91. Both Gore and McCain favor a ban on the largely unregulated political contributions known as soft money.
92. Both parties use soft money to finance advertising campaigns virtually indistinguishable from those financed by hard money.
93. Both political parties have used soft money to influence presidential and congressional elections.
94. Both the Democratic and Republican Parties, which can accept soft money, continue to outspend the Bush and Gore campaigns.
95. Both the GOP and the Democratic Party decided to use soft money this year to pay for issue ads.
96. Bush favors banning soft money from corporations and labor unions, but not from individuals.
97. Bush finance officials last week denied that they had begun to raise soft money, or that they had even begun to discuss how to do it.
98. Bradley supports an end to soft money.
99. Bush has said he does not favor soft money restrictions, because he does not trust the Democrats to abide by them.
100. Bush also produced his own campaign finance package which would ban soft money from corporations and labor unions but still allow such unlimited contributions from individual donors.