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The Politics of Money Is Easy
by Norman Solomon
While President Bush’s re-election campaign accumulates an
unprecedented pile of dollars, the country’s news media are deep in a
rut of reporting about the race for the Democratic presidential
nomination. With the next national Election Day scarcely 15 months away,
most signs point to a new triumph for the politics of money.
Rather than focusing on the positions being taken by Democrats
seeking their party’s nomination for president, the media spotlight
often stays on the amounts of money that those contenders have raised --
as if the importance and validity of a campaign can be gauged by the
size of its bank account.
A recent CNN interview with one of the longest-shot candidates, Al
Sharpton, was a painful indication of how extreme the media fixation on
campaign coffers has become.
“We know that the fund-raising reports for the first half of the
year, these reports to the Federal Election Commission, are coming in,”
anchor Judy Woodruff said. “Howard Dean appears to be at least on top in
the second quarter; $7.5 million he raised. And we’re told that in one
day alone, at the end of the quarter, he raised $800,000, one day alone.
Rev. Sharpton, in the entire quarter, so far it’s been reported that you
raised $80,000, about a tenth of that what he raised in one day. My
question to you is, are you even serious about raising money in this
campaign?”
During his response, Sharpton was clear: “We’ve reduced American
politics too much to fund raising. Yes, I think money is important. But
I think that you judge races based on who can bring people to the polls.
... I think that when we start acting as if money alone determines
democracy, that we’re undermining the principles of a people’s
democracy.”
Unwittingly, Woodruff came up with a retort that was even more
damning of the prevalent media mindset. “I understand what you’re saying
about it shouldn’t be based on money alone,” she replied. “But, Rev.
Sharpton, at this early stage, money is clearly one serious indicator,
measure, of where these candidates stand.”
To political reporters, the truly credible candidates stand on
mountains of money. Like Woodruff, most journalists assume that we
shouldn’t take a campaign seriously unless it has serious money behind
it -- a self-fulfilling attitude that simply postures as realism.
Meanwhile, in politics, after years of ballyhoo about “campaign
finance reform” and the banning of “soft money,” the power of bucks is
greater than ever. While turning off -- with great fanfare -- the
prodigious spigots of “soft money,” the recent McCain-Feingold law has
boosted the importance of direct “hard money.” An individual can now
give $2,000 to a campaign, twice the previous limit.
“Political observers believe Bush’s network of fund-raisers, along
with campaign-finance rule changes that work strongly in Bush’s favor,
will likely allow the president to overwhelm any Democratic opponent
with an unchallenged flurry of spending,” the ABC News website notes.
And: “Some expect the Bush campaign may raise a record $200 million,
largely through individual ‘hard money’ donations, before the election
is through.” That would be about double what the Bush campaign raised
for the 2000 election.
Journalists should focus a great deal of attention on political
fund raising. But the usual reportage does little to expose the power of
money in politics. News stories routinely tote up the dollars without
explaining which financial interests are writing the checks, what those
interests stand to gain, and whether the candidates already have a
record of serving them.
And often the coverage has the effect of magnifying the power of
money by equating financial accumulation with legitimacy. As a campaign
unfolds, when the press hypes candidates because they’re “first tier” in
fund raising, it’s part of a pernicious cycle: Reporters tout the
candidates who’ve raised millions of dollars, and the media hype causes
more checks to be written for those candidates, who then are taken all
the more seriously by news media because they keep raising millions...
Of course, few low-income people write four-figure or three-figure
donation checks. And Election Day comes long after the money primary has
winnowed out the presidential field of contenders. The campaign finance
system may have been “reformed” -- but it remains deformed.
"Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You," by Norman Solomon and
Reese Erlich, was published in late January by Context Books. For an
excerpt and other information, go to:
http://www.contextbooks.com/newF.html
Note to online readers:
:
For the transcript of
Solomon's March 11 appearance on CNN discussing U.S. plans for war on Iraq, go to:
www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0303/11/sdi.04.html
Background link:
www.lcnp.org/global/IraqLetter.htm
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