necessary to create a flow-way – it also receives federal price supports, quota and tariffs that artificially prop up sugar prices.

Big Sugar greases the skids of this process by actively contributing to the election campaigns of political candidates and incumbents in Congress. Then, when price supports, quotas and tariffs come up for a vote, our elected officials are more than willing to do the bidding for Big Sugar.

Recently, when an effort was made in the U.S. House to limit the sugar program, only three of Florida’s 27 House members voted to enact the limitations. The amendment died, 206-221. Both Sens. Marco Rubio, a Republican, and Bill Nelson, a Democrat, helped kill a comparable amendment in the Senate.

Not surprisingly, all but two members of the state’s U.S. House delegation have taken sugar campaign money since 2007. (Freshman Rep. Patrick Murphy, D-Jupiter, is a member of this small minority, yet he has not ruled out taking donations in the future.) Both Nelson and Rubio have accepted political donations from Big Sugar.

Coincidence? Hardly.

The relationship between Big Sugar and politicians gives the appearance of a quid pro quo – you scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours.

At the state legislative level, many political candidates and incumbents are more than willing to accept donations from the sugar industry.

At least $57,750 of the millions of dollars donated last year by U.S. Sugar, Florida Crystals Corp. and their subsidiaries went directly to the campaigns of legislative candidates from Martin, St. Lucie and Indian River counties, according to a report by Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers. Additionally, the sugar industry gave $728,500 to political committees associated with Sens. Joe Negron, R-Stuart, and Denise Grimsley, R-Sebring, who represent parts of the Treasure Coast.

WANTED: a new generation of state and federal lawmakers willing to reject political contributions from the sugar industry.

We ask again: Who will be the first politician in our region to hold a press conference and announce he/she is rejecting any and all contributions from Big Sugar?

We’ll be watching.

We hope readers will, too.

It’s worth noting Martin County’s Democratic Executive Committee announced recently it will no longer support or endorse state legislative, county commission or other local candidates who have accepted campaign donations from the sugar industry. The committee’s view is welcome, yet it rarely fields a full slate of candidates.

Ultimately, we – the voters – bear the responsibility for charting a new course. As long as we continue returning elected officials to office who accept political contributions from Big Sugar, we will continue getting what we always have gotten: Huge volumes of polluted water in our river, estuary and lagoon.

(From the Stuart News)

Anonymous said...

Let's hear Sunshine State News come out and state unequivocally that it takes no money from Big Sugar or from sources that act as pass-through entities from Big Sugar.

Anonymous said...

Even though Patrick Murphy has had some questionable votes since he has been in congress we need to support him. If he follows through on just the issues of fixing Florida's polluted waters and pushing big sugar out of the way he will be a hero.