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Ah, so this is about populists messaging and not the fact that money does have a huge effect on American politics?Money has an influence, it's just more subtle and complex than the narrative populists tend to present. It makes people assume that inaction =/= corruption.
populist make it seem like there are all these good things that COULD be happening but they are simply aren't happening because of corrupt influence.
For major political and policy questions I think this basically isn't true. Lobbying influence is strongest in the policy details, or in realms the public doesn't care about like foreign policy.
the main thing holding up major policy question from being resolved is the filibuster and the geographic bias of the senate.
Ah, so this is about populists messaging and not the fact that money does have a huge effect on American politics?
Lobbying affects so many facets of American life, from healthcare to pharma to big tech to agriculture/food. It’s not overstated at all.
We can look comparatively to comparatively to the EU and see a massive difference in what chemicals are banned in their foods, what data protections they have for their citizens, etc.
Yea, but the issue here is that the lobbies are so strong that it’s dead before you even get to the veto points that you’re talking about.If someone runs on doing removing xyz from food it's harder to not fulfill the promises as a politicians, because its within your power to make it happen.
Elon Musk sparks backlash in Germany after calling the chancellor an 'incompetent fool' and backing the far-right AfD party
Musk called for German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to "resign immediately" in response to an attack on a Christmas market in Magdeburg.www.yahoo.com
Elon has 2 months to use Twitter and his money to sway the elections in Germany. Nearly limitless financial resources and influence with elected leaders, he’s really turning into a super villain.
How?my original post was talking about being tired of overwrought populist narratives about money in politics.
It has an effect on American politics, but way less than the the populist would have you believe. Never said it had no effect, the effects is vastly overstated and over simplified.
This difference here is structural, parliamentary systems make it so that your vote as a citizen is much more connected to legislative outcomes.
If someone runs on doing removing xyz from food it's harder to not fulfill the promises as a politicians, because its within your power to make it happen.
In the USA there are so many veto points you can't address stuff the public wants addressed. so it leads to this perception that corruption is what's stopping it.
you could repeal citizens united tomorrow, you'd have most of the same problems.
By law, major presidential candidates in France may not spend more than 22.5 million Euros (about $25 million) on their campaigns. We in the United States have no such limits.
Not only does French law limit the total amount a presidential candidate may raise and spend, the government reimburses nearly half (47.5 percent) of campaign expenditures. That means only half of election funding comes from private donors. The cap on the amount an individual can donate is larger in France (4,600 Euros), but in the United States wealthy individual donors can easily circumvent our $2,900 cap by making unlimited contributions to political action committees and parties that support their candidate.
In the United States, it is perfectly legal for corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts of money to support a candidate. In France, corporate and trade union contributions are illegal. The U.S., like France, has disclosure requirements so the public can see who is funding campaigns, but there is a gaping loophole in U.S law due to our tolerance of corporate donations. Ultra-wealthy donors quickly learned to hide contributions behind the veil of political purpose nonprofit corporations known as 501(c)(4)s, which do not have to disclose their donors – so-called dark money. We simply do not know who is funding many campaigns and political causes in the United States.
Over the past 40 years, while France and other democracies in Western Europe have adopted stricter campaign spending limits, the U.S. Supreme Court has taken America in the opposite direction by severely limiting lawmakers’ ability to set such limits. The court’s rationale is that money is speech and limits on money in our democracy, for any reason other than to prevent the crime of bribery, violate the First Amendment’s free speech clause.
French law handles the conflict between speech and money by striking a balance between the democratic values of la liberte and l'equalite. One value is not more important than the other. The French believe strongly that candidates and citizens have a right to speak to voters – $25 million is not nothing – but they believe just as strongly in creating as level a playing field as possible for candidates and ideas. Money creates an advantage, so it must be limited. The U.S. Supreme Court, by contrast, believes that liberty under the free speech clause trumps an equal opportunity for candidates or ideas in our political system. Roberts explicitly rejected the concept of a level playing field in a 2014 case that opened the floodgates to unlimited contributions from individuals to political parties and PACs, writing: “No matter how desirable it may seem, it is not an acceptable governmental objective to ‘level the playing field,’ or to ‘level electoral opportunities’ or ‘equaliz[e] the financial resources of candidates.’”
Most of the money in our elections comes from less than half of 1 percent of the population, a majority of whom reside in a dozen wealthy ZIP codes. A plutocracy is not government by We the People.
USA TODAY and the Republic found at least 10,000 bills almost entirely copied from model legislation were introduced nationwide in the past eight years, and more than 2,100 of those bills were signed into law.
The investigation examined nearly 1 million bills in all 50 states and Congress using a computer algorithm developed to detect similarities in language. That search – powered by the equivalent of 150 computers that ran nonstop for months – compared known model legislation with bills introduced by lawmakers.
The phenomenon of copycat legislation is far larger. In a separate analysis, the Center for Public Integrity identified tens of thousands of bills with identical phrases, then traced the origins of that language in dozens of those bills across the country.
Warner: Now, Lee, what we've pointed out is that the company that helped write this language is also a donor to the Congressman in question. Is that unusual?
Drutman: No, I don't think that's unusual either. Look, to run for office now requires millions of dollars and so, a lot of interested parties become donors. I mean, that's like buying a ticket to the party, right? You know, buy a ticket to the main event. If you want to be taken seriously by a congressional office, you want to make sure that you've contributed as one lobbyist has put it, to show respect for the process, right? If you don't, if you haven't made a donation, other people will get in the door first.
I actually like that movie. Samuel L as Hondo worked.