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The Shays-Meehan bill would ban soft money -- unregulated, unlimited funds to political parties -- and it would raise the limit on hard money contributions to individual candidates.
CNN: Supporters vow to vote on campaign finance reform
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The Shays-Meehan bill, like the McCain-Feingold legislation, would ban soft money -- unregulated, unlimited funds to political parties -- and would raise the limit on hard money contributions to individual candidates.
CNN: House to take up campaign finance reform
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What about the consultant who says or implies that the client can only soft dollar its bill with its affiliated broker-dealer and no other firm?
FORBES: Consultants With Affiliated Broker-Dealers: How Independent Is Their Advice? (April 1, 1996 )
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As would the McCain-Feingold bill, Shays-Meehan would for the most part ban unregulated, soft-money donations to the major parties.
CNN: Campaign finance reform dies in House for now
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Like the McCain-Feingold bill in the Senate, Shays-Meehan would ban unregulated, "soft money" donations to the major parties.
CNN: House members cast eyes toward finance debate
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Though both support the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform bill banning soft money, Clinton supported public financing for campaigns, while Lazio criticized it as "welfare for politicians" and said a candidate's ability to raise money should be viewed as a measure of support.
CNN: Clinton hits Lazio over campaign reform in New York debate
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His interest in overhauling the campaign-finance system continued with his support of the McCain-Feingold Senate bill, which introduced bans on soft money to national parties.
NPR: Thompson on Heels of Frontrunners, Adviser Says
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The Shays-Meehan bill would, for the most part, ban unregulated, soft money donations to the major parties.
CNN: Campaign finance sponsors vow to continue
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The "anti-Bloomberg" bill simply assures consumers freedom of choice on what food and what size soft drinks they want to buy, and which restaurants they want to patronize.
CNN: 'Anti-Bloomberg' bill stops overregulation
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In the summer of 1975 a Harvard junior, Bill Gates, drove to Albuquerque and with his friend Paul Allen started a company, Micro-Soft, to write an operating system called BASIC for the Altair 8800.
FORBES: Magazine Article