Millionaires and Incumbents

Another issue worth noting about the Lieberman-Lamont match.  Their race brings together two of the less popular archetypes in American public life: the incumbent creature of Washington and the guy with more money than God.

That's not a coincidence.

Under the "one dollar, one vote" system undergirded by the "money is speech" regime set forth in Buckley, the ability to raise and spend money ranks high on the already frightful list of institutional advantages held by incumbents.  The ability to raise money is the first mark of legitimacy in the eyes of the media and political establishments who too often serve as gatekeepers between  would-be challengers and the attention of the electorate.  Ostensibly liberal people pledge fealty to the doctrine that serious candidates should be able to raise serious money.

Some millionaire candidates, of course, fail spectacularly.  Some spend enough of their dough to leave the incumbent at a significant spending disadvantage.  Some do both.

But wherever one comes down on what we should or shouldn't assume about millionaires' character and suitability to represent us, the difficulty of unseating an incumbent without being one should concern us.

Josh



Display:


Re: Millionaires and Incumbents (3.00 / 1)

How much money does God have, exactly?  And is it in Euros, Yen, Pesos?  Oh, I forgot - God is an American.

Glad you pointed this out although I fear you might just get flamed.  It used to be that you could count on the Republicans having old money - but maybe, just maybe, the Democrats would run people who knew how much a gallon of milk costs.  I find it highly ironic that the shining knight of the progressives comes from oodles of ancient money.  And his wife lists her profession as "venture capitalist". Whatever happened to pinko Dems?


by johnnygunn on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:32:41 AM EST

Re: Millionaires and Incumbents (none / 0)

Go Johnny GO!


by irsouth2 on Sat Aug 12, 2006 at 10:25:18 PM EST


You are not logged in.

In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.

If not, you can make an account right here. It's quick and free.