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Money Is Still the Name of the Game
For years certain pundits and political scientists have insisted that money is not all that important in winning elections. Large sums expended on campaigns glean only an extra percentage point or two in votes, we are told, and often the candidate who spends the most ends up losing anyway.
“Other Variables”
In 2010 Republican candidate Meg Whitman smothered the California gubernatorial contest with $142 million of her own money but still lost to Jerry Brown who spent a mere $24 million, along with another $27 million or so put up by independent groups. Such results are seized upon by those who argue that money does not guarantee victory. They insist that other variables—such as party affiliation, incumbency, candidate’s image, and key issues—may be the deciding factors. 
True, but we should remember that these “other variables” themselves are most likely to gather form and substance within a well-financed campaign. Feeding on large sums, a candidate can promote his image in a highly favorable light and advertise (or bury) the issues as best suit him, all the while casting mean shadows upon his financially weaker opponent.
Getting back to California’s Meg and Jerry show: candidates who win while spending less than their opponents, as Jerry Brown did, still usually have to spend quite a lot, about $50 million in his case. While never a surefire guarantor of victory, a large war chest—even if not the largest—is usually a necessary condition. In sum, money may not guarantee victory, but a serious lack of it almost always guarantees defeat.
No Money, No Game
Without large sums, there is rarely much of a campaign, as poorly funded “minor” candidates have repeatedly discovered. A candidate needs money for public relations consultants, pollsters, campaign travel, meals, canvassers, poll watchers, office space, telephones, computers, faxes, mailings, and, most of all, media advertisements.
Indeed what makes someone a “minor” candidate is the lack of a sufficient war chest—which leads to the lack of sufficient campaign visibility. Conversely, someone with a huge war chest is likely to be treated by the media as a “major” candidate. So money not only influences who wins, but who runs and who is taken seriously when running. Rich candidates sometimes are backed by party leaders explicitly because they have personal wealth and can use it to wage an effective campaign.
One of my favorite examples is Steve Forbes who ran unsuccessfully for the GOP presidential nomination in 2000. Of lackluster personality and fuzzy program, Forbes had never held public office in his life and had no close links to Republican Party regulars. But being able to spend $30 million of his personal fortune (back when $30 million was still an exceptional amount for a presidential primary), Forbes was immediately treated by the media as a serious contender. He even won Republican primaries in two states.
Money Primary, Media Primary, and Voting Primary
In all, there are three primaries not one. There is the voting primary, the one we all know about and sometimes participate in. But before that is the media primary and before that the money primary.
Decades ago, candidates used to play down how much money the private interests were pouring into their coffers. It was understood that a heavily financed candidate would owe a lot of favors to a lot of fat cats and could hardly promote himself as a champion of the ordinary voters.
Today candidates openly flaunt the size of their war chests at the early stages of a primary in the hope of taking on an appearance of invincibility, thereby discouraging other candidates. This triumphalist imaging, in turn, attracts backing from still other big contributors.
During the 2000 Republican presidential primaries, George W. Bush won the money primary by raising $50 million four months before the first voting primary in New Hampshire. That sum came from just a small number of superrich donors. Several other GOP primary opponents dropped out after they discovered that most of the fat cats had already fed their checkbooks to Bush.
By the time Bush won his party’s nomination in July 2000, he had already spent over $97 million—and the campaign against his Democratic opponent had yet to begin. Thus, well before the actual election, a handful of superrich contributors winnow the field, predetermining who will run in the primaries at what level of strength and with what plausibility. Only the very rich get to “vote” in the money primary.
The candidates who lose the money primary swiftly lose the media primary also. This is especially true if they have progressive politics. Consider the valiant campaign waged in 2008 by Representative Dennis Kucinich for the Democratic presidential nomination. His advocacy of progressive reforms left him with little access to big money. As a poorly funded candidate he was immediately labeled in the media primary as a “minor” candidate.
