Running for office in this country,
particularly for national office or for almost any elected position in
expensive states, especially those with the biggest cities and largest
populations, is hideously expensive. You can watch influence-buyers target
Senate seats (two per state) in sparsely populated rural venues, because it is
so much less expensive. But there are no shortcuts in presidential races.
“* The
cost of campaigning to be elected president has steadily risen over the last
100 years, but particularly so between 2000 and 2012, when spending by the
candidates more than quadrupled.
* In the 2016 campaign, eventual winner
Republican Donald Trump and runner-up Democratic nominee Hilary Clinton spent a
combined $1.16 billion; including all other candidates, a total of $2.4 billion
was spent.
“Even when
adjusted for inflation, the amount of
money it takes to become president has increased more than 250-fold from
Abraham Lincoln to Barack Obama. Even more striking, the trajectory of the
graph steepens as the years progress, suggesting not only campaign spending
itself but the growth rate in campaign spending is accelerating rapidly…
“At the time,
many estimates for the presidential election in 2016 said it would cost at
least $3 billion; some even put the number as high as $10 billion. At $2.4
billion, it fell a bit short of that but was still a staggering amount. Among the two nominees, Hillary Clinton's campaign spent a
total of $768 million, vastly more than the $398 million Donald Trump's
campaign spent, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. That $1.16
billion total is actually lower than the 2012 election's $1.97 billion total,
the first decline in decades – though it doesn't take into account the value of
"earned media" (that is, free media) coverage that the candidates
(especially Trump) benefited from. Federal Election Commission filings show
that Trump personally contributed a total of $66
million toward his campaign, while Clinton contributed $1.4 million of her own money.”
Investopdia.com, May 13th.
Trump’s 2020
target for his direct campaign spend:
one billion dollars. Add to that at least double for Political Action
Committees… a rapidly growing number since the 2010 Supreme Court decision in Citizens United vs Federal Election
Commission uncapped the amount such indirect contributions could raise and
spend. But most of that money stinks… strings attached everywhere, even if not
openly stated. Can candidates exist without corporate, PAC and other
organizational money?
“The mayor of South Bend, Ind. [Pete Buttigieg], the senators
from California [Kamala Harris] and Minnesota [Amy Klobuchar], and the ex-vice
president [Joe Biden] are among the Democratic presidential candidates
disavowing corporate cash, lobbyist checks, or the super PAC system. They’re
trying to outdo each other with promises to finance their campaigns with
grassroots contributions. But while they play down the role of money and
influence, longtime Wall
Street donors who have both say little has changed. ‘I’ve talked
to about half of them, and I have not run into a single one who said, ‘Hey, you
worked at Goldman Sachs, I can’t take your money,’ ’ says Heyman, who helped
elect Barack Obama by collecting checks from friends, and later became
his ambassador to Canada. ‘I’ve not
heard that—ever.’” Bloomberg.com, May 21st.
How about big money from the
rich associated with those corporate big boyz or billionaires with an agenda? “Wall Street has long been a deep well
from which presidential candidates draw hundreds of millions of dollars for
advertising, travel, and staff. As the presidential race gears up, almost the
entire Democratic field is hitting up the industry’s donors, according to money
manager Marc Lasry, who says he’s already met with about 10 Democrats. ‘At the
end of the day, candidates need money,’ says Lasry, who was a bundler for
Hillary Clinton in 2016, runs Avenue Capital Group,
and co-owns the Milwaukee
Bucks.
