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Johann Hari

Johann Hari

Posted: January 28, 2010 08:38 PM

This week, a disaster hit the United States, and the after-tremors will be shaking and breaking global politics for years. It did not grab the same press attention as the fall of liberal Kennedy-licking Massachusetts to a pick-up truck Republican, or President Obama's first State of the Union address, or the possible break-up of Brangelina and their United Nations of adopted infants. But it took the single biggest problem dragging American politics towards brutality and dysfunction - and made it much, much worse. Yet it also showed the only path that Obama can now take to salvage his Presidency.

For over a century, the US has slowly put some limits - too few, too feeble - on how much corporations can bribe, bully or intimidate politicians. On Tuesday, they were burned away in one whoosh. The Supreme Court ruled that corporations can suddenly run political adverts during an election campaign - and there is absolutely no limit on how many, or how much they can spend. So if you anger Goldman Sachs by supporting legislation to break up the too-big-to-fail banks, you will smack into a wall of 24/7 ads exposing your every flaw. If you displease Exxon-Mobil by supporting legislation to deal with global warming, you will now be hit by a tsunami of advertising saying you are opposed to jobs and The American Way. If you rile the defence contractors by opposing the gargantuan war budget, you will face a smear-campaign calling you Soft on Terror.

Representative Alan Grayson says: "It basically institutionalizes and legalizes bribery on the largest scale imaginable. Corporations will now be able to reward the politicians that play ball with them - and beat to death the politicians that don't... You won't even hear any more about the Senator from Kansas. It'll be the Senator from General Electric or the Senator from Microsoft." In 2008, Exxon Mobil made profits of $85bn. So if they dedicated just 10 percent to backing a President who would serve their interests, they would have $8.5bn to spend - more than every candidate for President and every candidate for Senate spent at the last election. And that's just one corporation.

To understand the impact this will have, you need to grasp how smaller sums of corporate money have already hijacked American democracy. Let's look at a case that is simple and immediate and every American can see in front of them: healthcare. The United States is the only major industrialized democracy that doesn't guarantee healthcare for all its citizens. The result is that, according to a detailed study by Harvard University, some 45,000 Americans die needlessly every year. That's equivalent to 15 9/11s every year, or two Haitian earthquakes every decade.

This isn't because the American people like it this way. Gallup has found in polls for a decade now that two-thirds believe the government should guarantee care for every American: they are as good and decent and concerned for each other as any European. No: it is because private insurance companies make a fortune today out of a system that doesn't cover the profit-less poor, and can turn away the sickest people as "uninsurable". So they pay for politicians to keep the system broken. They fund the election campaigns of politicians on both sides of the aisle, and in return, those politicians veto any system that doesn't serve their paymasters. Look for example at Joe Lieberman, the former Democratic candidate for Vice-President. He has taken $448,066 in campaign contributions from private healthcare companies while his wife has raked in $2m as one of their chief lobbyists, and he has loyally blocked any attempt in the Senate to break the stranglehold of the health insurance companies and broaden coverage.

The US political system now operates within a corporate cage. If you want to run for office, you have to take corporate cash - and so you have to serve corporate interests. Corporations are often blatant in their corruption: it's not unusual for them to give to both competing candidates in a Senate race, to ensure all sides are indebted to them. This runs so deep that Congressman James Clyburn says the US has become a "corpocracy." It has reached the point that lobbyists now often write the country's laws. Not metaphorically; literally. The former Republican congressman Walter Jones spoke out in disgust in 2006 when he found that drug company lobbyists were actually authoring the words of the Medicare prescription bill, and puppet-politicians were simply nodding it through.

But what happens if politicians are serving the short-term profit-hunger of corporations, and not the public interest? You only have to look at the shuttered shops outside your window for the answer. The banks were rapidly deregulated from the Eighties through the Noughties because their lobbyists paid politicians on all sides, and demanded their payback in rolled-back rules and tossed-away laws. As Senator Dick Durbin says simply: "The banks own the Senate," so they had to obey. The result was that the banks made staggering profits - and were immediately rescued when they smashed the world economy. The only people who paid for it were the public, all over the world.

It is this corruption that has prevented Barack Obama from achieving anything substantial in his first year in office. How do you reregulate the banks, if the Senate is owned by Wall Street? How do you launch a rapid transition away from oil and coal to wind and solar, if the fossil fuel industry owns Congress? How do you break with a grab-the-oil foreign policy if Big Oil provides the invitation that gets you into the party of American politics?

His attempt at healthcare reform is dying because he thought he could only get through the Senate a system that the giant healthcare corporations and drug companies pre-approved. So he promised to keep the ban on bringing cheap drugs down from Canada, he pledged not to bargain over prices, and he dumped the idea of having a public option that would make sure ordinary Americans could actually afford it. The result was a Quasimodo healthcare proposal so feeble and misshapen that even the people of Massachusetts turned away in disgust.