The media label was self-fulfilling. Defined as a minor candidate, Kucinich was accorded hardly any serious media exposure. Having lost the money primary, he would now lose the media primary. One scarcely knew he was participating in debates with “major” candidates. Deprived of media exposure, Kucinich achieved near invisibility and consequently was unable to reach many voters who otherwise might have been interested in what he had to say.
Big Spenders = Big Winners
Let’s face it, candidates who are the bigger spenders may not always win but they usually do, as has been the case over the last fifteen years in more than 80 percent of House and Senate contests. Even in “open races,” with no incumbent running, better-funded candidates won 75 percent of the time.
According to a Public Citizen report on the 2010 midterm elections, in 58 of the 74 contests in which power changed hands, the winning candidates rode enormous waves of cash, outspending their opponents with funds from “shadowy front groups, giant corporations and the super rich.”
This does not establish a simple one-to-one causal relationship between money and victory. But given the central role money plays in launching a campaign and defining who is and who isn’t a “serious” candidate, how can we say it is without decisive impact?
The reactionary judicial activists on the Supreme Court do their best to advance the role of big money in politics. In decisions like the 2009 Citizens United case, the Court’s reactionary majority repeated its arcane contrivance that (1) rich corporations are “persons” with human rights and (2) money is a form of speech. By imposing spending limitations we supposedly are restricting free speech and violating the First Amendment. Some years ago Justice Stevens took issue with this fanciful fabrication, reminding us that “Money is property; it is not speech.”
But money is the kind of property that feeds into and mobilizes all sorts of other power resources. I haven’t mentioned the other influential roles that money plays beyond election campaigns: ownership of print and broadcast media, control of jobs, financing research institutes, recruiting and training conservative activists, bankrolling lobbyists, and the like.
Heed not the system’s apologists who treat a money-driven political process as a matter of no great moment. Truth be told: if you’re not in the money, you’re not much in the game. It’s time we faced up to the plutocracy that masquerades as democracy.
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46 Comments so far
Show Allit's well past time to DO SOMETHING about the money game, instead of beating the dead horse.
we the people contribute to the game by participating in the game, and then complain about the game being rigged against us.
how about ways to stop, or reduce at least, our own participation, eh?
how about a "corporate-product/service-free holiday" this year?
we can't even make that little commitment.
who's "we?"
Oh, you mean the mass of USAns mesmerized by the shadows projected on the walls for them by the plutocracy. No hope at present for those folks. I'd wager that many who read this site have taken steps to stop funding the beast.
The most effective leadership is by example.
"we" are the ones who keep writing, reading, and complaining about the game.
We all know this is the way it works, but it's good to have Parenti walk us through the paces. I remember arguing with my Republican brother about the 2004 and 2008 elections. When I told him I had voted for Kucinich in the primaries, he had no idea who Kucinich was. Never heard of him, proving Parenti's point about money driving everything in this electoral system. When I said I'd voted for McKinney in '08 he was just as bewildered, as were nearly all my liberal friends. No idea who McKinney even was. Lose the money primary, lose the media primary, and fuggedaboutit. Isn't "democracy" just great?
People learn by experience, and when we experience our court system and learn that the party most wealthy always wins, this teaches us that if we want to win in capitalism, to enrich ourselves upon the misery of those less educated and wealthy is the only way to go.
For government does much more then just rule, it is the moral compass of society.
A simple point that could be made is that the variables in question, M: money and A: appeal, are multiplied in some fashion in the process. A candidate's success is dependent on some function of the product of M*A. Steve Forbes, with an A of near zero, cannot make it regardless of how large M is, and Dennis Kucinich, with an M of near zero, cannot succeed regardless of how large A is.
It's a compelling simplification, kivals.
Since the abstractions of mathematics and symbolic logic don't compute in my brain, a more qualified person will have to elaborate upon your basic formula to account for another crucial interrelationship between M and A.
