The Appellate Court ruled that the ban on federal campaign
contributions by individuals who contract with the government is
constitutional.
In America’s extremely divisive political
atmosphere, one that informs there are really two separate Americas, it
is remarkable indeed that Americans on both sides of the political
spectrum agree on at least one very important issue. One segment of the
population pants for, and avidly supports, theocratic government,
widespread poverty, white racial purity, and perpetual war against
everyone, and yet curiously, even the inhumane religious bigot voting
bloc (Republicans) that retain power due to corporate money believes
there is just too much money, especially corporate money, in politics.
For Republican politicians though, and their funding machine the Koch
brothers, there can never be enough money to buy control of state and
federal government.
Subsequently, after at least two Supreme Court
Justices commingled, conspired, and colluded with the Koch brothers and
an entity (Citizens United) over how to get more corporate money in
politics, the High Court ruled for the Koch brothers, Citizens United,
and McConnell. The now-infamous
Citizens United ruling fundamentally put control of America’s government
up for sale to the highest bidder and no human being in America, except
maybe the Koch brothers, was happier than McConnell.
Earlier this month, the media was relatively silent about a ruling
in Washington that was likely the second worst day of McConnell’s 35-year political life. Nearly a year ago at a
‘secret’ Koch brother strategy meeting for billionaires buying shares in
the Koch venture to control of the United States government, McConnell
complained mercilessly that he was forced to vote on foolish things like
minimum wage and unemployment insurance, and to get retribution against
Democrats and satisfy the Koch brothers he pledged to “go after” and
abolish most of the federal government, if not “all of it.” Of course
Mitch thanked the Koch brothers for their support because without it
McConnell and Republicans could not complete the task at hand. McConnell
also shared an intimate, poignant moment regarding a personal tragedy
he said was the “worst day of his 35-year political life; the day the shrub signed the McCain-Feingold campaign finance legislation into
law.”
Now, if that was the worst day of his political life, a unanimous (11-0) ruling
by the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington must be a close second. The
Appellate Court ruled that the ban on federal campaign contributions by
individuals who contract with the government is constitutional. The
takeaway from the ruling, besides putting a damper on McConnell’s
political life, is that regardless the push by the Koch-Republicans and
two horrendous rulings by Koch acolytes on the Supreme Court, 11
appellate judges firmly believe there is too much money in politics and
that more “can be a very bad thing.” McConnell believes otherwise
despite polling after polling revealing that an overwhelming 85 percent
of Americans believe that political campaign financing needs at the very
least “fundamental changes,” or better yet “a complete overhaul.”
However, Republicans have an innate following the will of the people,
or the Constitution for that matter, and in that spirit McConnell and
Republicans are conniving to gut more from campaign finance laws to
expedite the Koch brothers’ purchase and control of state and federal
government.
After the 1974 Watergate scandal, Congress passed a
law establishing limits on how much money people could give and how much
politicians could spend on their campaigns; it also “mandated”
disclosure to ensure that regular citizens could “follow the money.” The
High Court eviscerated 1974 law immediately by eliminating campaign
spending limits in Buckley v. Valeo; that ruling started the
“fundraising arms race” the wealthy are winning and to ensure total
victory, the Koch Supreme Court wiped out the rest of Buckley, and
Citizens United and McCutcheon v. FEC allowed corporations to spend
unlimited money directly and voided individual aggregate contribution
limits; all in the name of “freedom of speech.” Apparently, the High
Court’s Koch surrogates ruled according to the phrase “money talks,” and
since the Kochs and corporations have lots of money, they get lots of
“free speech” to buy government.
Despite the Koch Court wiping out campaign finance
regulations, there was one particular rule that Mitch McConnell was
unable to eliminate last year. McConnell waited until the eleventh hour
of a must pass spending bill to insert a provision that “relaxed”
campaign finance coordination between candidates and political parties.
Having failed to enact a provision that would consolidate power within
party committees that raise money for House and Senate candidates,
McConnell snuck
the same “campaign finance reform” in the completely unrelated fiscal
2016 Financial Services spending bill due by this Friday. McConnell, and
the Koch brothers, lust to enact into law, abolish more campaign
finance regulations before the 2016 general election season fully gets
underway. Apparently the Kochs, who are rumored to have pledged upwards
of a billion dollars to buy all three branches of government, want all
campaign finance regulations abolished to buy the government in 2016 and
end their costly crusade to own America. With an owned and operated
acolyte like McConnell, who also wants campaign finance rules
eliminated, the Kochs are closing in on their vision of America without
campaign finance regulations to hasten achieving their bigger goal of
abolishing the Federal Elections Commission along with free and fair
elections. It is exactly what a fascist dictator would do and a means
for the Koch brothers to repay Republican McConnell with the
greatest day of his 35-year political life.
Although
the Appellate Court’s ruling will be appealed to the Supreme Court for
the Koch brothers to overturn with extreme “free speech” prejudice, it
was encouraging that eleven federal judges unanimously decided that
there can be too much money in politics. However, that hopefulness has
to be tempered with despair that the ruling did not, in any conceivable
way, threaten Citizens United or the Kochs’ progress in buying
government. It just temporarily kept in place the ban on federal
campaign contributions “by individuals” who contract with the
government; there is no ban on companies, corporations, the Koch
brothers, oil industry, Wall Street, and defense industry, or
Republicans would cease to exist as a political power and Mitch
McConnell would know what “the worst day of his political life” really
feels like.
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