Yet the corporations that caused this crisis are now being given yet more power. Bizarrely, the Supreme Court has decided that corporations are "persons", so they have the "right" to speak during elections. But corporations are not people. Should they have the right to bear arms, or to vote? It would make as much sense. They are a legal fiction, invented by the state - and they can be fairly regulated to stop them devouring their creator. This is the same Supreme Court that ruled that the detainees at Guantanomo Bay are not "persons" under the constitution and are deserving of basic protections. A court that says a living breathing human is less of a "person" than Lockheed Martin has gone badly awry.

Obama now faces two paths - the Clinton road, or the FDR highway. After he lost his healthcare battle, Clinton decided to simply serve the corporate interests totally. He is the one who carried out the biggest roll-back of banking laws, and saw the largest explosion of inequality since the 1920s. Some of Obama's advisors are now nudging him down that path: the pledge for an appalling anti-Keynesian spending freeze on social programmes for the next three years to pay down the deficit is one of their triumphs.

But there is another way. Franklin Roosevelt began his Presidency trying to appease corporate interests - but he faced huge uproar and disgust at home when it became clear this left ordinary Americans stranded in the fog of a depression. He switched course. He turned his anger on "the malefactors of great wealth" and bragged: "I welcome the hatred... of the economic royalists." He launched a programme of redistributing power from the corporations back towards the people, and put in place tough regulations that prevented economic disaster and spiralling inequality for three generations.

There were rare flashes of what Franklin Delano Obama would look like in his reaction to the Supreme Court decision. He said: "It is a major victory for big oil, Wall Street banks, health insurance companies, and other powerful interests that marshal their power every day in Washington to drown out the voices of everyday Americas." But he has spent far more time coddling those interests than taking them on. The great pressure of strikes and protests put on FDR hasn't yet arisen from a public dissipated into hopelessness by an appalling media that convinces them they are powerless and should wait passively for a Messiah.

Very little positive change can happen in the US until they clear out the temple of American democracy. In the State of the Union, Obama spent one minute on this problem, and proposed restrictions on lobbyists - but that's only the tiniest of baby steps. He evaded the bigger issue. If Americans want a democratic system, they have to pay for it - and that means fair state funding for political candidates. Candidates are essential for the system to work: you may as well begrudge paying for the polling booths, or the lever you pull. At the same time, the Supreme Court needs to be confronted: when the Court tried to stymie the New Deal, FDR tried to pack it with justices on the side of the people. Obama needs to be pressured by Americans to be as radical in democratizing the Land of the Fee.

None of the crises facing us all - from the global banking system to global warming - can be dealt with if a tiny number of super-rich corporations have a veto over every inch of progress. If Obama flunks this challenge now, he may as well put the US government on eBay and sell it to the highest bidder. How would we spot the difference?


To join the campaign to democratize the United States of America, click here.

Johann Hari is a writer for the Independent. To read more of his articles, click here or here.

He is also a contributing writer for Slate magazine. To read his latest article there, click here.

 

Follow Johann Hari on Twitter: www.twitter.com/johannhari101

 
 
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09:35 PM on 03/05/2010
Thank you The Media Ranger for your response to fly over the mark. I would add that it boggles the mind
why this person is even on this blog with such a virulent distain for alternate points of view. My advice,
go rant and rave somewhere else, fly over the mark.
01:37 AM on 01/31/2010
I wish the corruption issue was simply that of the US , the unfortunate truth is that it's a global problem. We don't have democracy now we have global corporatism with its own brand of insidious influence. The Supreme Court in the US just gave the shop away, it's been done other places before.
04:50 PM on 03/04/2010
Please help inform me where in the world a supposed democratic country is so completely controlled by Banks, the Military and Corporations , and please do not say Israel because that is the 51 st state .

