Political Reform with People In It

There's a common theme to Nathan Newman's post,
"Campaign
Finance Reform is Dead; Long Live Clean Money,"
and Dan Cantor's
welcome
visit to the "Table for One" to talk about fusion voting
and the Working
Families Party in New York, and it's not just that I agree with both of them.



Rather, both are pointing toward a new way of thinking about the political
process, and steps toward reform, that puts people back in -- people, and
the possibilities of organized power.

There's a reason that purely limit-based campaign finance reform will inevitably
run into a dead end, as it did in the Supreme Court last week when the Court
effectively (and quite predictably) overturned the McCain-Feingold regulation on
broadcast ads that mention a candidate for office in the weeks before the
election. It's that reformers view the problem as money, particularly
"big money," and set out to protect elections (but only elections) from this
corrupting force. But in trying to shut out money, they have to go
chasing after one loophole after another, and after a while, everything starts
to look like a loophole. Yes, an anti-abortion group in Wisconsin running ads
calling on Senator Feingold not to oppose Bush's judicial appointments might be
-- and in part is -- sending a message to vote against Feingold. But it is
also doing what it claims to be doing, which is an expression by an
organized group of citizens of a view on an issue -- which is fundamentally
protected expression. And that expression can't be neatly separated from
elections. If the goal of reform is defined as chasing down big money wherever
it is to be found, it will inevitably end up chasing money down rabbit holes
where regulation doesn't fit -- and shouldn't. It's a stale, limited, airless
way of looking at the problem that doesn't have any room for the complexity and
flux of real politics.



(It is telling that reformers denounce the WRTL decision on the grounds that it
would put "corporate" money back into politics. Which it would. But what is the
"corporation" involved here? It's not Wal-Mart or Halliburton; it's the
Wisconsin Right to Life organization itself, an incorporated entity. As are most
political or social organizations. Yes, money from for-profit corporations could
flow through these organizations, and organizations could be created that are
shells. But the WRTL case shows that from fighting "corporate" or organized
money, it is very hard to avoid fighting political organization itself.)



This is not just the logical fallacy of limits-based campaign finance reform.
It's the fundamental hostility to politics that reformers of democracy
are prone to. They tend to hold an implicit view of democracy as a process of
isolated rational decision-making that must be shielded from bad influences --
money, organized groups, passion.



But those are the very things that make democracy work: participation, and the
ability of people to exercise power collectively, to debate and act together. If
you see the question in those terms, then things that enhance people's ability
to organize and aggregate their power -- whether it is the Wisconsin Right to
Life committee or ACORN or a union or the Sierra Club or a political party or
moveon.org -- become the solution, not the problem. As Nathan points out,
voluntary full public financing -- which has never yet lost a constitutional
challenge and grows more popular by the election in Maine and Arizona -- is one
way to enhance speech. These systems require some way to prevent the limited
public funds from being overwhelmed by outside money, so they often provide
extra funds to candidates who face attacks such as the Wisconsin Right to Life
committee's. These provisions might be constitutionally vulnerable on the
same basis as the BCRA law, but they are very different and so far they have not
been overruled. But systems that use public funds to match small contributions
-- small donor democracy -- are a little more flexible and probably have less
need for disincentives to outside money, because candidates are not asked to
accept a strictly limited and relatively low level of spending. These systems
are not just second-best to McCain-Feingold-type limits-based reforms, they are
morally and practically superior -- because they retain a greater role for human
passion, intensity, and organization -- and we should be grateful to the Court
for drawing a line under limits-based reform and quickening the arrival of a new
era in which reforms seek to expand the ability for candidates to run and
new voices to be heard, rather than restrict it.



Similarly. fusion voting is a modest question on its face: Can a political party
sometimes endorse candidates from another party and sometimes run its own
candidates, or must it always run its own candidates exclusively? Most people
would say, "why not?" to the first part, which is why fusion has some hope of
attracting broad support and as a neutral rule, it doesn't obviously advantage
any faction. But it has major implications. Without fusion, the only political
organizations that can have the clout that comes with a line on the ballot are
the broad and clunky coalitions that are the two major parties, or third parties
that will usually be symbolic and transient. There will be issue groups, of
course, on the right and left, trying desperately to use money and/or membership
to be heard, and sometimes being effective. And there will be attempts at
broader coalitions, like moveon.org and USAction, and I think (hope) the trend
is toward broader progressive coalitions and away from single-issue politics.
That's long overdue. But such coalitions, especially at the state level, are
fragile, they demand continued energy and there are always as many forces
pulling people away as pulling them together. But over time it becomes apparent
that the ultimate coalition is a political party. A party is not a letterhead
alliance; it's a substantive ongoing operation with a significant asset: a line
on the ballot. With fusion, it can share that line or use it for its own
purposes. The party can exist both within and outside of the other major
parties, as the Working Families Party does in New York. It is a way of
organizing people's political passion and power that, for a change, does not
depend completely on money.



