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This poster claims this ruling was an act of desperation by the Corporatists. http://www.fourthturning.com/forum/showpost.php?p=288777&postcount=36"I just realized something about this Court decision: it's a sign of desperation.
Consider how it was rushed through the Court in a truly high-handed and appalling manner. Consider that it represents serious overreach, since the case brought had little to do with the ruling. Now consider the political context. We have Obama's election in 2008, showing massive discontent with the corporate republic of the post-Reagan era. Granted, Obama has in fact been a lot less progressive than the expectations he raised, but those expectations were real nonetheless.
We have disaffection and the beginning of an insurgency on the left. We have disaffection and an insurgency on the right in the form of the tea party movement -- which despite its right-wing tinge is anti-corporate and anti-establishment. In NY 23, this insurgency succeeded in throwing an election in a securely Republican district to the Democratic candidate. In Massachusetts, it succeeded in defeating a corporatist, machine Democrat in a securely Democratic state, with a not-very-corporatist Republican candidate. From all sides, the corporate republic is under siege. The Court's majority, doing the bidding of its corporate masters, has now brought out the big guns in a desperate attempt to stave off disaster.
Can it work? I'd say probably not. Over the next two elections we will see a sharp turn to the left on Obama's part, responding to the insurgency; we will see damage done to the Republican party by the tea-party movement, which rejects the party's real agenda while adopting a few of its red-meat political issues; we will see corporatists in both parties under attack and in very difficult positions.
Much has been made by commentators about the advantage this ruling will give to Republicans. But that's not consistently true, nor is it the real point I think. It's intended to give an advantage to corporatists, and because it is a radical and desperate move, it would not have been done except that corporatists are under threat by populist forces within both parties. This move is meant to shore up conservative Democrats as much as Republicans. But I don't think it can succeed.
For one thing, there's a point of diminishing returns in the influence of money on elections. Political history shows us many examples of a candidate with less funding winning an election. The main thing that corporate money does is to raise the amount of money that candidates must have in order to have any chance to win elections, and this has in the past given corporate donors veto power; it has never permitted them to simply decide elections, however, and this ruling won't either. One other reason the Obama election put a fright into the corporate elite is that he found another effective source of campaign funding. If other politicians manage to do the same thing, appealing to small donors in large numbers via the Internet, the corporate veto power will be undercut. Since the main effect of corporate financing on elections was always that veto, a flood of extra corporate money as permitted by this ruling will not have the power to completely fix the electoral outcome, and is a desperate attempt to shore up a crumbling dike.
The main effect of this ruling will be to piss people off, and to galvanize anti-corporatists both left- and right-wing. It is likely to accelerate the very trends that it was intended to combat. In that respect, the comparison to the Scott v. Sanford decision is apt, as that decision galvanized and outraged abolitionists in a comparable fashion.
As for the decision itself, it can be reversed if one conservative Supreme Court justice should retire or expire while Obama is in the White House."
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