'Traditionally in American history,
politics is like a seesaw: When one side is up the other side is
down,” said Peter Wehner, a former aide to President George W.
Bush. “Now it's as if the seesaw is broken; the public is
distrustful of both parties.” Wall Street Journal (11-04-14)
“Follow the money” is
a seemingly simple, but telling popular prescription for discerning
people's motives, a slogan made popular by literature and movies.
But it is more than that.
It is also a useful key to unlocking the mysteries of social
processes and institutions. In a society that affixes a monetary
worth on everything, including opinions, ideas, and personal values,
tracking dollars and cents becomes one of the best guides to our
understanding of events unfolding around us.
Take elections, for
example.
Every high school Civics
class teaches that elections are the highest expression of democratic
practices. Apart from the direct democracy of legend-- the New
England town meeting or the Swiss canton assemblies-- organized
secret-ballot-style elections count as the democratic ideal deeply
embedded in every US school-age child's mind.
Let's put aside the
arrogant high hypocrisy of US and European politicians and pundits
who deride secret ballots when they result in the election of a
Chavez, Morales, Maduro, or Correa. That will make for a juicy topic
on another occasion.
Instead, let's examine
what the flow of money tells us about the gold standard of democracy
as celebrated in Europe and the US.
Surely, no one would deny
that money has a profound effect upon election outcomes. That comes
as old news. Even before the dominance of party politics, even before
the evolution of party politics into two-party politics, money played
a critical factor in advantaging issues, campaigns, and candidates.
To the extent that mass
engagement-- rallies, outreach, canvassing, etc.-- could match or
even trump both the corrupting and opinion-changing power of money,
electoral democracy maintained an aura of legitimacy. To be sure,
buying elections seems a nasty business, but as long as elections
remained highly contested extravaganzas drawing interest and
engagement, credibility remains intact.
New and changing
technologies cast a lengthening shadow over the electoral process.
News and entertainment media, like radio, were only too happy to take
advertising dollars to promote electoral campaigns. At the same time,
these technologies eroded the efficacy of traditional campaigns
reliant upon campaign workers' sweat and shoe leather.
With television and now
the internet, the power of media and media dollars has grown
exponentially. It has hardly gone unnoticed that these shifts have
amplified the power of money and diminished the traditional
get-out-the-vote efforts of unions, civil rights, and other people's
organizations.
Most recently, the Supreme
Court's Citizens United decision has opened the spigot of
unregulated cash into elections, further overwhelming any counter
forces to the outright purchase of candidates and election results.
Readers may find nothing
new here. The sordid story of money's corrupting and deflecting
influence has certainly been told before, as has the pat remedy
offered by reformers. To return to the halcyon days of US electoral
democracy is simply a matter of establishing financial limits on
campaigns and campaign contributions. By leveling and limiting the
electoral playing field, we can restore the legitimacy tainted by
money.
Unfortunately, this
idealistic solution will itself be overpowered by the power of money.
The traditional forces in US politics are not unhappy with buying and
selling political power, except insofar as their own money is not put
at a disadvantage.
But the reformist panacea
would not work even if it were implemented. Advocates of campaign
financial reform fail to see that capitalism and informed,
independent, and authentically democratic electoral processes are
incompatible. Capitalism, unerringly and universally, erodes and
smothers democracy. Eliminating, even significantly, reducing the
power of money in politics under a capitalist system is an
impossibility. The historical trajectory goes the other way.
A Broken
System
Since
the New Deal era, political partisanship and the accompanying flow of
money was linked to Party politics. Corporations and the wealthy gave
generously to opponents of the New Deal, the Republican Party. To a
great extent, the people power (and significant independent money) of
unions and other progressive organizations served as an adequate
counterweight to the resources of the rich and powerful. The
Democratic Party enjoyed the benefits of this practice.
The
television and money-driven election of JF Kennedy in 1960 marked a
watershed in both the diminution of issue relevancy and the
maturation of political marketing. Money and the advertising and
marketing attention that money bought moved to center stage. Key
chains, buttons and inscribed pens were replaced by multimillion
dollar television advertisements in the buying of election outcomes.
In
1964, the organic link between the money of wealth and power and the
Republican Party began to stretch with the campaign of Barry
Goldwater. So called “liberal Republicans” of the East Coast
establishment recoiled from what they perceived as extremism, leaving
Goldwater's campaign treasuries to be filled by the extreme right's
wealthy godfathers in the Southwestern and Western US (The looney
right rebounded to Goldwater's loss by investing heavily in rallying
and expanding the 26 million Goldwater voter base and by buying a
broader, louder, but less shrill voice in the media; that project
paid off handsomely by 1980).
While
it is understandable that donors would spend to their interests--
support candidates of shared ideology-- things began to change with
the Democratic Party's retreat from New Deal economic thinking, the
general decline of traditional Party politics, and the rise of the
politics of celebrity and personality. With advertising and marketing
domination of electoral campaigns, constructing an attractive
personal narrative replaced issues and accomplishments-- contrived
image replaced content.