That is, M directly correlates to increased false A, or pseudo-A; a vacuous personality like Steve Forbes-- an A-hole if ever there was one-- acquires false A simply because, as the article describes, he has enough M to be given access to the dice and freedom to move around the board. False A-- I'd express it as A subscript M if this primitive venue permitted subscripts-- eventually evaporates, but it confers limited advantage.
And A can be limited or constrained by lack or deficiency of M. So that even a candidate with genuine A can't adequately disseminate or amplify that intrinsically high A coefficient, i.e. "get the message out" to acquire recognition and appeal to a greater number of voters, without substantial M.
I don't mean to re-complicate your valid point, just note that the terms aren't discrete absolutes, but somehow functions of each other.
Yea, precision is impossible in this domain, in part, as you noted, because the situation is dynamic, with variables influencing other variables over time (making it exceedingly difficult to capture the essence of it with simple functions), in part due to the virtually unbounded number of possibly significant variables, and in part due to the impossibility of using rigorous experimentation to test hypotheses, isolate variables, and determine precise relationships. That is why I presented the very simplistic and imprecise equation that I did, just trying to improve the model slightly, knowing that an ambitious attempt would quickly run off the rails.
So, Farce = Money * Appeal.
Money should not get to vote twice in our society (once in our capitalism, once in our 'democracy'). That leaves people with no vote at all. Parenti's relating of the 'money primary' explains how the decisive votes in our 'democracy' are cast well before the candidates declare themselves. Without campaign finance reform, the ability of money to vote preemptively before mere people will continue, and if that continues nothing will ever be done by DC that benefits people at expense of money ever again. Exhibit A: Obama just continued the Bush tax cuts. And his excuse to his squabbling children is 'well, you didn't get the public option either, so why are you complaining?'. Amazing.
Fix the 'democracy' or nothing ever works, again. Not healthcare, not education, not environment, not the deficit, not the economy. Campaign finance reform should be the SINGLE issue progressives are fighting for, tooth and nail. Yet, on MSNBC, no less than Rachel Maddow is spending most of her time on 'Dont Ask, Don't Tell': as if most of us were gay soldiers. Of course I want gay rights, but its a trivial issue compared to campaign finance reform. Its a mark of our ailing 'democracy' that gays will get their right to be gay while people (including gays) lose their right to be people.
Money should not vote twice in our society. If it does, it will eventually leverage mere people out of the picture (except those who control money). People, through their democracy, can leverage money the other way, but only if the democracy is not corrupted. It is well past time to get the money out of the democracy. This should be the single issue progressives are fighting for; especially now that 'hope you can believe in' has become 'hope you can bereave in'. Its clear, now, that neither party represents us: the 'democracy' represents money, thats all. People have a few years to take democracy back for people, before losing it completely.
Even if you're right, that campaign finance reform is the silver bullet issue that all progressives should be fighting for, this assumes we have a democracy in which to fight for this single issue. It's circular. We can't achieve campaign finance reform because we are trapped in a system that forbids any such thing. "We" have no voice in the matter, or haven't you noticed? The only critters that can bring about such reform are the same ones who benefit from NOT having it now. And they are owned outright by corporations and the super-rich, who will do everything their mountains of wealth will allow to prevent it.
You're assuming we still have some sort of democratic structure within which to realize your impossible dream. We don't, and that's because capitalism and democracy cannot coexist, since in fact they do not coexist. I know you believe otherwise, but that's why you will go on with this obsession and never see any results.
EPHRAIM: Nicely argued.
I can't recall which poster it was, possibly Jake Newton, who tried to run that meme about money NOT being that significant to election outcomes. IF Jake (or the individual who posted that comment) is out there, or any of his buddies wish to tug his sleeve, I hope he'll read this article and consider altering his viewpoint. Truth should matter.
Ephraim: "You're assuming we still have some sort of democratic structure within which to realize your impossible dream." Well, yes I am. I believe the people of America still have the ability to force a single issue to passage, if they all huff and puff together. More importantly, if everyone in America is pushing for this single issue, and it doesn't pass, it bring events to a head faster, either way. Perhaps you are right, and the democracy is toast. Most of the population will only realize it if they all want something so badly, it becomes their single issue. If it still cannot pass, they'll begin to realize something is rotten in their government, and force change sooner. Either way, yours or mine, its the right thing to do.