The first thing we should ask about any reform is, does it help or hurt the
ability of citizens to organize themselves in a political context? Limits-based
campaign finance reform fails that test. But public financing, especially
open-ended matching systems, pass the test, and so does fusion.



Comments (16)

Mark, "fusion" would best be labeled "confusion". It is another form of slate card, like we all receive in large numbers before most elections. The difference is that "fusion" puts the slate on the ballot instead of in the mail. Obviously, one "fusion" party is no problem for voters, and might even be of some help. But, what happens when there are a half dozen "fusion" parties cluttering up the ballot, along with the Peace and Freedom, the American Independent, the Green, etc. parties which now appear to be real choices for the voters? All I see coming from this is a lot more Florida 2000's where people think they are voting for one party, but are really voting for something else entirely, something which might consist of nothing more than a post office box.

I like the idea of third parties. But, lets adopt voting schemes that allow people to support such parties without it being a vote against their own interests when they do so. Instant Runoff Voting does just that.

Hoppy in Sacramento

Like many here, I'm not convinced that fusion voting represents any sort of really powerful reform. I'm not against it, per se, I just don't think there's much to it.

In the end, I'll be voting for "Working Families" Spitzer instead of Democrat Spitzer. It's still the same guy with the same platform. Though I suppose some sort of statement has been made, I've cast the same vote, just with a little "color" to it.

There are far more meaningful reforms available to us. Fusion voting is just rather benign. It's nice to have but nothing to get too excited about.


thosethingswesay.blogspot.com

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I'd like to see campaign finance reform take a more fine-grained approach to limits, and start distinguishing between different types of spending and media. It should have some concept of "push" vs. "pull". "Push" advertising, like print and television ads, asymmetrically push their message to people who didn't ask for it. They don't enhance the public dialog, they just let money push the dialog in a desired direction. "Pull" media, like websites, cable channels and newspaper editorial pages, need to be specifically requested or tuned into in order to receive their message.

The first thing we should ask about any reform is, does it help or hurt the ability of citizens to organize themselves in a political context?

And this is exactly why we should distinguish between Push and Pull. Legitimate grass roots organizing will be more "pull" oriented than special corporate interest "push" advertising.

Failing that, stricter campaign finance reform that applied only to broadcast radio and television would probably be constitutional (public airwaves) and would probably be an improvement.

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Hoppy and Destor-

If you just think in terms of voters and candidates, then yes, fusion isn't such a big deal. But if you want to build an organization -- a political party -- then it's critical. Because what it does is give you a path from 1 or 2 or 3 percent to a majority.

In New York today, there are WFP-only people serving on the New York City Council, the Albany City Council, the Albany County legislature, and a number of other offices including Mayor of Hempstead, a "village" of 80,000 in Long Island. That's a lot more success at electing our own candidates then parties that do nothing else.

The reason is, with fusion you can build up your base until you have enough support -- and the opportunity is there -- to run your own candidate. And you can get there incrementally because each election people can vote on your line while still supporting the Dems (or whoever). That's a HUGE difference with current elections.

Like Mark says in this excellent post, the problem with a lot of thinking about elections -- left right and center -- is that it sets up an ideal of candidates on one side and voters on the other with nothing in between. In that frame, yeah, fusion is kind of pointless. But if you think it's important to build institutions -- especially parties -- then fusion looks much, much better.

As one who's been involved with 3rd parties and having heard the pitch of the fusion proponents -- which is mostly that Working Families group on the East Coast -- the actual stated goals of the fusion proponents is even less meaningful -- it is to convince the Dems that the votes on the WFP line for the same candidate, which in the ideal case would put the candidate over the top to victory, requires the Dems to pay more attention to WFP's agenda. That's it, that's all.

Which is why rank-your-choices voting, otherwise known as instant runoff voting, is a much greater level of reform that opens the choices of citizens AND opens the possible outcomes beyond just the two tired, compromised big parties, and is much more likely to lead to re-invigorated citizenry pushing for and getting real reforms of (our far too career-ist, far too powerful for the elite and too crushing to the ordinary guy) political and media systems.

