"Is That All You've Got?": That "Liberal Media" & Money, Again

From Left Hook!:

Money in American politics isn't just the most important story in American politics; it's the only one. To quote myself on the point, "U.S. politics are all about money. It overwhelms every other consideration. A lack of understanding of this basic fact precludes any understanding of U.S. politics."

You wouldn't know this from the coverage money gets in much of the "mainstream" corporate press. The stories do get reported from time to time, it's true, but they're inevitably offered in a vacuum, without any proper foundation. It's never a subject covered in the comprehensive fashion that would be necessary to give it the proper context. Given the weight it merits, it would lead the news nearly every night. As it stands, stories of money in politics are treated as man-bites-dog tales, while we get intense, detailed, around-the-clock coverage of things like the rescue of the Chilean miners--"human interest" stories that don't affect anyone beyond those directly involved.

The big Money story at the moment is how Big Money is purchasing the November elections. In the wake of the grotesque Citizens United decision foisted on us, earlier this year, by our Supreme Court, "independent" expenditures in many of the congressional races around the country are actually outpacing the money spent by the candidates themselves. The Center for Responsive Politics reports that

"Business associations, unions and ideological groups have more than doubled their spending on political advertisements and messaging when compared to the entire 2006 federal midterm, a Center for Responsive Politics analysis indicates."

CRP also notes that spending by corporate-sponsored PACs has already more than tripled over the previous mid-term elections.

Unsurprisingly, the overwhelming beneficiaries of this are the Republicans, whose shameless pro-corporate, pro-wealthy, pro-Big-Money politics are offered without the threatening (but empty) populist rhetoric sometimes served up by the Democrats when they're trolling for votes. In the first three weeks of September, Republican-leaning groups outspent Democratic-leaning groups 7-to-1. A week ago, the CRP reported that

"Eight of the top 10 [outside] groups are conservative with one bi-partisan and one liberal group. Since September 1, identifiably conservative groups have spent $25.8 million, liberal groups $5.6 million, and bipartisan or nonpartisan groups $4.1 million."

The Political Correction project of Media Matters For America has documented that only 10 conservative groups have, between Aug. 1st and Oct. 11th, financed an incredible 60,052 attack ads aimed at liberal candidates--almost all Democrats--on behalf of their conservative opponents.

One of the major players in this orgy of spending is the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Among other things, it has financed over 8,000 attack ads on behalf of Republican Senate candidates this year, and has promised to spend $75 million against liberal candidates around the country. Earlier this month, a ThinkProgress investigation revealed that the Chamber is financing this operation out of its general fund, a fund which solicits and accepts significant contributions from foreign sources. One would think this would set off some alarms in a press corps that always proves itself an enthusiastic conduit for any xenophobic (and generally baseless) allegation about sinister foreign influence on Democratic politicians, but, when the shoe was on the other foot (or, more to the point, on the other party), the matter actually received no significant coverage until the Obama and his underlings raised this issue. It briefly cracked the news cycle at that point, but only long enough for much of the press to dismiss it as baseless and irrelevant, and to characterize it as a last-minute desperation tactic.

That was certainly the case when CBS's Bob Schieffer asked White House adviser David Axelrod if he had any evidence that the Chamber was using foreign money to finance its campaign activity. Axelrod's reply was, "Well, do you have any evidence that it’s not, Bob?" Schieffer was unimpressed. "Is that all you've got?"

On the surface, Axelrod's reply sounds rather lame--it's always incumbent upon someone making an allegation to offer evidence of it--but it actually gets to the heart of an important part of the Chamber story, a part Schieffer was sidestepping with his withering retort: the Chamber's fat $75 million wad to attack Democrats has been collected from sources that aren't publicly disclosed. That much money is involved, and the donors are entirely secret. We know foreign sources give to the fund from which the Chamber drew that money. We don't know how much they give. More importantly, we don't know how much anyone has given, or even who has given.

While it's no small matter that China, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and other foreign concerns may be using outfits like the Chamber to pour money into U.S. elections, the narrow focus, by the White House, on "foreign" contributions was unfortunate, in that it allowed that much larger point to be missed. Nearly half of all the very Big Money presently being poured, by outside groups, into the elections on behalf of Republicans come from groups that don't even publicly disclose the source of that money. What we have, then, is a mind-bogglingly huge wad of cash, intended to manipulate the outcome of U.S. elections, and we, the public, don't know where a dime of it came from. Politico reports that

"Never in modern political history has there been so much secret money gushing into an American election. By Election Day, independent groups will have aired more than $200 million worth of campaign ads using cash that can't be traced back to its original source."

That's important. No formulation of Responsible Citizenship would allow one to dismiss it.

Responsible Citizenship doesn't guide everyone, though. This summer, before this deluge, a Democratic initiative that would have at least made these groups disclose their donors was blocked when all 41 Republicans in the Senate--who are, of course, the beneficiaries of the current state of things--voted to filibuster it. An effort to revive it last month was similarly killed.

So there you have it. Is that all I've got? I'd say that was quite enough.

--classicliberal2

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Comments

I have noticed over the years...

I have noticed over the years that I hear lots of screaming about money in every election cycle where Democrats are losing, and yet I hear crickets chirping when they're winning.

I also notice that at least $200 million of Barack Obama's campaign funds can not be accounted for, and are likely from foreign entities.

Again, crickets.

