Post from Still Breathing:
publicly funded campaigns
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I like the idea of publicly funded campaigns. It puts every candidate on a level playing field financially speaking and forces them to address the issues. None of them will be able to buy more air time or fire off more nasty memos than their opponents. The only serious contention I have is that we'd be paying for them. All of them. And with the sheer volume of elected officials in this country, we're talkig about thousands of campaigns each election cycle. That's a lot of money. Where would it come from? Or would we limit the public funding to national offices?

I've heard a lot of people defend campaign contributions as an exercise of free speech, but I call shennanigans on that. Money does not equal speech. Anyone is free to make their own posters or call their favorite radio shows or in any other way publicly and vocally promote their favorite candidate (or rail against his/her opponents). But giving money to that candidate is a sketchy thing. It implies that they now owe you a favor in return, especially if you donate a lot of money. And having a representative who owes favors to wealthy organizations is probably not in the best interests of their constituents.

Reader Comments
  
Campaign limits may help
By Judy Sep 15th 2006 at 3:10 pm EDT
Seriously honing down campaign limits may help. I've always favored the idea of public funding but how DO you eliminate the guy wearing a diaper with antennas on his head?
Re: Campaign limits may help
By Sean Michael Patrick Gallegos Sep 15th 2006 at 6:30 pm EDT
Well there will still have to be recognized parties... If they can get enough support then they'll get state money just like now if they can't they won't.
  
Here's where I get my ears boxed
By Jim A (aka AsparaGus) Sep 15th 2006 at 6:57 pm EDT
Free speech is not free.

We are spending money right now (see below "Paid for by the Democratic National Committee") and this is a Forum for Fundraising among other things, like this blog which can educate us, motivate us and show our numbers and thoughts to the undecided.

Besides contributing money (which may have been more than I can afford - yet admittedly a drop in the bucket) I spend time here. Time I might spend on any number of sites and online activities, even my own blogs. I choose to do it here, because I've gotten as much as I've given - perhaps more.

Free speech isn't free! Ask Jack Truman Link