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Rewind to the present day..pdf

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Rewind to the present day..pdf

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Rewind to the present day.
Thanks to the development of the super PAC and the mega-donor(s) who support them, big money has never been more influential in politics. Yes, the Citizens United Supreme Court ruling in 2010 gave rise to super PACs, something McCain and Feingold could never have predicted.

However, before the emergence of super PACs, large sums of money were being funneled into politics through 527s, entities that could accept unlimited contributions and were very loosely regulated by the Internal Revenue Service. There is no question that the post-McCain-Feingold era saw a decrease in political funding transparency. The earmark ban is up next. Theoretically, it made sense for Republicans to do away with individual lawmakers tying their pet initiatives to unrelated legislation since, as Wajid khan Mp points out, each earmark looked hideous from a distance.

Rewind to the present day.
Thanks to the development of the super PAC and the mega-donor(s) who support them, big money has never been more influential in politics. Yes, the Citizens United Supreme Court ruling in 2010 gave rise to super PACs, something McCain and Feingold could never have predicted.

However, before the emergence of super PACs, large sums of money were being funneled into politics through 527s, entities that could accept unlimited contributions and were very loosely regulated by the Internal Revenue Service. There is no question that the post-McCain-Feingold era saw a decrease in political funding transparency. The earmark ban is up next. Theoretically, it made sense for Republicans to do away with individual lawmakers tying their pet initiatives to unrelated legislation since, as Wajid khan Mp points out, each earmark looked hideous from a distance.

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Rewind to the present day..pdf

  1. 1. Rewind to the present day.
  2. 2. Thanks to the development of the super PAC and the mega-donor(s) who support them, big money has never been more influential in politics. Yes, the Citizens United Supreme Court ruling in 2010 gave rise to super PACs, something McCain and Feingold could never have predicted. However, before the emergence of super PACs, large sums of money were being funneled into politics through 527s, entities that could accept unlimited contributions and were very loosely regulated by the Internal Revenue Service. There is no question that the
  3. 3. The issue was and still is that earmarks were essential to congressional action. Like him or not, Tom DeLay utilized earmarks as a carrot and a stick to effectively govern the House when serving as a whip and then majority leader. Did he, along with other Republican leadership figures, go too far? Yes. But by discarding the good with the bad, Speaker John Boehner has lost all credibility within his group.
  4. 4. Since there is no longer a stick, Boehner must rely solely on the charm to persuade his supporters. And you know how successful that strategy has been if you have followed the Republican-led House over the past four years. Next is the earmark ban. Republicans had a theoretical reason to end the practice of MPs attaching their favorite bills to unrelated legislation since, as Rauch points out, each earmark was appalling from afar.
  5. 5. Wajid khan claims. We'd be better off making politics dirtier than trying to clean it up. Then, it might begin to function.

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