Interesting sentiment, that "everyone in America" would push for a single issue, no matter what it might be, but when has that ever happened? Can you say never? Everyone in America has never done anything together. We are usually divided 50/50 on virtually every last thing you can name, or near enough. One American will say grass is green and the next one will say it's aqua blue or chartreuse, just to spite the first guy. The day "everyone in America" does anything is the day pigs fly.
Michael Parenti, as usual, nails it. Really folks, if you read any books, do yourself a favor and read Parenti's. I'd say he's the best writer today in America when it comes to clearly showing how everything that is happening can be explained by a class analysis.
MONEY DRIVEN ECONOMY -- BRAINPOWER DICTATORSHIP
(1) If were not in a brainpower dictatorship, then government and mass media, both owned body and soul by the rich, they are telling us the truth, that we all have an I.Q. between 100 and 102. Then of course, the speed at which the rich can rationalize a problem and take corrective action, this is no faster then the speed at which the homeless dig for food in a garbage can.
Michael Parenti's point could have been made even stronger if he had given Ralph Nader and other third party candidates as an example of how the media ignores those who do not belong to either the Democrats or the Republicans. The Media Primary certainly ignored Nader in 2000 when the television and network executives colluded with the two major parties to make sure that Nader was not going to be allowed to debate Bush and Gore in the summer of 2000 despite the fact that he had a valid ticket which should have enabled him to enter that building which housed the debate between Gore and Bush. But the last thing that the corporate powers desired was to have someone like Nader give his views in front of a public televised forum against the two major corporate parties in this country. And since Nader's war chest, if one could call it that, was nowhere near the size of either Bush or Gore, then it was practically preordained that he would never be considered a serious threat against either Bush or Gore.
Michael is not a capitalist, not like Ralph Nader or all the other popular third Party candidates who try to improve the capitalist system.
For Michael is all for social democracy, hates above all things our "capitalist democracy."
I think your comment is severely undermined by the fact that Nader has always been a severe critic of large corporations. Given that to be true, it does not follow that Nader is a huge fan of the capitalist system.
Agreed, Nader is in no way a fan of our fake “capitalist democracy,” and if I had any faith in our make believe government I would vote for him.
But, as I remember, everything in Nader’s platform was in harmony with “good capitalism,” if there is such a thing.
And not am I trying to interject my opinion, not to argue in favor of the Parenti or Nader position, just to give a sincere opinion of the difference between the two.
here here. I was a bit shocked to read that Parenti was hailing Kucinich as a serious candidate for the Democratic Party. Everyone who studies the Democratic Party and especially someone who knows what happened at the '68 DNC in Chicago (where delegates in the audience were baffled by the 3-ring circus going on around them and feeling like the process was hijacked...which it was....and their voices were NOT heard...leading to the miserable outcome of Humphrey to run against Nixon) knows that the DNC is just the socially left side of the corporate party...the Republicans. Kucinich is ALWAYS the bagman for the lefties (the REAL leftists) who are philosophically Green (party) but are only able to be "progressive" Democrats due to a MONIED and corporately controlled election system. I source ISR Sept-Oct 2004 issue "Dennis Kucinich: Kerry's Bagman" by Paul D'Amato. I will back it up by Kucinich's STAND STRONG-STAND TOGETHER for MEDICARE FOR ALL and caving to Obama after a very expensive taxpayer-funded plane ride on Air Force One where he told us to pack it up and go home...he was going w/ the health insurance plan backed by Obama. REAL SPINAL MATERIAL THERE!!! (sarcasm)
Until we get TOTAL ELECTION REFORMS....third parties, end to all private money, equal access to television/radio/billboard ads, national debates hosted by a people's forum not BUDWEISER and AT&T, same day registration and voting, paper generated ballots and equipment owned and controlled by the elections offices, with nation-wide standards for access to voting w/ election day being a NATIONAL HOLIDAY...etc.. WE WILL CONTINUE TO GET THE SAME CRAP DRESSED IN RED OR BLUE UNIFORMS. that ain't democracy folks.
