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Showing Original Post only (View all)Study: American public has ‘virtually no influence’ over politics in face of wealthy interest groups [View all]
Its not just your imagination: The influence of money in politics has indeed drowned out the voices of American voters, a new analysis shows, with runaway corporate lobbying and a lack of campaign finance reform to blame for giving much more political weight to the wealthy.
Researchers at Princeton University and Northwestern University compared the publics influence on 1,779 policy issues between 1981 and 2002, finding that more often than not, the interests of wealthy groups and individuals won out over the demands of the general public. For instance, when 80 percent of the public asked for a change of some sort, they got their way only about 43 percent of the time.
The study, its authors say, points to the overwhelming power of wealthy lobbying groups and individuals backing certain interests in American politics, and the marginalization of voters and public advocacy groups.
I expected to find that ordinary Americans had a modest degree of influence over government policy and that mass-based interest groups would serve to promote those interests, Martin Gilens, a political scientist at Princeton and a co-author of the study, wrote in an email to Al Jazeera.
What we found instead was that ordinary Americans have virtually no influence over government policy and that mass-based interest groups as a whole do not reliably side with the wishes of the average citizen.
Researchers at Princeton University and Northwestern University compared the publics influence on 1,779 policy issues between 1981 and 2002, finding that more often than not, the interests of wealthy groups and individuals won out over the demands of the general public. For instance, when 80 percent of the public asked for a change of some sort, they got their way only about 43 percent of the time.
The study, its authors say, points to the overwhelming power of wealthy lobbying groups and individuals backing certain interests in American politics, and the marginalization of voters and public advocacy groups.
I expected to find that ordinary Americans had a modest degree of influence over government policy and that mass-based interest groups would serve to promote those interests, Martin Gilens, a political scientist at Princeton and a co-author of the study, wrote in an email to Al Jazeera.
What we found instead was that ordinary Americans have virtually no influence over government policy and that mass-based interest groups as a whole do not reliably side with the wishes of the average citizen.
THE REST:
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/4/16/oligarchy-politicsus.html
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Study: American public has ‘virtually no influence’ over politics in face of wealthy interest groups [View all]
Triana
Apr 2014
OP
It matters where I live in a very blue district and affects the state and nation. n/t
freshwest
Apr 2014
#54
When your choices are Corp-Thing 1 vs. Corp-Thing 2, it dont matter what the numbers are.
rhett o rick
Apr 2014
#32
Well, with Black Box Voting and other bullshit, the US doesn't have anything even close to free and
kath
Apr 2014
#49
This is, though simple and obvious, the most important issue in politics today
BrotherIvan
Apr 2014
#14
You're saying that like it's up to us. Some of us feel that as long as we get
rhett o rick
Apr 2014
#35
I see only one viable solution. The torches and pitchforks is romantic, so to speak,
rhett o rick
Apr 2014
#38
The United States is a government of, bought by, and operated and for benefit of plutocrats
indepat
Apr 2014
#31
Look at the recent "health care debate" where two-thirds of the public ...
slipslidingaway
Apr 2014
#52
This is why the administration is wisely trying to get them to like us,
woo me with science
Apr 2014
#69