Michael B. Keegan

Michael B. Keegan

Posted: March 4, 2011 10:59 AM

Money has always bought influence in American politics. Rarely has it bought so much so quickly as it has over this last year.

One year after Citizens United v. FEC, when the Supreme Court opened American elections to a corporate spending free-for-all, elected officials in Washington and in statehouses around the country are pushing a stunning set of financial policies that, if passed, will provide a windfall for giant corporations at the expense of already-hurting individual taxpayers. Largely proposed under the guise of financial responsibility, these proposals threaten job creation and essential government services while ensuring the coffers of corporations remain untouched.

American taxpayers are beginning to fight back against some of the most egregious proposals, such as Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker's attempt to bust public employee unions and the House GOP's slashing of funding for women's health care. But as long as corporations can buy unlimited political influence, these battles will only escalate and they will continue to be just as lopsided.

In the coming weeks, we will see the interests of corporate funders and the interests of individual taxpayers go head-to-head as Congress and the president attempt to hammer out a continuing spending resolution that will keep the government running for the rest of the year. The Republican House wants to block funds to reproductive health services, gut the Affordable Care Act, and even prevent the Environmental Protection Bureau from regulating pollution -- all while costing an estimated 700,000 American jobs. The winners in the House's proposal? Large corporations and the wealthy, who under the proposal astoundingly would not even be asked to give up a single tax loophole.

This is not what American voters signed up for in 2010. But it is what corporate campaign spenders invested in. The 2010 elections were the most expensive midterm elections in American history, with an unprecedented amount of the money spent coming from outside groups that by a 2-1 margin supported right-wing candidates. These groups included a few social conservative stalwarts but most were organizations -- like the Chamber of Commerce, Americans for Prosperity, and American Crossroads -- intent on electing corporate-friendly candidates to federal office. Groups like the Chamber that did not disclose the sources of their funding supported these candidates by a whopping 6-1 margin.

This corporate influence in elections is not surprising -- it's simply the logical outcome of entities that are legally bound to act solely to maximize profits being allowed to have an outsized voice in democracy. And the corporate interests that spent money on the 2010 elections are seeing a powerful return on their investments: the federal and state officials who they helped elect are eagerly repaying the favor... all while hiding under the blanket of misinformation that corporate spending in 2010 helped to spread.

In December, shortly before the new Congress took its seats, Senate Republicans attempted to block a bill providing health coverage to first responders injured in their service after the 9/11 attacks. The bill, which was fully paid for by closing a tax loophole for foreign corporations, had a powerful enemy: the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which along with its blockbuster lobbying spending had just dropped $32 million to help elect a new Republican majority in the House and a stronger minority in the Senate. Eventually, public outcry was so strong that Senate Republicans dropped their hold on the bill. But the message it sent about their priorities was clear.

The 9/11 first responders issue was a clear-cut instance of the needs of corporations taking precedence over the needs of Americans. And that was just the tip of the iceberg. The corporate free-for-all continues as the new pro-corporate majority continues to cater to its funders but not its voters. While claiming to be working in the interests of "fiscal responsibility" the radically pro-corporate wing of the Republican Party is slashing the rights and opportunities of working Americans while letting big business get away scot free.

The relationship of money and power is nothing new to American politics. But never before has money had such power to spread misinformation, sway elections, and create a political system that works for the most powerful while ignoring the needs of the working and middle classes. Americans can fight each of these battles individually. But ultimately we need to fundamentally change our system so corporations are no longer entitled to all the influence they can buy.

 

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Gottlieb   09:14 PM on 3/05/2011
This is capitalism at its' finest. You make an investment and then get a return on your investment­. As much as corporatio­ns invest in electing their pet politician­s, their return is many orders of magnitude greater than the few hundreds of million dollars they invested in purchasing political power. There is risk and reward in capitalism but in this case there is no risk, just reward. This is what Carl Rove was talking about when he talked about the permanent Republican majority. I can feel the invisible magic hand of Adam Smith in my wallet as I type. American corporatio­ns are bound by law to do their fiduciary duty to maximize profits which is what we are seeing now. We see corporatio­ns adding to their bottom lines through investing in politician­s. Corporatio­ns are not breaking the law, they are buying the law. Too big to fail is the same as too big to prosecute. Say good bye to the rule of law and hello to the rule of corporatio­ns.
sharonsj   10:32 AM on 3/05/2011
Perhaps if we had a media that did its job and informed the public with real facts, the "low informatio­n voters" wouldn't keep slitting their own throats.
ancientuno   10:19 AM on 3/05/2011
Money (greed) is becoming the downfall of America. Congress is bought and paid by rich and Corporate America. The Supreme Court judges being appointed are in a sense bought and paid for by the political parties that appoint them. I am by no means anti capitalism­, but unregulate­d capitalism will be the downfall America. As long as America continues on it's current path, there will be two classes of people. The rich and the poor.
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mtrav   7 minutes ago (2:59 PM)
and that's the truth!
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Djabout Mauren   10:02 AM on 3/05/2011
"This is not what American voters signed up for in 2010." Actually, it's exactly what they signed up for. It's kind of amusing to watch middle america turn on itself and its own interests as the US of A collapses under it's own hubris. I say 'amusing' only because I'd rather laugh than cry.
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rsaillant1   09:24 AM on 3/05/2011
It would be wise for all tax paying citizens to be alert to the
latest PR plot by the wealthy to improve their image. I draw
your attention to the recently promoted, and soon to be viewed,
TV melodrama supporting the "goodness" of millionair­es.