ERROLL: Well-argued. Good example.
For most readers at CD, Parenti's argument is hardly a revelation. However, it would be an excellent article to pass along to friends, family, and associates who have been bamboozled into believing that average Americans really make the important choices in our flourishing 'Democracy'.
Parenti has a gift for writing in limpid prose and using common sense logic and analysis when he delves into history and politics. Coming out of a Marxist and socialist tradition, he never sounds turgid or dogmatic. He writes on difficult topics with the clarity of an Orwell or Bertrand Russell.
Anyone who has not read one of his books should give him a try. (His son, Christian, is also an excellent writer.)
http://www.christianparenti.com/books.html
If you gave a copy of Fredric Jameson's Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism to your rather conventional cousin, it would soon end up as a door stop.
http://newleftreview.org/?view=729
In contrast, a Parenti book on history, something like -- Democracy for the Few -- might actually be read, understood & even appreciated.
For a taste of Parenti at his best, may I recommend his "History as Mystery", City Lights (1999), a fine analysis of how history is written from a progressive socialist's point of view. Also, "Blackshirts and Reds", City Lights (1997), Rational Fascism and the Overthrow of Communism.
Tony Vodvarka
Can I run for president making only 70,000K per year with kids?
ROOT CAUSE -- FEEL DESERVING
There are only two possible ways to own things without stealing them, by law you have a right to it, or by a gift you should feel grateful for it.
Problem is, most feel they deserve more then life, especially all those into religion with a fake morality that calls out, “Good news, you deserve eternal life.” The result being greed, a reverse conscience that feels guilty if ever it misses an opportunity to take all it can take.
And so, our only burden is to expose such an illusion of good hiding misery, such a pretense of good that gives the deceitful rich an ability to advertise a sucker bait, “Something For Nothing” and thereby enrich themselves upon our misery.
Good article. Shows how money buys democracy.
Shadow, of course the world isn't all about money, if by world you mean the world that people inhabit in both body and spirit.
The American people still know that love and family and society and caring and kindness and fairness are the most important things in the world. All those good things. They don;t live in a world of money, and if they do spend they typically spend for spiritual reasons. A good example is all the spending they do to have a good christmas with their families. Their intention is good.
But the Revolutionaries, the power elite of their day, certainly set up an economic system that facilitates exploitation. That much is true.
giving money credit for this much influence lends the electoral process, the media, and the resulting 'governing', more legitimacy than I can concede...
the game is rigged...the influx of money is intended to conceal, even while enabling, that fact...
if money is seen as the problem with elections, potential solutions abound, inspiring hope for such, which is the point...
if the problem is bigger, like elections being utterly fraudulent, and successful politicians nothing but corporate shills, solutions become less obvious, or pleasant, which could lead to real trouble...
better to blame money...
Parenti I'm sure would agree with all you say, except admit that he did an over-kill on the effect of money in politics.
Your point is well taken, a rich nobility Republic since 1776 has been our fate, this being the root cause. But less then 10% would agree, and Parenti has no choice but to meet the people where they are at.
For the root cause of our make believe government, this is what the Parenti Home Page is all about.
AMONG THE RICH ONLY ONE KIND OF FRIEND -- MONEY FRIENDS
Reading all the posts below, no one here fooled by paid actor politicians working for the rich man’s gold.
So why is society by and large so self-absorbed and pleasure orientated that the greater a politicians wealth and power, the greater appears his honesty and win ability?
Well, they all feel most deserving of wealth and if lucky could be high-high up in High Society and glory in such power over society, just savor the thought of it, all that admiration from you and me.
