Fogdog
Well-Known Member
I think a level playing field, where campaigns are driven by individual contributions that are held to a reasonably low limit is a good idea. Sanders introduced a bill in the Senate in 2014 that would have led to the repeal of the Citizen's United Ruling. Every Democratic Party Caucus senator supported it. The bill was killed because every Republican Senator did not.I'm amazed how you can say that all this money is a good thing when it's plain that it means politicians care even less about your needs than that of those who donated the cash.
But call me the delusional one...
For this reason, among others, ceding elections to Republicans is a really bad idea. There is absolutely no chance that Republicans will take the pledge to forego PAC and corporate money. NONE. Your theory that the public will flock to a liberal candidate if only he swore off PAC and corporate money is practically untested. There are a few election results that show this hypothesis is probably false. Sanders' own run in the Democratic Party primaries for one. A few others along with Sanders failed but not enough to conclusively say it is false. On the other hand, no election results to say it could be true.
I'm all for testing your hypothesis in the primaries. Let candidates decide for themselves, let the electorate choose the Democratic Party candidates to run against opposition parties and we'll see what happens.
I think we'll find that the "pledge" candidates get pasted in primaries. But maybe not. As I said, I'm OK with either result. Are you OK with this?
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