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I don't think you understand fusion voting. It doesn't mean you vote for a fusion party. It means a candidate gets endorsed by more than one party and the votes for that candidate fall under the other party not establishment party.


If you want to call someone a thieving pig fucker, you'd better be prepared to produce the pig." -- HST

Of course I understand "fusion voting". It is too simple not to understand it. It is putting slate cards on the ballot, so I can express my reason for voting for John Smith, as well as voting for him, as long as that reason coincides with the "fusion" party position. So, if the "fusion" party adds another 5% to John Smith's total vote, John will be beholden to the "fusion' party vote for his close victory. Simple. However, John has no idea but what he got 15% of his votes from opponents of the "fusion" party and thus owes his election to the unpopularity of the "fusion" party followers. That is another reason for calling it a "confusion" party.

Instant Runoff Voting differs, in that it is clear from the results that John got X% second place votes from X party supporters, Y% votes from Y party supporters and the rest from his own party. Meanwhile X and Y only got their votes because their voters could be free to vote their consciences without either losing their votes or de facto giving them to the opponents of John. That is a much neater and more effective system, and no more difficult to get set up and in use.

Hoppy in Sacramento

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About fusion voting:

The Populists nominated Democratic candidate WJ Bryan in 1896 and although the party then faded away much of its platform was folded into the Democratic party. It took awhile to bear fruit but ultimately a good many Populist positions became law as part of the New Deal.

There's no doubt that the Populists nudged Democrats to the left.

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This is bogus:

This is not just the logical fallacy of limits-based campaign finance reform. It's the fundamental hostility to politics that reformers of democracy are prone to.

Here's one example of how the rest of the world does it:

The final thing to be said to an international readership is that [the recent French] election has been a stunning democratic accomplishment by a thoroughly and passionately mobilized electorate, with real issues and policy alternatives challenged, serious debates, near-total participation in the crucial votes, no cheapness, fired by political ideas and not by business, industrial or sectoral interest lobbies, since no paid television advertising or campaigning is allowed in France, equal broadcasting time granted even to the minor candidates, campaign funding largely provided from public sources, and serious media coverage. It was not something that today’s Americans are likely ever to experience.

So please drop the crap about how "limit-based" election reform is "anti-politics." It isn't. Clean elections and limit-based reform, especially of broadcasting, are complements, not substitutes.

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I see it as voting for more of the same and saying we did not, a public pacifier that will allow those in power more time to solidify and enlarge what are already dangerous levels of power.

On the upside power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely and corruption brings on destruction; ergo the demise of our current power structure is likely in sight. I just hope some vestiges of our republic survive the crash and burn these fools are piloting them and us into. It is becoming very easy to see how so wise a man as Marcus Aurelius embraced stoicism as he was carried along by the tides of his time.

You make a persuasive case but to me, it's trumped by this:

If I have a billion dollars and the feeling that some one should or shouldn't be elected to government, what right does anyone have to tell me that I can't spend my billion dollars in order to express my opinion on the matter?

There are no limits on the amount one can spend advertising hamburgers. Why have limits on the amount one can spend advertising ideas?

thosethingswesay.blogspot.com

You miss half of your own point since the French example includes the free air time. Limits alone might fail in France without this.

I remember a time when we had something like it, the Fairness Doctrine, RIP.

In many cases where it becomes difficult to chase the ever-more-clever evasions the answer is to make the desired behavior easier. For example, there's not much point in selling alcohol under the counter, since it can be done legally to considerable profit, if one simply restricts minors. By comparison, the marijuana black market makes no distinctions as to age. As a result, my son informed me it was easier to buy pot than beer, when he was in high school.

The Sorcerer's Apprentice can't keep up with the inventions of funding politics, but if there's a way to politick without funding it will drive out the big money.

 

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Is it my imagination or does the picture of
Mark Schmitt here resemble Ken Starr?

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If you, say, run a tobacco corporation and have a billion dollars you want to spend on cigarette ads you can't do that.

Most of the fact-free hit jobs that pass for political advertising on broadcast media hardly qualify as "advertising ideas." They are as destructive to our political system as cigarette advertising was to our public health.

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Just for the record I'm in favor of free air time too, for things like debates or candidate "infomercials," just not the hit-and-run crap that most third-party groups put out.

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I very much appreciate your emphasis on the importance of reforms enhancing peoples' collective capacity for political organization in order to build power long-term. This is what we are increasingly finding in our project as well. For more comments on your ideas from the perspective of our project, click here.

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