Never mind the Super PACs: A new must-read investigative report in The Nation reveals how Big Business is buying the election with secret money.
(via sunfoundation)
Source: thenationmagazine
As of today, spending reported to the Federal Election Commission by groups that aren’t required to disclose the sources of their funding has nearly tripled over where it stood at the same point in the 2010 election cycle, according to research by the Center for Responsive Politics.
Chart of the Day: We really have no idea who’s paying for campaign ads.
Inspired by the “Keep calm and Carry on” poster (src:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keep_Calm_and_Carry_On) This series edited by the Moneyocrat party reminds you what’s important.
(Design Gerald Holubowicz - 2012)
Here’s a very interesting piece wrote by Matt Bai in the New York Times magazine section.
“How Much Has Citizens United Changed the Political Game?”
Citizens United and a couple of related court decisions changed all of this in two essential ways (…) First, the Supreme Court wiped away much of the rigmarole about “express advocacy” and “electioneering.” Now any outside group can use corporate money to make a direct case for who deserves your vote and why, and they can do so right up to Election Day. The second change is that the old 527s have now been made effectively obsolete, replaced by the super PAC. The main difference between a super PAC and a social-welfare group, practically speaking, is that a super PAC has to disclose the identity of its donors, while social-welfare groups generally do not.







