This may be the year in which we finally say enough is enough. (Actually, it won’t be. But if you buy the premise, you buy the bit.)

This may be the year campaign ads on TV finally hit the saturation point and actually become either a) white noise or b) the TV equivalent of Internet popup ads. (This might happen, but it won’t matter. They’ll keep coming, regardless.)

This may be the year when a few political pros leak the news that, in the end, all the money spent on ads was basically a non-factor. (Some studies suggest this could be at least somewhat true, but hardly true enough that anyone can afford to disarm unilaterally.)

This may be the year ….

What am I saying? This won’t be the year. It’ll be like every other year, except worse — much, much worse.

Thanks to the Supreme Court, we have stripped away all the pretenses about money and politics. Money is speech. Speech is money. PACs have evolved (devolved?) into Super PACs and Super PAC dark money has become the black hole of politics. And, whether or not you think this is what the Constitution requires, is there anyone out there who really thinks we’re better off for it?

GOP

The story goes something like this: Campaign reform gives way to Citizens United, and Citizens United is made even worse by McCutcheon. And in the new Gilded Age — wherein millionaires are no longer rich and even billionaires come cheap — we can’t even put together a decent populist party. In fact, the real watershed moment in campaign finance may have come during the 2008 presidential race when Barack Obama turned down federal matching funds and Democrats, in the process, turned their backs on good-government reform.

It’s no wonder that running against the outsize influence of Koch Brothers — together worth about $100 billion — isn’t a cinch for Democrats. It isn’t as if they haven’t tried, though. They’ve tried ads. Harry Reid rips them every other day.

There was the recent Huffington Post story about Cory Gardner and other Republican Senate candidates attending a secret Koch Brothers retreat, in which Mitch McConnell was taped saying to “Charles and David … I don’t know where we’d be without you.” If that was supposed to be a scandal, let’s just say it didn’t exactly scare anyone off.

In fact, a bunch of Republican would-be presidential candidates spent their Labor Day weekend — yes, Labor Day weekend — at a Dallas summit for Americans for Prosperity, the Koch Brothers’ political arm. Rand Paul was there and Rick Perry was there and Mike Pence and Ted Cruz and Ben Carson. It wasn’t exactly a secret. Cruz made headlines there saying that we should bomb ISIS “back to the Stone Age.”

Meanwhile, the Kochs raised something like $400 million for the 2012 election, using what the Washington Post described as “a far-reaching operation of unrivaled complexity, built around a maze of groups that cloaks its donors” from view. They may raise as much as $300 million for this mid-term election and maybe half a billion for 2016.

All the polls show that voters think big money corrupts politics, but they may not know the half of it. It’s not that politicians are necessarily crooks — the great majority are not — but that they spend so much of their time raising money that they might as well be. They become basically influence peddlers. The least that we can demand — but don’t seem to care enough to insist — is that they disclose the people trying to buy the influence.

Of course, there are billionaires for both parties. Mark Udall has climate-change activist Tom Steyer, who says he is spending $50 million on Senate races. This is what the competition for money means in real terms: According to a report by Colorado Public Radio, TV political ad buys in Colorado had reached $49.8 million by Aug. 22. And $38 million — more than three dollars out of four — had arrived courtesy of outside money.

CPR did the math for us. That’s the equivalent of more than 58,000 30-second spots, or — and I like this little statistic — 20 days of nonstop TV viewing. It’s like watching the Simpsons marathon, only with slightly fewer laughs.

Here’s what really bothers me. Let’s take the Udall-Gardner race. If money were really speech, we might actually have a race worth talking about, one between two politicians with starkly different views. I know we’d have more than attack ads on Personhood and Obamacare.

There might be real debates about immigration, about the limits of government, about the limits of American power, about tax reform, about entitlement reform, about the role of science in making policy, about the impact of climate change or if there is one, about access to abortion, about voter ID, about equal pay, about inequality, about guns, about dozens of other issues.

There will be a few debates, but most people won’t see them. And most questions will remain unasked and unanswered. The ironic thing is that big money in politics allows politicians to narrow the conversation instead of expanding it. It allows them to control the message instead of explaining it. It means making 30-second TV ads instead of having to make a defensible argument.

Mike Littwin writes for ColoradoIndependent.com

2 replies on “Littwin: So much money, so little speech”

  1. The GOP has historically claimed regulation should be, self-regulation, because The People’s Pledge is the candidates themselves taking the action to overturn The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) 5 to 4 Citizens United Ruling, with regards to their particular election, isn’t this the self-regulation the GOP has been clamoring for?

  2. You blame Supreme Court for somewhat leveling the field. Unions have spent millions in the past of money extorted from their members for politics and I don’t remember you or anyone else writing about it. Harry Reid has been on Koch brothers for last 2years, because they don’t give to him. And of all the Billionaires and Millionaires, top 17 listed in Forbes live in San Francisco, giving to Democrats under or over the table. Koch brothers were 53d on that list last time I looked, and they give to charities, theatres, and others, besides the funds they give to Politics. If all the Democrat billionaires and millionaires put their funds into manufacturing and companies, providing jobs, we would not have to dole out food stamps, welfare, etc. Not to mention that some 200 million was supposed to have come from Dui By (sp?) which is illegal, and Al Gore went to California as bag man to pick up funds from the Chinese (I believe) when he was running for VP;, are not mentioned in your article. That year I had a phone block and I was called 73 times by unions, telling me how to vote, after I had already sent in my absentee ballot. And I was registered Independent. Newspapers are supposed to tell both sides of stories, and let the reader decide. So please tell the whole story in any succeeding articles.

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