http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/17/new-ad-brings-tea-party-progressives-together/
9/17/2010 8:58:12 PM
Looks like it made it out of committee alive & well http://www.commoncause.org/site/apps/nlnet/content2.aspx?c=dkLNK1MQIwG&b=4773613&ct=8669637
9/23/2010 5:51:43 PM
I read the summary, and I'm still not fully sure of how it works. First of all, who pays for this funding? It says a "small fee on large government contractors." I don't get that. Shouldn't contracts be going out to whatever private entity can provide the best service at the lowest cost to the taxpayer? Why should a government contractor have to pay a fee, what do they even have to do with the electoral process? How does the media cost reduction work? The government just pays 20% of the tab?I'm also not seeing how this funding is really going to solve anything. It may allow some people that lack funds to get more funding than they would have been able to before, should they qualify for the program. Problem is, there's nothing stopping a Linda McMahon from spending tens of millions of dollars on a primary. I don't think we'll have "fair elections" until there's a major shift in terms of what the government is allowed to do. Becoming a career politician is far too lucrative under the current model.
9/23/2010 7:46:14 PM
9/23/2010 10:29:19 PM
http://www.democracy-nc.org/news/blog/2010/10/04/monday-october-4-2010/
10/5/2010 2:34:27 AM
10/5/2010 8:58:22 AM
10/5/2010 9:23:02 AM
lol @ the idea that laundering campaign funds through non-profits is a new thing.
10/5/2010 9:46:03 AM
10/5/2010 9:49:12 AM
10/5/2010 10:20:23 AM
Suspicious . . . as is most anything involving congress self-regulating their own electoral process (or that Supplanter is excited about)
10/5/2010 11:08:16 AM
I'm sure there have been lobbyists trying to get Congress to "look the other way," i.e. subvert justice, and I'm certain they've been successful. If some person, or business, is getting a free pass to violate rights, then our government has failed us.Most lobbyists are not openly pushing for that, though. They're looking for legislation - new programs, new funding, new subsidies, new special benefits that the average person doesn't receive. It's too easy. You support a candidate financially, get them into office, and that candidate (on his own accord, of course) throws in a special subsidy/program/whatever in the next 3,000 page omnibus bill. No one will know about it, because no one reads it. If we used the Constitution, this wouldn't be an issue, but we don't, so it is. Stealing more money to pay for election funding doesn't resolve the core issue.
10/5/2010 11:12:47 AM
10/5/2010 11:21:19 AM
Overturn Citizens United!
10/5/2010 12:51:01 PM
the Citizens United decision was one of the better ones the SCOTUS has made in recent years. I'm all for overturning the two decisions that recognized corporations as persons, but so long as they are they have the unfortunate right to contribute to political campaigns like anyone else.Also, few know this, but when Roger Stone formed Citizens United it's full title was Citizens United Not Threatened. Interesting acronym considering it's primary target.
10/5/2010 1:09:42 PM
lol at indy's many rollie eyes, followed by an oh yeah, you did talk about/make a thread about ballot access too
10/5/2010 2:57:41 PM
10/5/2010 3:37:32 PM
10/5/2010 3:52:12 PM
10/5/2010 4:30:34 PM
Replacing the current vote system with an instant runoff system would fix more problems than campaign finance "reform".
10/5/2010 8:44:31 PM
^Agreed 100%$*!!
10/5/2010 10:00:55 PM
http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/10/04/720439/officials-from-5-states-fight.html
10/5/2010 10:33:32 PM
10/5/2010 11:17:44 PM
10/5/2010 11:41:13 PM
If you're going to separate "people" from "special interests", then I have to point out that its much easier for "special interests" to lobby government than "people.Changing the size/scope of government won't change the power special interests have over it.
10/6/2010 11:24:27 AM
Corporations should not be allowed to influence elections and lobbying on the hill needs to be ended. None of those by the way will ever happen.
10/6/2010 12:32:25 PM
10/6/2010 12:55:45 PM
I won't when I am King.
10/6/2010 1:04:14 PM
^^The only way to buy an election is to pay or arrange to rig it.If the vote-counting is fair, and someone says the election was "bought" - there has to be more than one player.That is, if the votes are tallied correctly, the voters sold their vote. You can't buy something without there being a seller. And any society that does not have enough free-thinking, educated folks to resist what those corporations/parties can buy (ads, tv shows, etc.) is pretty screwed anyway. Ultimately, voters are the problem. The drug problem in America cannot be solved by attacking supply. Political corruption cannot be stopped by regulating supply. In both cases, it's the demand that needs to be addressed, or no change is possible. Fine - get rid of corporate lobbying, two-party-only ballot access, or any other "evil," and the difference will only be cosmetic. Re-arranging deck chairs on the Titanic, so to speak. Americans are easy to fool, quick to tolerate corruption, etc.....fix that, and we've got something.
10/6/2010 1:40:42 PM
OK lets just fix human nature. That's a realistic approach.
10/6/2010 1:42:43 PM
10/6/2010 2:25:26 PM
10/6/2010 2:27:44 PM
Perhaps that would be a good start
10/6/2010 2:31:42 PM
and that's necessary.....how?
10/6/2010 2:32:24 PM
10/6/2010 2:36:19 PM
^Ban campaign advertising. Still give them equal time on news programs.Just a list of names on a ballot.
10/6/2010 2:49:15 PM
Then how would you decide who gets on the list; who gets air-time?
10/6/2010 3:04:15 PM
EVERYONE
10/6/2010 3:04:49 PM
Truly inspired
10/6/2010 3:07:32 PM
I think Congress should feel more like jury duty. Not in the sense that people would be picked randomly from a pool, though. Congress shouldn't need to convene more than a few times a year. It wouldn't be as glamorous, as it'd go back to a true "civil service" position. The federal government should be limited to its basic functions, and if it were, no one would be spending 50 million to buy a Senate seat. Representatives would continue working in whatever profession they did, taking off a few weeks a year to take care of business. You wouldn't have multiple cable news networks running 24/7 reporting on federal policy, because federal policy would be limited to mundane administrative tasks that no one cared too much about. You could have term limits, and no one would be running for re-election, or voting as if they were.That would be an ideal situation, I think. Politician should never be a viable profession, because as long as it is, politicians will be acting in a way that benefits them and their friends, rather than the country at large.
10/6/2010 3:55:20 PM
Direct and frequent internet elections on all major legislation. Relegate the politicians to secretaries that package the bills but do little else.And of course ban advertising.
10/6/2010 4:47:41 PM
Replace the speaker of the house with a unicorn. Chewbacca for minority whip!
10/8/2010 10:44:06 AM
"Despite complaints, Democrats still far outspending Republicans in midterm elections"http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1010/44216.html#ixzz13XffUM2Q
10/27/2010 9:16:48 PM
how is that even possible when those evil corporations are buying the elections for republicans now?
10/27/2010 9:19:31 PM