Congressional Digest

Congressional Digest October 1998 No. 10 Vol. 77
The Cost of U.S. Elections

Campaign Finance Reform

The Debate Over Money and Politics

The Cost of U.S. Elections

Campaign Spending and Related Issues

Since the mid-1970s, the limits on contributions by individuals, political action committees (PACs), and parties, and an absence of congressional spending limits, have governed the flow of money in congressional elections. Throughout the 1980s and much of the 1990s, the two paramount issues raised by campaign finance practices were the phenomena of, first, rising campaign costs and the large amounts of money needed for elections and, second, the substantial reliance on PACs as a source of funding. Concerns were also voiced, by political scientists and the Republican congressional minority, over a third issue: the level of electoral competition, as affected…

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