Today,
the two-party system holds electoral politics in its tight grip. And
issue-driven politics has been replaced by the politics of flag pins,
winning smiles and a “wholesome” family.
Undoubtedly,
the decline of substance in politics further encouraged the activity
of sleazy lobbyists and influence peddling. Politicians are not
faced with the conflict of principles against powerful interests
because electoral politics have turned away from principles.
We
see the cynicism of principle in the Republican Party's rejection of
its ideological zealots. So called “Tea Party” radicals sat well
with the Republican corporate leaders when they were energizing
electoral campaigns, but the zealots were challenged after setbacks
in 2012. Today, the Republican corporate god fathers are making every
effort to temper party radicalism in order to insure the only
important principle: electability.
The
Democratic Party, on the other hand, simply ignores its left wing,
treating it alternately as an embarrassment or a stepchild. It is
this trivialization of principle and ideology that channels the flow
of money today.
Barren
Politics
This
election cycle has revealed something new: Democrats are raising more
money from corporate interests for their campaigns than the
traditionally dominant Republicans. This process began before the
2006 elections, accelerated sharply in the Presidential elections,
strengthened in the early primaries and continued into 2008. In
March, 2008, McCain gained somewhat on his Democratic rivals, but
still fell well below the total raised by the two Democrats.
Within the Democratic camp, Clinton dominated most corporate contributions until 2008, when Obama enjoyed big gains, pushing ahead through March especially in the key industries of finance, lawyers/lobbyists, communications and health.
Wall Street has strongly supported the Democratic candidates over the Republicans. Through the end of 2007, seven of the big 8 financial firms (Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan Chase, UBS, and Credit Suisse) showed a decided preference towards the Democrats. Only Merrill Lynch gave more to Republicans, though they gave the single most to Clinton. The Wall Street Journal (2-3/4-08), while noting that Obama receives a notable number of contributions from small donors, pointed out that “…even for Sen. Obama, the finance industry was still the richest source of cash overall…”
Through February, Obama led the other candidates in contributions from the pharmaceutical industry and was in a virtual dead heat with Clinton with respect to the energy sector.
These numbers strongly suggest that candidates, especially Democratic Party candidates, are unlikely to challenge their corporate sponsors in any meaningful way.
Within the Democratic camp, Clinton dominated most corporate contributions until 2008, when Obama enjoyed big gains, pushing ahead through March especially in the key industries of finance, lawyers/lobbyists, communications and health.
Wall Street has strongly supported the Democratic candidates over the Republicans. Through the end of 2007, seven of the big 8 financial firms (Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan Chase, UBS, and Credit Suisse) showed a decided preference towards the Democrats. Only Merrill Lynch gave more to Republicans, though they gave the single most to Clinton. The Wall Street Journal (2-3/4-08), while noting that Obama receives a notable number of contributions from small donors, pointed out that “…even for Sen. Obama, the finance industry was still the richest source of cash overall…”
Through February, Obama led the other candidates in contributions from the pharmaceutical industry and was in a virtual dead heat with Clinton with respect to the energy sector.
These numbers strongly suggest that candidates, especially Democratic Party candidates, are unlikely to challenge their corporate sponsors in any meaningful way.
Clearly,
Corporate America was not afraid that Obama or Clinton would step on
their toes or even stand in their way. While the Republican message
and program were more overtly and adamantly pro-business, big
business was not trying to swing the election their way. While they
may have differed on social and even foreign policy questions, wealth
and power understood that the Democrats would not challenge them on
any matters relevant to their business agenda. Six years after, they
appear to have been right.
Another
way to illustrate the uncoupling of corporate money from party
ideology is through the trend in corporate PACs to shovel money to
incumbents of either party: In 1978 corporate PACs gave 40% of their
contributions to House incumbents; in 2014, that number had leaped to
74%.
Corporations
are not trying to deliver a message; they are outright buying all
of the candidates.
With
respect to this year's November 4 interim election, corporate PACs
have shifted their support-- sometimes dramatically-- from Democrats
in key races to Republicans over the last 18 months (WSJ,
10-29-14). Obviously, neither the corporations nor the candidates
have changed their agendas greatly. So it's not about issues, but
electability.
It
should be transparent that two-party politics in the age of extreme
concentrations of wealth and media influence is far from a rousing
example of democratic process. Consequently, we should surely not
expect the results of the tainted process to be democratic. Like the
commercialization of commodities, the commercialization of politics
results eventually in the domination of the market by a few products
(parties, candidates) and the minimizing of their differences. We no
more pick our leaders than we pick the products offered in the
showroom. Corporate America picks them both.
Zoltan
Zigedy
zoltanzigedy@gmail.com
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