Essay: NOW IS THE FOR ALL GOOD MEN . . .
An important force in winning political office in the U.S. is green power: the money required to publicize a candidate's views and persuade the voters that he is worthy of governing by their consent. Those who give the cash exercise a vital form of political expression: they provide a basic nourishment of democracy. "Money," says California Democratic Boss Jesse Unruh, "is the mother's milk of politics." Yet Americans remain deeply suspicious of the campaign spending essential to effective elections. They fear that political contributors buy political influence. They know that even the nation's greatest political figures flout the laws regulating political fund raising. Such is the resulting public cynicism that only 10% of Americans make political contributions. Most of the political dollars come in large sums from a tiny percentage of the population.
How to finance political campaignshonestly, adequately and from a far broader baseis surely one of U.S. democracy's biggest unsolved problems as it enters another presidential election year. As the nation grows, candidates must spend more and more to reach more and more people; while TV now puts office seekers in every living room, the enormous cost drains party budgets. Given most voters' financial apathy, the net result is a qualification for office unspecified in the Constitution: a candidate must now be rich or have rich friends or run the risk of making himself beholden to big contributors by accepting their big contributions.
The Price of Technology In 1846, Abraham Lincoln's friends raised a mere $200 to finance his race for Congress. After he won, Lincoln returned $199.25: he had canvassed the voters on his own horse and spent only 75¢to treat some farm hands to a barrel of cider. In 1860, Lincoln won the presidency without leaving Springfield or making a single speech; his entire national campaign cost $100,000a sum now barely sufficient for one 30-minute national telecast.
By election time, 1960, John Kennedy had traveled 44,000 miles and made 400-odd speeches in 45 states to win the White House, at a reported cost to his party of $11 millionexcluding his own unreported costs. In 1964, total reported campaign costs were almost $50 millionmore than double the price of 1952. On primaries alone, Loser Nelson Rockefeller personally shelled out nearly $5,000,000. The 1968 money competition may be fiercer. In the New Hampshire primary, presidential hopefuls may drop $1,000,000.
Most Popular »
- Retailers Gear up for Black Friday
- 2012: End-of-World Disaster Porn
- Now It's Official: There Is Water on the Moon
- Does Mexico City Need a Red-Light District?
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- It's Twilight in America
- Obama in Southeast Asia: Mending Fences in a Key Region
- Why We Shouldn't Give Christmas Gifts
- Iraq's Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters
- How a Bank Robber Became an Antihero in France
- In a Malaria Hot Spot, Resistance Grows to a Key Drug
- Retailers Gear up for Black Friday
- Iraq's Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- Another Cause of Obesity: The Bacteria in Your Gut?
- How to Make Money from Viral Videos
- 2012: End-of-World Disaster Porn
- Behind the CDC's Soaring H1N1 Death Totals
- London Museum Asks Public What to Pitch







RSS