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Money and Politics

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Now let us use our heads and deal appropriately, as they say in Washington, with a corporate ruling class that has hijacked the nation, and in so doing eliminate at least one glaring that ours is a government of, by, and for the many when it is so notoriously the exclusive preserve of the few.--Gore Vidal, from the Foreword

In recent years, many voters have wondered whose voices are actually heard by our elected representatives. As the cost of running competitive political campaigns escalates and politicians appeal increasingly to wealthy interests to finance election bids, voters in many states have passed, or are primed to vote on, campaign finance initiatives.

In Money and Politics , David Donnelly, Janice Fine, and Ellen S. Miller argue that only full public funding of campaigns can ensure democratic elections. Often contentious, the responses to Donnelly, Fine, and Miller are penned by activists, politicians, and scholars who have been vocal in the debates over campaign finance reform, including Senator Russell Feingold, who offers a reflection on the status of the landmark McCain-Feingold Act.

120 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 1999

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David Donnelly

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