It is final
now: Mitt Romney is the official presidential candidate of the Republican Party
for 2012. This is in itself a little miracle.
To begin with, given the strength of Christian fundamentalists in the GOP –
from Evangelicals to Catholics – it is still remarkable that a Mormon has
finally made it to the top of the ticket. Given the history of Mormonism in the
US and its longstanding antagonism from ‘mainstream’ Christian groups this is
probably the clearest indicator of the magnitude of resentment towards Obama. To
Tea Party fundamentalists, even an apostate is more acceptable than – I guess –
a black person in the White House. Those two delegates who threw nuts at a black
CNN camerawoman with the comment "this is how we feed the animals"
are probably – despite the political correctness of the official reaction -
just an indicator of the Republican Zeitgeist.
There is
though another reason why this is even more interesting. After all, this is the
first election where private corporations (or rich business owners through
their companies) are able to basically fund the campaigns of their preferred
candidates without any limits. We saw this clearly in the primaries, where
candidates such as Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich or Rick Santorum were all able to
stay in the race far beyond what their paltry successes in the primaries would
traditionally suggest. It was ironic, that the Citizens United ruling by a
Republican-leaning Supreme Court in 2010 reared its predictably ugly head first
to the detriment of the Republican frontrunner Mitt Romney himself. Newt
Gingrich was probably the best example: not only did his philandering past made
him unpalatable for even the most ideological GOP supporters at the base, but
also his success in the primaries was dismal –he could not even win his home
state Georgia. He stayed in the race though because his ‘sugardaddy’ Sheldon Adelson poured limitless amounts of cash into his campaign. Adelson, the owner
of a global Casino empire, is currently investigated for breach of the Foreign-
and Corrupt Practices Act by the US Justice Authorities and has good reasons to
make sure whoever ends up in the White House has some loyalties to him.
The
Republican primaries have shown that rich individuals, after the Citizens
United ruling, basically can buy elections. It will be exciting to watch how
this will now impact the presidential campaigns in the fall in the US. Mind
you, four years ago it was Obama who had the biggest coffers. And still today,
if one just analyzes the funds of the actual campaigns of Obama and Romney,
where donations are capped at $5,000, Obama is still leading Romney (according
to a recent report in The New Yorker). However, what the Citizen United ruling
has allowed is the creation of so called ‘Super PACs’ (as in political action
committee), which can advertise on behalf and in the interest of a candidate
and can accept unlimited amounts of donations.
The effect
is fairly impressive. Already now, if we look at the Super PACs around both
candidates, Romney with $120m in donations leads Obama by factor four. Adelson
alone has pledged $100m to get rid of Obama and other rich republican donors
such as the Koch brothers are willing to donate whatever it takes. Estimates
suggest that Romney (and his entourage) by November may have been able to spent
some mindboggling $1.2bn dollars!
The
interesting thing here then is that for some reasons, the Obama campaign is not
playing the same game. This not so much due to a lack of potential donors (according
to the cited article); there are enough rich business people who are leaning
towards the Democrats. It appears that Obama himself is not too keen on
becoming too close and dependant from wealthy individuals and interests. Another
factor appears also to be that some of the individuals who potentially could
play the game of the Koch’s and Adelsons’ on the other side feel that this
trend in politics is not desirable: “I don’t want to see democracy go in that
direction”, Warren Buffett (a longstanding Obama supporter) is quoted in The
New Yorker.
There are
many people among the Democrats who are worried about this. After all, come
fall it may well be possible that most advertising time on TV and radio has
already been bought by Republican Super-PACs. And indeed, as we have frequently
discussed here on this blog, the current situation in the US lifts the entire
debate of corporate influence on the political process to a truly new level. There
is now only a little and mostly cosmetic difference between how ‘third world’
dictators can buy elections and the way the sheer financial backing of a
candidate and his capacity to spend on his campaign will decide the US
Presidential election.
The Republican
primaries though have left us with a glimmer of hope – albeit in a somewhat
twisted way. After all, despite the corporate backers of several candidates, in
the end the Republican base by persistently not voting, for instance for
Gingrich, finally got to speak the last word. The assumption that money can buy
an election then rests on a simple assumption: that the majority of the
electorate, in fact: the few millions of swing voters in some ten states of the
US who effectively have decided elections in the last decades are stupid enough
to fall for a bombardment of advertising (for which most of the funds are used
these days) and just succumb to these formidable means of manipulation. Or is
it still also true, as the Republican base has shown, that voters still have
some minimal set of convictions and the ability to see through all the veneer
of a political campaign – and decide for themselves. One way or the other,
these specific circumstances have added an ingredient to this presidential
campaign which might actually make it a slightly more interesting spectacle to
watch.
Artwork from DonkeyHotey, reproduced under the Creative Commons License.