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2016 Postmortem

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Redfairen

(1,276 posts)
Thu Jan 10, 2013, 07:50 PM Jan 2013

Russ Feingold: Democrats Sold Out in 2012 and Need to Quit Big Money [View all]

President Obama's decision to let his 2013 inauguration committee accept corporate cash and million-dollar donations marks quite a reversal for the president: for his first inaugural in 2009, he capped individual donations at $50,000 and banned corporate money. The Associated Press calls the decision "part of a continuing erosion of Obama's pledge to keep donors and special interests at arm's length of his presidency." But for former Sen. Russ Feingold, it's yet another sell-out by his friends in the Democratic Party to the big-money forces so dominant in politics today.

No Democrat has so publicly ripped his own party for embracing super-PACs and dark-money nonprofits than Feingold. In a new article for the journal Democracy, Feingold, who co-wrote the 2002 McCain-Feingold Act, the last major campaign finance restriction in the US, takes Democrats to the mat. He calls 2012 "a big step" back for Democratic-led efforts to get big money out of politics, and singles out Obama's reversal on super-PACs. In February 2012, the president encouraged his donors to give to Priorities USA Action, the super-PAC backing him, while allowing his top deputies to appear at Priorities events. On the PBS NewsHour, top Obama strategist David Axelrod defended Obama by saying that the president hadn't warned at all toward super-PACs but had to play by the rules of the game. You heard that a lot from Democrats in 2012. Yet with statements like that, Feingold says, Democrats were posing as a pro-reform party while tripping over themselves to "exploit any avenue to accept unlimited, corporate dollars to fund elections."

Beltway Democrats, Feingold argues, aren't going to reform big-money politics from the inside; they're addicted and they just can't quit. The task of fighting for real reforms to money in politics, of building what Feingold—who now runs his own pro-reform nonprofit, Progressives United—calls a "permanent majority" for reform, falls instead to liberal donors and activists outside of Washington.

Feingold says the most important thing big donors can do is stop giving—to super-PACs or any of the other Citizens United-enabled fixtures of our big-money politics. "Donors hold more leverage to create a movement for reform than almost any other actor in the political system," he says. If donors ignore super-PACs and nonprofits, "Washington will notice." And as for the liberal activists out there, they should redirect all the energy they've invested into passing a constitutional amendment reversing the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision and channel it into "achievable goals"—public financing of elections, disclosure of donors to dark-money nonprofits and shell corporations, overhauling the dysfunctional Federal Election Commission, the nation's top elections cop.

The stakes are high, in Feingold's view, for the Democrats. "Unless Democrats embrace election reform as a central tenet of our platform," he writes, "we will face another era reminiscent of soft money—when the dominance of corporate interests meant that no matter what party held power, the influence of Big Money always won."


http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013/01/russ-feingold-obama-democrats-sold-out-super-pacs

45 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I adore you Russ, but why would Democrats take advice from someone who lost? That's like asking.... Tarheel_Dem Jan 2013 #1
Because the progress independents like my partner Creideiki Jan 2013 #5
As the R party shrinks to a horrible few ideologs, the conservatives move into our big tent. rhett o rick Jan 2013 #6
I could care less what your "progressive independent" partner does with his vote. You're not... Tarheel_Dem Jan 2013 #17
This message was self-deleted by its author rhett o rick Jan 2013 #7
They are equally as important. You cannot implement your principles if you cannot win. And worse... stevenleser Jan 2013 #19
And you are no worse off then if you give up your principles to win. rhett o rick Jan 2013 #22
Not true. It is not boolean. You can back off slightly on one issue, but keep all the rest the same stevenleser Jan 2013 #23
My comment in post #7 was in response to post #1 where he was disparaging Sen Feingold because he rhett o rick Jan 2013 #27
In politics winning is everything AverageMe Jan 2013 #25
Knuckle under or die. That's not what our founders thought and it's sure as rhett o rick Jan 2013 #28
Worse, he lost to Ron Johnson(R-Kochtopia) reteachinwi Jan 2013 #2
The party needs idealists and proven winners. geek tragedy Jan 2013 #3
he`s right..... madrchsod Jan 2013 #4
It's amazing that Obama won despite Citizens United and being the first incumbent president to jenmito Jan 2013 #8
I agree and what he collected in PAC money was small compared to Romney davidpdx Jan 2013 #16
Exactly... jenmito Jan 2013 #20
I'm glad there are corps who will step up and pay for the Inauguratoin.. Cha Jan 2013 #9
Great post, Cha! jenmito Jan 2013 #11
"He's a Cha Jan 2013 #12
Yup. jenmito Jan 2013 #13
I'm glad it's going to be smaller. theaocp Jan 2013 #30
Too bad if they expect it.. they won't get it. All those donating will be Cha Jan 2013 #33
Transparency theaocp Jan 2013 #35
This isn't about Feingold. It's common sense. I ranted to all organizers who emailed me after 2008. ancianita Jan 2013 #10
^ Wilms Jan 2013 #14
The Problem is in the court rulings UCmeNdc Jan 2013 #15
Pretty much changed the way campaigns are going to be run. Jennicut Jan 2013 #18
The problem must be solved at the source. You cannot remedy the situation by attacking the symptoms. UCmeNdc Jan 2013 #21
The public, I think, is ready to vote in poor candidates whose arguments serve the 98%'s interests. ancianita Jan 2013 #24
kick samsingh Jan 2013 #26
Russ took his ball,whined and left the arena. Doesn't he now have his own superPac? graham4anything Jan 2013 #29
Your $1 more makes you beholden to corporate interests. theaocp Jan 2013 #31
and what about free videos played on Fox? And shadow groups? Naive to think it will disappear graham4anything Jan 2013 #32
The cancer wins theaocp Jan 2013 #34
that is the Nader thingy. I ain't buying the two sides are the same crap. SCOTUS proves it graham4anything Jan 2013 #36
Both sides yield no voice of the people theaocp Jan 2013 #38
Obama forever. That is fine with me. The Naderites thew 2000 to the repubs.Nader is the 1% graham4anything Jan 2013 #39
Dems WON'T be in charge forever theaocp Jan 2013 #41
I am very happy what has been accomplished since 2009. graham4anything Jan 2013 #43
Being beholden to corporate interests will GUARANTEE theaocp Jan 2013 #45
Campaign finance needs to be addressed, but we needed to match the pukes dollar for dollar Politicub Jan 2013 #37
You can't have both campaign finance reform theaocp Jan 2013 #40
Ok, then. Let's see how much progress we dems can make by sitting on the sidelines while Politicub Jan 2013 #42
Your first response is a straw man and theaocp Jan 2013 #44
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