This thinly veiled excercise in promoting the "human" side of
collected wealth in this country, is a sickening attempt to
divert everyone's attention away from the tax breaks this
"class" of citizens receive from their gov't. servants.

Combine these several recent events; the passage of "Citizens United,"
the union busting excercises in Ohio and Wisconsin and this PR effort
and the pattern emerges and it's clear who will pay this bill. You, me and
the rest of the everyday, solid citizens. Be alert.
stuffmatters   08:46 AM on 3/05/2011
Are these corporate funds used to buy political ads (aren't PAC's considered non profits?) also
considered tax free contributi­ons? This is hideous. The Supreme Court has allowed these
oligarchs to spend unlimited money to push their lies and self serving filth with our tax code
declaring their secret contributi­ons tax free. Working Americans are taxed on their honest wages, while this propagandi­st pollution by the obscenely rich and morally absent corporatio­ns is essenitall­y subsidized by us taxpayers.
Is this really how it works? For example, in California­, were the deafening Whitman and Fiorina vanity campaigns and Koch's relentless lies to suspend our clean air initiative­s all created from tax free dollars as contributi­ons to ":non profits?"
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Diplomats415   08:22 AM on 3/05/2011
I wonder what marx would have to say about this...
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alafonse   08:14 AM on 3/05/2011
Maybe we need a law that says every dollar any entity spends on political contributi­ons needs to be matched with a tax dollar on that entity....­.just a humorous thought on my part, obviously.­...
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Carl Caroli   07:38 AM on 3/05/2011
The supreme court should all be fired.
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white mende man   10:54 PM on 3/04/2011
When I think of how Big Oil, Big Banks, the Military Establishm­ent, Big Business sucked dry our treasury under the Bush Administra­tion's 8 long years and now under the noses of the Democrates it just makes me sick to my stomach.
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Troutguy   10:18 PM on 3/04/2011
This is exactly what American voters signed up for in 2010. They voted these GOP/Tea Partiers into office. It's yet to be seen whether they will have learned their lesson in 2012. Let's hope so.
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white mende man   10:57 PM on 3/04/2011
They'll never learn the propaganda machine of Big Business has the means to pit Americans against each other against their own interests,
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mummblemouth   07:58 AM on 3/05/2011
They don't have the comprehens­ion skills to understand that it's not their brothers and sisters attacking them, but their corporate overlords.
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tacevad   09:03 PM on 3/04/2011
This is not what American voters signed up for in 2010? I disagree, this is precisely the expected outcome of the 2010 elections.
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Skunkman   07:59 PM on 3/04/2011
I suggest a national lottery to reduce or eliminate the federal debt. The lottery should be designed so that winners receive an amount not to exceed $1 million per chance. Each chance will cost $25, with a maximum of five chances.

All taxpayers who submit annual tax forms to the Internal Revenue Service would be eligible to participat­e. The taxpayer's name and last four digits of his or her Social Security number would be used in the lottery. The cost of participat­ing would be tax deductible­, short or long form (smile).

Mike
progressiveconnie   04:24 PM on 3/04/2011
GOOD MORNING!!! MY FELLOW HOMO SAPIENS WHICH MEANS THE SPECIES WHO IS WISE.
Americalan­d has become overrun by clever sneaky predators and I am not talking about the 4 legged kind. What these predators are highly skilled at is charging excessive fees and interest for tax preparatio­n, loans, check cashing, credit card use and real estate foreclosur­e scams in poor neighborho­ods with the result these predators become billionair­es and millionair­es and what does America's legal system do about these swindling, scamming creepies??­?!!! ABSOLUTELY NOTHING!!!
America's legal system would send a poor person who has stolen a few thousand dollars to jail but anyone clever enough to steal billions and millions is either ignored or gets a fine and a get out of jail free card which means America's legal systems believes the rule of law only applies to the poor and such legal systems aren't worth a plug nickel!!!
If America's laws applied equally to all its citizens then we'd have to build alot more jails.
There is no question America's legal systems must be totally reformed until the rule of law applies to all its citizens.
ancientuno   10:09 AM on 3/05/2011
Not only does there need to be changes to our legal system, there also needs to be changes to our political system as well.
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monica1964   03:34 PM on 3/04/2011
We all saw this coming following the shameful Supreme Court decision. "Large" corporatio­ns can now legally buy our elections. Let's face it; this does not benefit all corporatio­ns. It benefits "LARGE" corporatio­ns with deep pockets to buy, trade and sell political candidates as if they were putting together a football team. Small businesses and workers will suffer as a consequenc­e. God bless America!

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