Trump is America's Chance To Fix A Broken System
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS - Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, the party
front-runner in most polls, has positioned himself as the one contender who
can't be bought, and who is intent on making Washington a place less beholden to
cash-flashing by special interests.
It's not the first time a candidate has campaigned at least partly on the basis
of getting special-interest money out of Washington -- just the first time that
someone in position to actually get elected has done so. Usually it's the kind
of message that comes from fringe candidates who can safely claim that they
won't ever touch lobbyist or donor cash because there isn't much chance that
anyone would want to give them any.
Trump has broken a political omerta just by talking about money in politics. His
public airing of the topic is the political equivalent of a mobster giving a
PowerPoint presentation to police detailing shady dealings. There's an unspoken
understanding among serious presidential contenders that you don't bring up
campaign contributions in a debate. It can only result in everyone's closets
emptied out and skeletons thrown everywhere. Typically, only the broke
contenders engage in such talk -- and there's no danger of them making it far
enough in the nomination process to have it become a centerpiece of discussion.
This has all changed with Trump. Here we have a self-made billionaire who freely
admits that he has spent his entire career playing the political money game.
He's even identified some of his competitors as past beneficiaries of his
largesse. Now, Trump says, he wants to hop onto the other side of the game and
change all the rules.
There's no question that donations from special interests have been legitimized
and institutionalized. We in the West point fingers at Russian and Ukrainian
oligarchs for their disproportionate influence in national politics, yet we
ignore fact that fewer than 400 families are responsible for nearly half the
donations in this presidential campaign, according to the New York Times. In a
country of nearly 320 million people, this represents undue influence of
oligarchic proportions.
One would have to be awfully naive to believe that those families have donated
millions upon millions of dollars to presidential hopefuls without any
expectation of a return on that investment. In a functional democracy, all votes
are supposed to carry equal weight. When such a massive amount of money not only
determines winners by permitting some to outspend others on the campaign trail
but also saddles the candidates who are elected, it overrides the spirit of the
democratic process.
Something unique is happening in this election cycle: Billionaire donors have no
horse to bet on. Jeb Bush has been the apparent favorite for many, and his
struggling campaign recently resorted to dragging out Jeb's dad and bro --
former Presidents George H.W. and George W. Bush, respectively -- to spend two
days in Houston reassuring donors.
Meanwhile, industrial titan Charles Koch has told the Wall Street Journal that
he's going to wait to decide where to put his money.
How about putting it nowhere? Wouldn't that be great? How absolutely awesome
would it be if billionaires had more money to spend on, say, creating more jobs
or value because no one with a viable chance to be elected would take their
money?
Complaining about the influence of money in politics is less proactive than
sending a message at the ballot box. The traditional election-season complaint
is that all of the candidates are the same, and all of them are in someone's
back pocket. But now, Americans have a real chance to affect change when they go
to the polls in November 2016. Trump is a political comet that likely won't come
around for another thousand years -- if ever.
Whatever one might think of Trump's policy positions, he has chosen to stand for
something greater: reform of the system itself. While some may argue that a
single person couldn't possibly change the rules of the game in Washington, the
simple fact that American oligarchs are getting so visibly jittery seems like a
great start.
The absurdity of cash-infused electoral politics is something on which both the
right and left can agree. It transcends ideology. The real choice is between
continuing to shuffle around ideological chairs on the deck of the political
Titanic, or seizing an opportunity to steer the ship away from the iceberg via
Captain Trump.
COPYRIGHT 2015 RACHEL MARSDEN