About what would be the net-worth of God, figuring all of His assets that is?
He only seems to speak to those on His level.
Michael Parenti concludes that, "It’s time we faced up to the plutocracy that masquerades as democracy."
But, Parenti, of all people should (does) know that what "masquerades as democracy" is not plutocracy but the ruling-elite's global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE which really "masquerades as democracy" --- behind the facade of 'Vichy' government.
Now granted, Empire uses 'money', since it is in part a "financial" Empire, but it also uses (abuses) corporatism, militarism, and political deceit.
While money/economics is both the preferred weapon, and the goal of Empire, as I have noted in several analyses at OEN, Empire will leverage any of its 'power tools'; economics, politics, and ultimately military to get its way. Which is why I like von Clausewitz's point that "war is just politics by other means" --- and I extend with, "politics is merely economics by other means". [Thus by the transitive property then, "war is merely economics by other means".]
Anyway, Parenti being the author of the first and most clear work, "Against Empire" (1995), certainly knows that money (economics) is both the semen of Empire and its horrible spawn.
A plutocracy is always only an aspect of EMPIRE and not the full depth and horror of EMPIRE itself.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
OEN articles:
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_alan_mac_070319__22economics_of_empire.htm
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_alan_mac_070324__22with_their_own_rope.htm
hey, Alan!
how do you like this?
politics is the marketing of crime...
Great, dubet!
Politics IS marketing ---- marketing of crime, yes!
I think you've got a brandable idea there.
Politics is a 'branding' of crime, which is, from a marketing standpoint, a way of 'softening' the image of crime and making the 'experience' (as Microsoft would say) more enjoyable than one would experience if you directly bought the actual product 'crime' and tried to use it directly.
Yes, dubet, you could initially trademark the 'brand', "politics as crime", by merely using the tm symbol when you post anything about 'politics as crime', and merely show that you have tried to defend your brand name trademark.
Then if you were to create a web site, let's say, and show that you are getting a significant number of hits on your site, and that you always refer to 'politics as crime' with your tm symbol, you're home free (sorta speak).
I've been using the entirely trademarkable phrase "corporate/financial/militarist Empire behind the 'Vichy' facade of sham democratic government" for years now, but when I tried to formally apply for a global trademark, damned if the US trademark office didn't reply and tell me that they were already honoring a previous global trademark applied for in 1940 by a guy named Goebbels --- but it turns out that they are fighting his mark here in the US by claiming that their product has a unique innovation which differentiates it as being a "Two-party Vichy" facade, rather than poor old Goebbels' tm, which was apparently an early design that only used one party for the 'Vichy' facade. Anyway, the guy and his corporatist boss are probably dead by now.
"And so it goes." --- which should also be a trademark of Kurt Vonnegut, but he never bothered to use the tm symbol --- maybe he just didn't give a shit about the profit potential --- but he's dead now also, unfortunately for all of us in the US Empire.
Best,
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
excellent, thank you!
I have read Vonnegut's Bluebeard, and loved it, but never read Slaughterhouse...
I first encountered 'and so it goes' as Linda Ellerbee's sign off...perhaps she borrowed it from Kurt...
Hey! perhaps you'd be more successful in your trademark bid against Goebbels if you were willing to respell Vichy with an F...kind of a workaround...
you could hold the tm for 'Two-party Fichy' facade...
Please read Vonnegut's superb "Breakfast of Champions"!
It's as fresh and relevant now as it was when it was published, c. 1976.
The book intersperses a multi-threaded story with drawings apparently done with a thick felt-tipped marker. My brother, who eventually outgrew his original aversion to Vonnegut, thumbed through my paperback copy at the time and scornfully remarked that you knew an author was scraping the bottom of the barrel when he padded his books with his own crude, puerile doodles.
He didn't say "puerile doodles"; if he had, I would've promptly replied, "YOU'RE a 'puerile doodle'!"