Liberals, when you decide to get serious about this, I'll listen to what you have to say. Until then, it's just another liberal political tactic designed to scare voters into voting for them.

Yawn.

As an aside, this is one of the great things about the Tea Party, and yet another thing that liberals don't get. Yes, there's plenty of corruption in Washington, and you'd be an idiot to think that it's all on one side of the aisle.

The difference between the Tea Party and organizations like the Netroots: We recognize that we need to clean up our house before we can scream about the problems in yours.

Dems, clean up your own house. Until then, shut up.

I have noticed over the years

I have noticed over the years that I hear lots of screaming about money in every election cycle where Democrats are losing, and yet I hear crickets chirping when they're winning.

The so-called "liberal media" doesn't cover the matter of money in politics, no matter who is "winning" (which was one of the big points of the original article). Liberal groups like Common Cause and the Center for Responsive Politics, however, do cover the matter all year 'round, and raise their perpetual concerns to (mostly) deaf ears. Your deafness to them (more to the point, your indifference) doesn't mean you have anything resembling a point. What's happening this year--as you would have "noticed" if you'd read what I wrote earlier--doesn't have any sort of precedent. Certainly not in this:

I also notice that at least $200 million of Barack Obama's campaign funds can not be accounted for, and are likely from foreign entities.

No, you haven't "noticed" that. You've noticed the allegation. That $200 million the Spectator would love to have its dim-bulb readers think is "fishy" and that you'd like to have people believe is "likely from foreign entities" refers, in fact, to the total the Obama raised from all small contributions during his campaign. Finance law doesn't require that the source of each such small contribution be reported, and that has always seemed a reasonable approach--requiring that everyone who ever gave $5 to a campaign be reported is both silly and an unnecessary (probably unmanageable) hassle. The huge amount the Obama raised via this method--it broke all records--is what makes it a matter of concern. We can say two things about that $200 million with near certainty: first, there is probably some genuinely funny-money in it, and second, the amount of it is going to be microscopic. Of MUCH greater concern, when it comes to the Obama, is the other $300 million he raised, much of it from Big Money sources. It's why he has, among other things, governed as a conservative Republican (the same people bought him).

In any event, 2008 presents a very different situation than exists now. In the current election cycle, the spending by these outside groups has radically increased. In races across the country, it's actually outpacing the amount spent by the candidates and parties. The massive amount of money involved is historically unique. IOW, rather than a few questionable donations, we're looking at an all-out effort to manipulate the outcome of a U.S. election, one in which most of those trying to buy it aren't even identified to the public. As I said in the original article, no concept of responsible citizenship allows this to be set aside. But, as this ably demonstrates...

Yawn.

Not everyone has a sense of responsible citizenship.

Oh wow

http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/124565-democrats-have-raised-1-million-from-foreign-affiliated-pacs

Doesn't quite fit the narrative, does it?

Don't let that stop you.

I repeat. When you're serious about cleaning up your own house, I'll listen to what you have to say. Until then you're just shouting fire in a crowded theatre.

 

 

You didn't intend to do so,

You didn't intend to do so, but you offered a perfect example of the sort of very, very bad press coverage this sort of thing gets. In this case, it's a textbook example of false equivalance. It's a documented fact that Republicans are the overwhelming beneficiaries of the corrupt money from outside groups this year, so the Hill decided to construct one of those phony "they all do it" stories to diffuse the real story--journalistic squid's ink, intended only to cloud the real issues that have been raised. One need go no further than the story itself to demonstrate this:

The PACS are funded entirely by contributions from U.S. employees of subsidiaries of foreign companies. All of the contributions are made public under Federal Elections Commission rules, and the PACs affiliated with the subsidiaries of foreign corporations are governed by the same rules that American firms' PACs or other PACs would face.

They aren't "foreign contributions" at all, in other words--they come from Americans who work in Toyota plants. Unlike with the outside groups, the donors are all publicly identified; unlike with the outside groups, all of the money is openly disclosed; unlike with the outside groups, all of it subject to finance rules.

(And, of course, both parties draw from these PACs, with Democrats getting slightly less than twice what Republicans get).

IOW, it has absolutely nothing to do with the story of these outside groups and their shadowy benefactors.

Wrong as usual, Classic Ya don't have a clue

Tea Party candidates getting massive cash infusion from small donors Link HERE

Your statement: "The big Money story at the moment is how Big Money is purchasing the November elections." needs updating, as does most of your propaganda post above.

Desperate Democrat talking point, sort like the "Foreign Money" Lie, when reality is THIS...

http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/124565-democrats-have-raised-1-million-from-foreign-affiliated-pacs

 

What a surprise that you turn

What a surprise that you turn up a day late and a dollar short, with nothing to do but throw out an already-discredited "squid's ink" story.

The rundown on that particular piece of journalistic fraud.

"The Hill" discredited by who ? ?

The Left Hook ?  You're starting to quote yourself, an unbiased website written by someone named "ClassicLiberal ?    That wasn't a story from the "Right Hill" that I linked, its an article from "The Hill".    This is just the lastest October Surprise trick from the Democrats, spreading misinformation and ignoring their own history of taking foreign money. Here is a RIGHT HOOK from the Tea Party for you, Classic........... 

 

Its source is the same source

Its source is the same source you cited; deal with what it has to say or piss off.

And no, I don't think most teabaggers  would appreciate having themselves associated with a Muslim.