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Polluted Political Games


DKW 86

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http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/28/opinion/nicholas-kristof-polluted-political-games.html?ref=todayspaper&_r=0

I’ve admired
for years for its fine work on AIDS and global poverty, and I’ve moderated many panels at the annual Clinton Global Initiative.
of failed disclosures or the appearance of a conflict of interest from
of $500,000 for the former president, I have wondered:
What were they thinking?

But the problem is not precisely the Clintons. It’s our entire disgraceful money-based political system. Look around:

• Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey
from the Dallas Cowboys owner, Jerry Jones, who has business interests Christie can affect.

• Senator Marco Rubio of Florida has received financial assistance from a billionaire, Norman Braman, and
.

• Jeb Bush likely has delayed his formal candidacy because
with his “super PAC” and raising money for it. He is breaching at least the spirit of the law. When problems are this widespread, the problem is not crooked individuals but perverse incentives from a rotten structure.

“There is a systemic corruption here,” says Sheila Krumholz of the Center for Responsive Politics,
. “It’s kind of baked in.”

Most politicians are good people. Then they discover that money is the only fuel that makes the system work and sometimes step into the bog themselves.

Money isn’t a new problem, of course. John F. Kennedy was accused of using his father’s wealth to buy elections. In response, he joked that he had received the following telegram from his dad: “Don’t buy another vote. I won’t pay for a landslide!”

Yet Robert Reich, Bill Clinton’s labor secretary and now chairman of the national governing board of Common Cause, a nonpartisan watchdog group,
. Billionaires adopt presidential candidates as if they were prize racehorses. Yet for them, it’s only a hobby expense.

For example, Sheldon and Miriam Adelson donated $92 million to super PACs
; as a share of their net worth,
that was equivalent to $300 from the median American family.
So a multibillionaire can influence a national election for the same sacrifice an average family bears in, say, a weekend driving getaway.

Money doesn’t always succeed, of course, and billionaires often end up wasting money on campaigns.
,
Meg Whitman spent $43 per vote
in her failed campaign for governor of California in 2010, mostly from her own pocket. But
Michael Bloomberg won his 2009 re-election campaign for mayor of New York City after,
, spending $185 of his own money per vote.

The real bargain is lobbying — and that’s why
corporations spend 13 times as much lobbying as they do contributing to campaigns,
, author of a recent book on lobbying.

The health care industry
as there are members of Congress. That’s a shrewd investment. Drug company lobbyists have prevented Medicare from getting bulk discounts,
in extra profits for the sector.

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"But the problem is not precisely the Clintons. It’s our entire disgraceful money-based political system. Look around:"

Look around!

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Folks a billionaire can buy DC and he can do it for chump change...

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