President Obama has sent a wave of terror through
the Republican Party by suggesting that the most direct way to get rid
of Citizens United is to require mandatory voting by every eligible
citizen.
In response to a question about Citizens United, President Obama said:
Now, here’s the problem. Citizens United was a
Supreme Court ruling based on the First Amendment, so it can’t be
overturned by statute. It could be overturned by a new Court, or it
could be overturned by constitutional amendment. And those are
extraordinarily challenging processes. So I think we have to think
about what are other creative ways to reduce the influence of money,
given that in the short term we not going to be able to overturn
Citizens United.
And I think there are other ways for us to
think creatively, and we’ve got to have a better debate about how we
make this democracy and encourage participation — how we make our
democracy better and encourage more participation.
For example, the process of political
gerrymandering I think is damaging the Congress. I don’t think the
insiders should draw the lines and decide who their voters are. And
Democrats and Republicans do this, and it’s great for incumbents. But it
means, over time, that people aren’t competing for the center because
they know that if they win a Democratic primary or a Republican primary,
they’ve won. So they just — it pushes parties away from compromise in
the center.
I think that — now, I don’t think I’ve ever
said this publicly, but I’m going to go ahead and say it now. We
shouldn’t be making it harder to vote. We should be making it easier to
vote.
In Australia, and some other countries, there’s
mandatory voting. It would be transformative if everybody voted. That
would counteract money more than anything. If everybody voted, then it
would completely change the political map in this country, because the
people who tend not to vote are young; they’re lower income; they’re
skewed more heavily towards immigrant groups and minority groups; and
they’re often the folks who are — they’re scratching and climbing to get
into the middle class. And they’re working hard, and there’s a reason
why some folks try to keep them away from the polls. We should want to
get them into the polls. So that may end up being a better strategy in
the short term.
Long term, I think it would be fun to
have a constitutional amendment process about how our financial system
works. (Applause.) But, realistically, given the requirements of that
process that would be a long-term proposition.
Republicans reacted with predictable terror to the idea that everyone would vote. Marco Rubio wigged out on Fox News’s Hannity over the idea,
“I don’t put anything past him. I mean, there are a lot of things that
have already happened that I never thought I would see. Here’s the point
he refuses to point out or that he misses: Not voting is also a
legitimate choice that some people make. I wish more people would
participate in politics, too, but that is their choice. That is the
choice of living in a free society.”
Mandatory voting would be the most direct way to
neutralize Citizens United. Mandatory voting would also hand the House
and Senate back to the Democratic Party. The Republican Party would have
to completely change, and the competition for votes in politics would
shift to the center. Democrats and Republicans could not exclusively
appeal to one side of the ideological spectrum and be successful.
Republicans would be forced to move to the center or face extinction.
The entire Republican model for political success is
based on conservative millionaire and billionaire donors, and keeping
the electorate as small as possible.
When
Americans show up to vote, the Republican Party doesn’t win. President
Obama’s mandatory voting idea would be the most direct way to return
America’s representative democracy back to the people.
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