The Far Right Fights Back Against Democratic Elections
>
When we started DWT the theme had a lot to do with exposing corrupt political hacks like Duke Cunningham, Bob Ney, Tom DeLay, Conrad Burns, Ted Stevens, Jack Abramoff, Jerry Lewis, Duncan Hunter, etc. Of that lot only Lewis is still in DC, DeLay, Conrad and Hunter seem to have avoided prison, and the Justice Department felt sorry for Ted Stevens-- an in-crowd Beltway good ole boy-- and let him off. There are still plenty of corrupt elected officials wasting billions of taxpayer dollars to enrich themselves and finance their political careers. This week we looked at WalMart's senator, the execrable Blanche Lincoln (D-AR), at crazed and on-the-take wingnut Virginia Foxx (R-NC), at lobbyist-owned Kendrick Meek (D-FL), and at the systematic payoffs by Big Pharma and HMOs for shills like John McCain (R-AZ- $8,595,609), Arlen Specter (R-PA- $3,914,733), Max Baucus (D-MT- $2,797,381), Miss McConnell (R-KY- $2,723,168), Joe Lieberman (I-CT- $2,373,119), Orrin Hatch (R-UT- $2,311,744), Lamar Alexander (R-TN- $2,056,558), Richard Burr (R-NC- $2,039,094) and John Cornyn (R-TX- $1,994,353), all working diligently to make sure universal health care will never become a reality in our country.
Today Politico published an opinion piece by virulent anti-democracy Bush Regime shill Hans von Spakovsky, that asks a simple, and highly misleading question: Should taxpayers subsidize pols? What von Spakovsky misses-- quite purposefully-- is that taxpayers do subsidize pols. When Duke Cunningham, Don Young, Jerry Lewis, Tom DeLay, Jack Murtha, Roy Blunt, Thad Cochran, William Jefferson or John Boehner is selling earmarks worth millions for thousands, who is subsidizing that? Duke Cunningham's cars and mansions and yachts and whores cost the taxpayers millions and millions of dollar in earmarks through Jerry Lewis' incredibly corrupt Defense Appropriations Committee. Some estimates are as high as $100 billion dollars a year-- a year-- as the cost of corruption in Congress alone. We bear those costs!
It costs at least a million dollars to run for a House seat, sometimes five times that, and over ten million to run for a Senate seat. Those elections are largely financed by special interests with very specific agendas. The biggest special interest that's gone into perverting our electoral system has been the $2.2 BILLION (since 1990) by the FIRE (Finance/insurance/real estate) sector. What did they want? Deregulation so they could rip off the public. What did they get? TRILLIONS of dollars worth of deregulation. And what did we get? The Bush Depression. Von Spakovsky is a clown to miss the point-- or to try to hold up a bright shiny object to make his readers miss the point.
His complaint is the Fair Elections Now Act that was introduced this week by Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Arlen Spector (R-PA). There's a similar bill sponsored by John Larson (D-CT) and Walter Jones (R-NC) wending its way through the House.
This bill would allow candidates to opt into a public funding program if they raised a minimal amount of money from home-state residents. This proposal resembles the current public funding program for presidential primaries. But serious White House contenders have recently eschewed that program because it provides nothing near the amount necessary to run a nationwide campaign. And there is no indication that the proposed program for congressional candidates would be any better.
The key difference between Durbin’s congressional proposal and the existing presidential matching system is that the funding for the chief executive races is completely voluntary-- via taxpayer check-offs on tax returns. Durbin would fund his new program by taxing government contractors. [And Larson's would be funded by broadcast spectrum sales by the Federal Communications Commission.]
Those shilling for the rich and powerful, like von Spakovsky, object, strenuously. "Taxing government contractors or using spectrum sales may sound innocuous, but it will simply make government more expensive, giving taxpayers less bang for their buck. Contractors will necessarily incorporate the cost of the tax into their government bids, effectively passing the costs on to the Treasury. Using spectrum sales for political campaigns will also take away revenues that would otherwise fund existing government programs or reduce the deficit, robbing Peter to pay Paul. Durbin may call it a tax on contractors, and Larson may believe spectrum sales are free money, but both concepts are ultimately a tax increase for rank-and-file taxpayers."
Von Spakovsky is, as usual, wrong about everything. The amounts set for the Senate bill, for example, would provide enough money so that roughly 80 to 85% would have approximately as much or more money (should they work hard to seek small donors) than they had the last time they ran and won. On the House side, the figures are set by what the average cost to win was across the entire country (with a one-time reduction of 20% because of the savings in fundraising costs)-- which means most candidates will have more than what they’re used to-- and again, those who continue to raise small donations will have as much as they’ve had in the past. Either bill would provide a competitive edge for virtually every candidate who does the hard work to seek small donations from regular people, not lobbyists or big money donors.
Historically, the right, has done all they could to minimize the role of ordinary working people in elections. For rightists like von Spakovsky, decisions should be made by the wealthiest people-- only and anything that removes power from their hands is problematic. He may talk and "significant constitutional concerns"-- the Supreme Court's misguided application of the First Amendment giving the wealthy the right to buy elections-- but the real problem for him, and for all anti-democracy types, is that by taking Big Money out of electoral politics, you remove the clout that the rich wield. If a shady character like Blanche Lincoln wasn't so dependent on WalMart and the Walton family, do you think she would be joining a disreputable neo-fascist like Jon Kyl to try to abolish the estate tax?
There is only one way-- short of hanging every right winger-- to solve the grave problems that face our country: campaign finance reform; the real stuff. Money is the root of all evil and in politics it begets corrupt government, regardless of party. Tobacco lobbyist and congressmember, John Boehner (R-OH) rarely gets anything right and when, he does, it's for the wrong reasons but today he used a phrase that should be forever linked to his name:
Labels: bribery, campaign finance reform, Culture of Corruption, Dick Durbin, Fair Elections Now Act, Von Spakovsky
2 Comments:
Enough is enough.
Well said.
Christopher Hamilton
The Right Opinion, for the Right Wing
Seems to be that the corporate owned media is a huge part of the equation as well. Takes a lot of work to see through all the lies on both the right and the left, and people just do not have the energy to do their own homework.
Want to eliminate corruption and the current tyranny coming out of Washington for the benefit of Wall Street? Got to tear the whole system down. The criminal Central government needs to be scraped and the power needs to be returned to the States and the local communities. By breaking up the power structure you help prevent so much power being centralized and becoming tyranical. People can always move away from a corrupt state or city, but there is no escape from the USA.
Post a Comment
<< Home