The US Presidency For Sale
By Patrick Martin
July 20, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"WSWS"
-
The 2016 US presidential election will be the
most expensive in history, costing an estimated $10 billion, when
all spending by candidates, the Democratic and Republican parties,
super PACs and other corporate lobbies and trade unions is
tabulated.The vast sums being raised and
spent by the Democratic and Republican candidates make a mockery of
the claims that the United States is a democracy in which the people
rule. It is big money that rules, dominating the entire process of
selecting the candidates of the only two officially recognized
parties and effectively determining the outcome of the vote on
November 8, 2016.
Of the $390 million raised so far, $300 million
has gone to the 15 announced candidates for the Republican
presidential nomination, while $90 million has gone to four
Democrats—$71.5 million of that to the Democratic frontrunner
Hillary Clinton. The disparity is misleading: once the primary
contest is over, and a Republican is selected to face Clinton, there
will be billions spent on each side in the general election
campaign.
The role of big money in the presidential campaign
has become so obvious that even the corporate-controlled media can’t
cover it up any longer. The Washington Post, for example,
published a report July 16 whose headline left little to the
imagination: “2016
fundraising shows power tilting to groups backed by wealthy elite.”
The article noted that “independent” expenditures by so-called super
PACs—political action committees loosely linked to the
candidates—would for the first time exceed the spending by the
candidates and their official campaign committees.
On the Republican side, the pace has been set by
Jeb Bush, brother of former president George W. Bush and son of
former president George H.W. Bush. His campaign and two associated
super PACs raised $119 million during the second quarter of 2015,
the largest amount ever raised for a presidential candidate so early
in the campaign.
Nearly all this money came from well-heeled
donors: Bush himself gave more money to his own campaign ($399,720)
than all of his small donors combined ($368,023). Besides the
billionaires and multi-millionaires who gave up to $1 million apiece
to the super PAC (the limit set by the Bush campaign), Bush raked in
cash from lobbyists representing finance, oil, wholesale, real
estate and a raft of other industries.
Super PACs are the offspring of the Supreme
Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision and subsequent court
actions, which effectively removed any limit on what billionaires
and corporations can give to political action committees (donations
to candidates themselves are still limited to $2,700).
Super PACs first played a significant role in
2012, mainly in the Republican primary campaign, where billionaires
Sheldon Adelson and Foster Friess kept Newt Gingrich and Rick
Santorum in the field against Mitt Romney, himself a hedge fund boss
and near-billionaire.
What is happening in 2016 is a further
quantitative leap. Super PACs account for $230 million in funding
for Republican candidates, compared to $65 million raised by the
candidates themselves.
Every significant Republican candidate has a
billionaire (or in the case of Donald Trump, is a
billionaire), except Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, whose occasional
objections to US military adventures overseas have cut him off from
such funding, causing his campaign prospects to fade rapidly.
Super PAC funding has made Jeb Bush the
frontrunner, while also boosting Senator Ted Cruz ($53 million) and
Senator Marco Rubio ($44 million) to the status of serious
contenders. Another top Republican hopeful, Governor Scott Walker of
Wisconsin, raked in $20 million for his super PAC before declaring
his candidacy July 13.
Super PACs will sustain at least another half
dozen Republican candidates. Three billionaires are funding former
Texas Governor Rick Perry, with $16 million of the $17 million he
has raised. Ohio Governor John Kasich, who is to announce next week,
has $11.5 million, and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie $10
million. Even Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, a latecomer to the
campaign, is backed by $9 million in super PAC money. Former
Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee and former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly
Fiorina also have enough big-money donors to run campaigns.
On the Democratic side, the same essential reality
prevails, albeit masked by the pretense that the Democratic Party is
the party of working people, and the populist rhetoric of some of
the Democratic challengers to former secretary of state Hillary
Clinton.
Clinton’s fundraising has the same profile as the
Republican candidates, with the difference that, not expecting a
serious primary contest, Clinton’s strategists asked big money
donors to hold their fire until the general election campaign. Most
Democratic billionaires, like Warren Buffett, currency speculator
George Soros, and investment banker Tom Steyer, are waiting until
next year.
But Clinton has already raked in smaller
amounts—essentially down payments—from media billionaires Haim Saban
and Fred Eychaner, hedge fund operator Marc Lasny, J.B. Pritzer of
the Hyatt family fortune, Lynn Forester de Rothschild, and numerous
other Hollywood, Silicon Valley and Wall Street moguls.
Last week Clinton posted on her campaign web site
the names of 122 “bundlers” who raised at least $100,000 for her
campaign in the second quarter. These included corporate lobbyists
for Dow Chemical, Microsoft, Exxon, PepsiCo, Verizon and MasterCard,
among many, many others. The identity of one “bundler” is telling:
Steven Rattner, the investment banker who headed Obama’s auto task
force that imposed 50 percent pay cuts on newly hired autoworkers.
Clinton’s main challenger, Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders, has no super PAC but raised $15.2 million anyway, mainly
over the Internet. He actually raised more money than Clinton from
small donors, those who gave less than $200. This shows that Sanders
is performing his assigned function: using anti-billionaire rhetoric
(which includes refusing to have a super PAC), to attract those
disaffected by the right-wing policies of the Obama administration,
and bringing them back into the orbit of the Democratic Party.
This entire process has nothing whatsoever to do
with democracy. It shows how the US financial aristocracy
manipulates public opinion, seeking to preserve the illusion of
popular choice in the presidential election behind the most
transparent of fig leaves. In the meantime, the billionaires will
put the candidates through their paces, selecting the individual
they will install in the White House to do their bidding.
Copyright © 1998-2015 World Socialist Web Site
- All rights reserved