cyrano: (Haring Rampage)
[personal profile] cyrano
So I confess that, despite being a PoliSci major in college, there are trappings to the American Electoral System that I don't understand.

Barack Obama declined to participate in the federal public financing system during the primaries.
John McCain declined to participate in the federal public financing system during the primaries.
Barack Obama is declining to participate in the federal public financing system during the general election.
John McCain says that anybody who's not participating in public financing is obviously not fit for the office.

Are there any grounds to McCain's statements here? Is there a difference between primary campaigns and general election campaigns? Or is this just a politics thing where anything your opponent does just shows that he's an incompetent puppet of special interests?

Date: 2008-06-19 09:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kirbyk.livejournal.com
With McCain, it's even more complicated, since he used the public financing to finance his campaign and yet didn't, and then opted out in the primaries, and there are lawsuits flying that he violated election law.

What he did in December, when he was in serious trouble in the primaries, was use the _promise_ of $4M in public money that he could take as collateral for a hefty loan. Things changed, and he didn't want to be capped at the public funds when he became a frontrunner. So, he can reasonably claim he never took the public funds, but he did actually _use_ them in a way. (I'm not sure I have all the details right - it's complicated stuff. And I'm really not sure who's in the right on this.)

It is bizarre to turn this into a moral issue. And dangerous - what Obama is doing is turning down money from lobbyists and large PACs. He's got a really strong, broad group of doners, by virtue of being extremely well liked by the people who like him. (People who support him are willing to open their wallets, moreso than any other current politician.) McCain, on the other hand, has a serious problem with how connected professional lobbyists are to his campaign staff. He really isn't well served by this whole debate.

And, ultimately, people don't care. This isn't an interesting scandal. I think most people look at it as, you can take the free money or not, but if you do it has a cap. If you can raise more than that, of course you opt out. You're running for President, not for the School Board, you'd have to be a moron to not take every legitimate advantage. And of course the guy with less money is going to want both of them to be capped. It gets mentally reframed into this political calculation very quickly, and nobody who pays attention to politics is surprised by or affected by political calculations.

Date: 2008-06-19 10:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] roseneko.livejournal.com
As to that last, I think what McCain is betting on (and what is sadly true) is that the majority of folk don't think about politics; they listen to rumours, email forwards, and Rush Limbaugh for their information. So if he can manufacture a scandal of some sort, and enough people listen just to what he says (or what the news media parrots him saying) and don't think critically, it'd be an advantage over a candidate to whom quite literally nothing has stuck.

That said, I'd like nothing more to be proven wrong and see this whole thing blow up in his face. But my faith in the collective intelligence of the American voting public has taken hit after hit, these past several months...

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