Speaking of copywrighting or trademarking, one of those crude, puerile doodles resembles a ragged asterisk: *. Vonnegut explains that it's a drawing of an asshole-- and that he's added the symbol as a flourish to his own signature.
* See: http://bit.ly/cksVCh
Thank you, O.S.! I will check out Breakfast of Champions...
a 'puerile doodle' of an asshole...that's hilarious!
I always enjoyed Dr. Seuss's illustrating as much as his writing...why not have the extra fun of drawing the story, too?
Direct democracy takes money out of the equation. Only the Green Party is direct grassroots democratic, but it has less chances of winning than do Democrats.
How about a coalition between Greens and Progressive Democrats? We may even include some Libertarians if we adopted some of their most popular issues under common sense regulations like legalizing drugs (and prostitution?) and making gun ownership easier but with a gun safety course.
Make your thousands of petitions carry the force of law by fair and frequent referendums:
http://ni4d.us/
That would be wonderful, remember though, that the biggest asset to any such coalition would be the currently disillusioned.
Yes, to legalize and regulate prostitution should be a definate part of this, you could even reference the moral authority of no less than Thomas Aquinas, who wrote something to the effect of:
A brothel is, to a city, much like a middens to a house. Although it is not a pleasant part, without it, pretty soon the whole place starts to stink.
It's the size of the political campaigns that's the problem. They drown out the voices of the good candidates. The money is only the vehicle that's causing it to happen, and limiting the money is the way to stop it from happening.
Michael Parenti would be the first to state (and clearly has in his writings and talks) that voting and elections are a small part of class struggles for a decent life for the bottom 90% or so of society. The New Deal, arguably the most sweeping set of reforms in U.S. history, was preceded by about 80 years of intense social struggle. Working people who suffered with 16 hour days and 6 or 6 1/2 day work weeks (yes in some industrial sites you could work just 8 hours on your "day off") fought valiantly for years. The power structure used social, political, economic and physical force against them. The state militias, state and local police forces, private thugs, and vigilantes were all used ruthlessly to suppress and intimidate working people.
Nonetheless by the time of the Great Depression the U.S. was becoming ungovernable. Frequently armed farmers would surround sheriff's deputies conducting foreclosure sales of neighbor's farms. One dollar bids would win the auction and the auctioneer (with guns leveled at them) would close the bidding. The winner would then deed the farm back to the owner. Evictions in the cities were often met with large crowds who moved the possessions of the occupants back into the house or apartment. Bitterly contested strikes continued on and on.
Thus the election of FDR occurred to the background of an active and organized populace used to going out physically and personally and fighting for their interests. He and his administration were constantly pushed to make concessions to the less affluent. Of course his reforms saved capitalism in the U.S. and the right-wing never forgave him for it (they presumably liked the German and Italian style reforms of the 20s and 30s better).
Of course at the present time the U.S. is a transparent plutocracy with the range of candidates from center right to far far right. The bottom 90% of society is still somewhat more comfortable than in the 80 years preceding the Great Depression, but current trends auger for that to continue changing for the worse, much worse. Unfortunately the right-wing is currently more organized and active than the left in the U.S. and responds more nimbly to the problems and opportunities that occur.
Getting money out of U.S. politics is essential, but still only a small part of what is needed. Fortunately, or unfortunately, events in the real world of global power shifts and the various environmental crises that threaten our continued existence will soon trump the right-wing's mastery of myth and illusion. The Chinese and the laws of physics care not one whit about the ravings of Fox News commentators or Sarah Palin's fantasies.
The question is will we on the left be able to respond capably with a program that maximizes the benefits the bulk of the population might be able to extract from situations that will be arising in the future.
Money will always be the name of the game. Unfortunately.
Saw a quote today, "money is the root of all evil. Capital is synonymous with money. Shouldn't we therefore call it, 'evilism'?"
Count me with ShadowDancer on this one. It's cash registers from birth to death in a pay-your-bills-and-die world.
It didn't have to be this way, people, but all are caught now in the grip of transnational evilism.