A provocative article on Election reform and state financing - Ajay
Money Spinners, October 29, 2012
Here's how we can defeat political corruption of the kind that's destroying US democracy.
By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 30th October 2012.
Permalink: http://www.monbiot.com/2012/10/29/money-spinners/
It's a revolting spectacle: the two presidential candidates engaged in a frantic and demeaning scramble for money. By November 6th, Obama and Romney will each have raised over $1bn(1). Other groups have already spent a further billion(2). Every election costs more than the one before; every election, as a result, drags the US deeper into cronyism and corruption. Whichever candidate takes the most votes, it's the money that wins.
Is it conceivable, for example, that Mitt Romney, whose top five donors are all Wall Street banks(3), would put the financial sector back in its cage? Or that Barack Obama, who has received over $700,000 from both Microsoft and Google(4), would challenge their monopolistic powers? Or, in the Senate, that the leading climate change denier James Inhofe, whose biggest donors are fossil fuel companies, could change his views, even when confronted by an overwhelming weight of evidence?(5) The US feeding frenzy shows how the safeguards and structures of a nominal democracy can remain in place while the system they define mutates into plutocracy.
Despite perpetual attempts to reform it, US campaign finance is now more corrupt and corrupting than it has been for decades. It is hard to see how it can be redeemed. If the corporate cronies and billionaires' bootlickers who currently hold office were to vote to change the system, they'd commit political suicide. What else, apart from the money they spend, would recommend them to the American people?
But we should see this system as a ghastly warning of what happens if a nation fails to purge the big money from politics. Ours, by comparison to the US system, looks almost cute. Total campaign spending in the last general election – by the parties, the candidates and independent groups – was £58m(6): about one sixtieth of the cost of the current presidential race. There's a cap on overall spending and tough restrictions on political advertising.
But it's still rotten. There is no limit on individual donations. In a system with low total budgets, this grants tremendous leverage to the richest donors. The political parties know that if they do anything which offends the interests of corporate power they jeopardise their prospects.
The solutions proposed by parliament would make our system a little less rotten. At the end of last year, the Committee on Standards in Public Life proposed that donations should be capped at an annual £10,000, the limits on campaign spending should be reduced, and public funding for political parties should be raised(7). Parties, it says, should receive a state subsidy based on the size of their vote at the last election.
The political process would still be dominated by people with plenty of disposable income. In the course of a five-year election cycle, a husband and wife would be allowed to donate, from the same bank account, £100,000(8). State funding pegged to votes at the last election favours the incumbent parties. It means that even when public support for a party has collapsed (think of the LibDems), it still receives a popularity bonus.
Even so, and despite their manifesto pledges(9), the three major parties have refused to accept the committee's findings. The excuse all of them use is that the state cannot afford more funding for political parties(10). This is a ridiculous objection. The money required is scarcely a rounding error in national accounts. It probably represents less than we pay every day for the crony capitalism the current system encourages: the unnecessary spending on the private finance initiative, on roads to nowhere(11), on the Trident programme(12) and all the rest, whose primary purpose is to keep the one per cent sweet. The overall cost of our suborned political process is incalculable: a corrupt and inefficient economy and a political system engineered to meet not the needs of the electorate, but the demands of big business and billionaires.
I would go much further than the parliamentary committee. This, I think, is what a democratic funding system would look like. Each party would be able to charge the same, modest fee for membership (perhaps £50). It would then receive matching funding from the state, as a multiple of its membership receipts. There would be no other sources of income. (Membership-based funding would make brokerage by trade unions redundant).
This system, I believe, would not only clean up politics, it would also force parties to re-engage with the public. It would oblige them to be more entrepreneurial in raising their membership, and therefore their democratic legitimacy. It creates an incentive for voters to join a party and to begin, once more, to participate in politics(13).
The cost to the public would be perhaps £50m a year(14), or a little over £1 per elector: three times the price of a telephone vote on the X-Factor(15). This, on the scale of state expenditure, is microscopic.
Both politicians and the tabloid press would complain bitterly about this system, claiming, as they already do, that taxpayers cannot afford to fund politics. But when you look at how the appeasement of the banking sector has ruined the economy, at how corporate muscle prevents action from being taken on climate change, at the economic and political distortions caused by the system of crony capitalism, and at the hideous example on the other side of the Atlantic, you discover that we can't afford not to.
References:
1. http://elections.nytimes.com/2012/campaign-finance
2. http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2012/10/capital-eye-opener-oct-26.html
3. http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/index.php
4. http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/index.php
5. http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/georgemonbiot/2012/aug/02/climate-change-political-funding-us
6. See Figure 19, Committee on Standards in Public Life, November 2011. Political party finance: ending the big donor culture. http://www.public-standards.gov.uk/Library/13th_Report___Political_party_finance_FINAL_PDF_VERSION_18_11_11.pdf
7. Committee on Standards in Public Life, November 2011. Political party finance: ending the big donor culture. http://www.public-standards.gov.uk/Library/13th_Report___Political_party_finance_FINAL_PDF_VERSION_18_11_11.pdf
8. The Committee says "it would be reasonable to allow spouses or partners each to donate up to £10,000 [per annum], even if the money comes from the same bank account."
9. Figure 4 of the committee's report quotes the commitments in the manifestos of the three main parties.
10. "The Conservative party co-chairman Baroness Warsi said: "the public will simply not accept a plan to hand over almost £100m of taxpayers' money to politicians"('Reform party funding or politics will sink in sleaze, says watchdog', The Independent, 23 November 2011); the Liberal Democrat president, Tim Farron MP, said: "While it is clear now is not the time for more public money to be spent on politicians, that shouldn't stop us taking immediate action to reform political funding"('Political parties 'should get more taxpayer funding", BBC News online, 22 November 2011); and Michael Dugher MP, Labour's Shadow Cabinet Office Minister, said: "In the current economic environment, we recognise that a significant increase in state funding for political parties is not a priority and any such measure would need to command broad public support" ('Labour: Tories wouldn't accept party funding cap', Politics.co.uk, 22 November 2011)." http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201012/cmselect/cmpolcon/1763/176304.htm
11. http://www.bettertransport.org.uk/campaigns/roads-to-nowhere
12. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/oct/29/tories-lib-dems-trident
13. Membership of political parties has declined, in total, to 420,000, about one seventh of what it was in 1965. Committee on Standards in Public Life, November 2011, as above.
14. The committee reports that "Over the last decade the spending of the three main parties in total averaged £68 million a year. The smaller parties spent a fraction of that."
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