But as I said, average political donations over the electoral cycle, are roughly number of votes cast x 5.Dom, same olde point here: I do donate to a political party but I am poor so my donation isn't very much in the Grand Scheme of Things. Sadly, because of the difference between rich and poor, the poor person who genuinely believes they have a point weilds a lot less clout (in this situation and many others) than the rich person who also believes he has a point.
If democracy is for sale, the price isnt high, so why not pay it?
We cant pay it alone of course, but we can pay it in a group with little trouble.
Also, I'd advise against donating to a party, and go straight to a candidate.
I am a politician.
To get elected, I need three things.
1. People to deliver my literature
2. Money to pay for the printing,
3. Money to pay someone to deliver.
If you want two hours of my time, all you have to do is ring me up and we can go for a nice walk and stuff some letterboxes whilst you mould my opinion about an issue.
Or you can write me a fat cheque and insist I attend a dinner to receive it, where you mould my views on an issue.
Thats just the way it is.
It costs about £500 to print and pay for delivery of a leaflet to every house in my ward, or just £250 to print and use volunteer walkers.
At the end of the day, whoever prints and delivers the most usualy wins, so whoever has the most money wins, Labour outdelivered me 5:1 last year using postal union money to do it.
Amazingly, the guy is a strong supporter of postal subsidy.
Did they "buy" his vote, or did they find a guy who agreed with them and back him?
Its not really possible to say, and more than likely both occur, from people putting "their man" in power, to flat out buying people who are already in power.
There are far more rich people than poor, if everyone who voted for me gave me a fiver as well (or delivered 200 leaflets), I'd be rather closer to the bloke who just gets a cheque fat for the spending limit from one source.
Nowt?In general, you seem to assume that if a given person states an opinion and for some reason they are unable to back it up with their own money (including, they spend all their own money on simply getting-by) then their opinion's worth nowt. Is this what you genuinely believe?
No, not nothing, but words are just words. Any*one* can say any*thing*.
There is neither risk, nor commitment.
I can say I can fly
But if I refuse to jump off a building?
I believe freehold land will make a solid investment over the long term, even at its "peak".
Thats just words,
I believe freehold land will make a solid investment over the long term, even at its "peak" and I believe this so strongly I borrowed 5 years wages to buy land.
Thats words, and a follow on action.
One *should* be weighted much more than the other, not more likely per se, but the person saying it certainly believes it more.
Anyone who wants dirty money out of politics just has to provide a source of clean money (or money subsitute).
If your *really* want clean politics, that shouldnt be an issue, if you want clean politics less than Sky TV, or that 2litre instead of the 1.6, or that yearly family holiday, or that saturday morning lie in, well thats your choice, youre free to make it, and you get what you choose.