Posted on 05/22/2007 11:04:22 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Few political or social positions in and of themselves should disqualify a person from being a candidate for president. Just about every candidate will differ with any of us even on something we consider important. That is why I admire pro-life Republicans, such as former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who argue that a pro-choice position should not automatically disqualify a Republican from pro-life Republicans' support. A big tent is necessary in politics, or one ends up with a small tent and no power.
Thus, I could support politicians with whom I differ on taxation (I support a consumption tax), on education (I support vouchers and think the Department of Education should be disbanded), on a flag-burning amendment (I'm against), on an amendment defining marriage as a man-woman institution (I'm for) and on many more divisive issues.
But there are a few positions that are either so immoral or so destructive or so foolish that a politician who holds them cannot be considered a viable candidate. Campaign finance reform, such as the McCain-Feingold bill, falls into the latter two categories. It is particularly destructive to society, and it is particularly foolish.
The primary consequence of most campaign finance reform has been to ensure that more and more extraordinarily rich people run for office. News media have just reported New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is considering running for president on a third-party ticket if he is not happy with the nominees of the two major parties. He is willing, the reports noted, to spend a billion dollars on himself. As his worth is about $6 billion dollars, this is quite feasible.
Why shouldn't he? Thanks to campaign finance reform, Jon Corzine and Frank Lautenberg bought New Jersey's two Senate seats. By prohibiting a billionaire from giving more than $2,000 to anyone else's campaign but his own, campaign finance reform has ensured that with few exceptions, only the super rich will run for office in races that demand great expenditures of money.
According to the New York Daily News, these are the net worths of presidential contenders: "Mitt Romney tops the fortune fortunate with a stash estimated at $250 million. ... Rudy Giuliani, as much as $70 million, John Edwards, as much as $62 million, John McCain, about $25 million, Sen. Hillary Clinton, probably more than $15 million, and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, up to $10 million."
A few years ago, I considered running for the Senate seat held by Barbara Boxer. Ultimately, I decided against it for family reasons and because I thought that having a national radio show enabled me to influence more people than even a Senate seat from California would. But what rendered running untenable was the campaign finance reform ban on individuals giving candidates more than $2,000.
Since no one can run in a California statewide election with less than $40 million and since I have no personal wealth, I would have had to raise tens of millions of dollars from tens of thousands of individuals. My life would have consisted almost solely of asking people for money. I had supporters who could have personally given me millions of dollars, but they are barred from doing so. Wealthy people can only spend such money on themselves, no matter how ill-suited they may be for public office.
That is what campaign finance reform has achieved discouraging, if not actually eliminating, non-wealthy Americans from running for office and forcing those who do run to devote their lives to asking for money; while at the same time pushing more and more extremely wealthy incompetents into office.
And I haven't even mentioned campaign finance reform's undermining of elementary freedoms. Who is the government to tell an American whom he can give his money to? So long as the giving is completely transparent i.e., the public knows exactly who has given any candidate money and exactly how much people should be allowed to spend as much on another person as on themselves.
I understand why liberals support it by limiting access to the political process, incumbents and, most significantly, the media are empowered. Any time a few wealthy people can boost the chances of a Republican candidate, the power of the liberal media to influence elections is reduced.
That Sen. Russell Feingold, a liberal Democrat, would support campaign finance reform therefore makes perfect sense. That a Republican senator let alone one who calls himself a conservative would do so boggles the mind.
When asked about campaign finance reform in the last Republican debate, McCain argued for it and by extension for the Senate bill that bears his name McCain-Feingold. He argued that such reform was necessary because politics is "awash in money." Of course, campaign finance reform has not reduced the role of money at all. It has merely shifted it to organizations that have far less transparency than candidates have and ensured that the wealthy disproportionately run for office.
That is how damaging campaign finance reform has been to American democracy. And that is why John McCain, a good man and a great American, cannot now get my vote which is quite something considering that I voted for him against a governor from Texas in the 2000 California presidential primary.
Now let's get Rudy Giuliani's views on the matter. The former mayor told me a few months ago that he had not given it much thought. He needs to.
You've only scratched the surface.
Something further back should be what disqulifies him, and will be his undoing if we are ever stupid enough to nominate him. 2 words: Keating Five. He was caught with his hand in the cookie jar, and his signature issue is what he has done to make sure that the S&L failures which he helped make happen are neutralized as political ammunition against him.
I just love Dennis Prager and he is right on, as always. If I didn’t have the hots for Rush, I’d listen to him more often.
Dennis voted for McCain over Bush in the 2000 primary?
Ick!
The big tent is turning into a circus.
I can not vote for someone who would destroy America with a stupid immigration bill.
He has stated that that was one of two votes that he regrets.
The other was voting for Jimmy Carter in 1976, when he was young and a Democrat.
That's a mistake that even most of today's democrats wouldn't make, I'd wager.
Even though they did vote for "Vietnam John" Kerry, and "lockbox" Al Gore.
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