“There is one notable difference. ‘In the
past, there was no candidate who didn’t come to New York, Chicago, L.A. for
money,’ says Lasry. ‘Today, there are two candidates who aren’t doing
that—Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.’ Few bankers would want to promote
those senators anyhow. This month, Vermont’s Sanders proposed capping credit card interest rates,
calling banks ‘modern-day loan sharks.’ Warren, from Massachusetts, has pitched
a tax on family assets above $50 million to wipe out student debt. She wants to
jail executives whose companies’ negligence causes harm, citing bank bosses and
the financial crisis…
“Near the end of April,
Buttigieg said he was returning $30,250 from
lobbyists. Two
days later, Biden said he was rejecting support from super PACs to increase
his appeal to middle-class voters. Super PACs blossomed after the Supreme Court’s
2010 Citizens United decision, and they now raise
unlimited amounts from companies and people. New York’s Kirsten Gillibrand, who
was a corporate lawyer before becoming a senator, and her New Jersey colleague
Cory Booker, a Wall Street favorite for years, have both said they won’t take
money from corporate PACs. But Buttigieg, Biden, Gillibrand, and Booker are
meeting with bankers and investors to talk policy or raise money. Those four
campaigns didn't respond to requests for comment. Wall Street fundraisers often
ask guests to give a candidate $2,800, the most allowed in the primaries…
“Robert Wolf, who ran UBS
Group AG’s Americas unit, says he’s already
donated to nine Democratic presidential candidates and plans to meet with about
15. ‘You have to, more than ever, be involved,’ says Wolf, who started the
strategy and investment firm 32
Advisors.
“Besides Buttigieg, Myers has had John
Hickenlooper, the ex-governor of Colorado, and Jay Inslee, Washington’s
governor, drop by his office for what he calls policy lunches. He says the idea
isn’t to get them to go easy on Wall Street. What he really wants is to resist
what he sees as the party’s socialist tilt while fighting Trump. ‘I don’t feel
embarrassed at all,’ says Myers, who was vice chairman of Evercore
Inc. before he started Signum
Global Advisors, which does
policy research for finance firms. ‘Running for president and winning a general
election is incredibly expensive, and the other side will raise enormous
amounts of money.’ He’s right so far: Trump’s reelection campaign and joint
fundraising committees raised $38.3 million in the
first quarter of 2019.
Sanders, the Democratic contender with the most cash, raised $18.2 million.
Harris raised about $12 million, with only about 37 percent in amounts of $200
or less.” Bloomberg. And that’s just about getting elected. One elected… the money need really starts to
explode.
Republicans have deferred infrastructure
repair and enhancement, shifted the cost of college to the students and their
families, are trying to get the federal social programs cut to the bone (from
Social Security and Medicare to the Affordable Care Act) and passed all those
cuts in the form of lower taxes and deregulation on to the richest in the land.
Effectively, America is living on the investments from past generations but
investing very little for our future. I’ve noticed that Republican candidates
are no longer touting “job creation” from trickledown money from the
now-even-richer Americans… just saying “we cut taxes” as if that were enough.
Trickledown didn’t trickle down. And Trump has increased the peacetime deficit
by more than any other president.
On the other hand, the Dems are increasingly
embracing bigger government with spending programs to match… perhaps a bit more
than the economy is able to support. “The competition among 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls
to be bold in confronting vexing social and economic challenges has created a
mountain of policy promises. The rising price tag has implications the
contenders prefer to sidestep.
“Candidates’ breezy assurances that
everything from four years of college to first-class medical care to cash
payments for the middle class can be had for free — unless you are one of those
very wealthy Americans targeted to foot the bill — have concerned even liberal
economists.
“‘These big, ambitious proposals are
so expensive, it is not possible to pay for them by just taxing the rich,’ said
Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. ‘They
are going to require taxing middle-income people…. But talking about that just
doesn’t fly politically.’” Los Angeles Times, May 21st. For a nation that is clearly slip-sliding in
power, influence, global stature and even relative economic size, everything
seems to be about money. Money we don’t have, money rather dramatically
targeted to buy political power and influence (the bedrock of any corrupt
society) and money that has increasingly shifted to the highest rungs of our
economic ladder… like never before.
I’m Peter Dekom, and since this financial
structure is probably unsustainable, exactly what happen when we really do hit
a wall… and there is nowhere else to go?
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