Even in Africa what is called lobbying in the US is known as bribery and treated as a crime !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nickmantas
01:27 PM on 01/30/2010
This is the sad state of our country!
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flyovermark
...Obamacare is tyranny...
12:24 PM on 01/30/2010
"None of the crises facing us all - from the global banking system to global warming - can be dealt with if a tiny number of super-rich corporations have a veto over every inch of progress." This is pure comedy. To spend fourteen paragraphs railing against America's governement for corruption by corporations, only to wail that it stands in the way of advancing the cause of global warming, after the exposure of "climate science" as the most politically corrupt hoax ever perpetrated on a global scale, is nothing short of laughable. Not to mention the omission of any acknowledgement that it was the introduction of government as a "competitor" into the housing market (with no fear of market consequences for imposing a political agenda on it), that precipitated the collapse of the global banking system in the first place, is ridiculously myopic to say the least. This guy is better than Letterman.
12:09 PM on 01/30/2010
Campain finance reform is long overdue. I see a lot of good idea's here, some not. We need to cobble together pieces of the good ideas and try to come together to start some sort of change. Voter contributions only with caps on contributions seems appealing to me. How much money does our media outlets receive from campain contributions every couple of year's to run ad's for people running for office? It seem's like that alone is a never ending cash cow. These corporation's use the consumer's money against them. Perhap's equal ad time should be given with cap's on election spending. Putting a stop on the profit of the campain's would seem to me to be a step in the right direction, after all the public's best interest's should be the focus here, not profit. Some things should not be profit driven, especially when it is obviously working against the people.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DemoMom
10:54 AM on 01/30/2010
Excellent post - and very depressing.......What can we, ordinary people, do about this? It's just appalling that we're in this state but until we push for public financing of elections, things won't change. The media is worse than useless, especially Faux News which feeds lies and misinformation to the fools who watch and most people are totally ignorant about the whole issue.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mauiloa
Dedicated to fighting the bullies of the Right.
10:45 AM on 01/30/2010
This headline is about America's future and also its coming epitaph.

So much promise, so little follow through.
10:44 AM on 01/30/2010
there are several posts that call for a constitutional amendment to change who is defined as a person which is at the heart of the Supreme Court ruling, There is only one person who can get the ball rolling for such an amendment which is incredibly difficult to pass and that is President Obama. Lets get that ball roliing now and if it passes you will see a huge cleanup in Congress
09:37 AM on 01/30/2010
Any time Americans actually stand up and rage against the supreme court appointing their president I will know things have changed. Any time they actually demand that all elections be funded by the taxpayer so the winner in a race will know the taxpayer is his boss, then change will occur. Martin Luther King Jr. took to the streets and his efforts succeeded because he got the people out and they stayed out til they won. When will America understand talk is cheap. Change which Obama spoke of was not Washing ton will change. It was "we" can change. We means the people and it means accepting the need to walk and not just talk.
10:37 AM on 01/30/2010
We need a Constitutional amendment that redefines what a "person" is as it is being interpreted by the Supreme Court. We will never get a fair system in Congress until that happens.
09:37 AM on 01/30/2010
Excellent article.

Now answer this question: ARE THE PEOPLE REALLY EXPECTED TO ABIDE BY LAWS THAT HAVE BEEN PASSED IN A CORRUPT FASHION?

They'd better fix this CULTURE OF CORRUPTION quickly, otherwise the PEOPLE will respond the only way they can.
09:51 AM on 01/30/2010
We have tried to impose democracy and Capitalism on the people of Afghanistan who’s way of life and Government has been based on greed and corruption for centuries and is a way of life in most Arab countries.

It seems to me that we not only have failed to sell Democracy to the Arabs but they have sold their methods of greed and corruption to our so called Democracies.

Democracy has come to mean a vote every 4 or5 years and no control of what happens in between. There was hope with Obama but that hope is fading fast.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kd45music
The truth is out there.
10:35 AM on 01/30/2010
Once the overwhelming majority of people are affected by this corrupt system, it's going to hit the fan in a violent revolution. It's inevitable. Domestic terrorism is just around the corner.
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flyovermark
...Obamacare is tyranny...
09:26 AM on 01/30/2010
It is insulting to give the eurotrash a forum from which to lecture America on what we must do to become as they are. J Hari hasn't a clue what it is to be an American, but he is full of ideas on how to "restore democracy" to a nation that has, from it's beginning, eschewed democracy. Not once is the word used in the Constitution, nor in the Declaration that gained our independence from HIS country. Before you worry about the speck in our eye, Johann, try removing the 2x4 in your own. How dare you presume to condemn corruption in our "temple", while the union that controls healthcare in Britain, with a membership that numbers larger than the Chinese Army, has such a stranglehold over YOUR parlamentary "temple". Well here's a clue, Mr. Hari. America isn't great because of what it's government can do FOR it's people; America is great because OF it's people. JFK understood this, even if the party he belonged to has long forgotten it, for he is best remembered for saying, "Ask not...." Your misleading post may play well among the "progressive" sychophants here at HuffPo, but Americans recogonize a carpetbagger when they see one. Perhaps there should have been a third signal to sound the alarm. One if by land, two if by sea, and three if by Op-Ed.
09:53 AM on 01/30/2010
In your lengthy rant, you failed to shown that the CULTURE OF CORRUPTION in the highest level of the US government is not firmly in place. I do agree with you that America is great because of its people. So, the question is, what are the people (and you in particular) doing about this.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
StJames
In absentia luci tenebrae vincunt
10:12 AM on 01/30/2010
If the corporations do indeed take advantage of this ruling, I am going to cancel my television subscription until the election is over.

If enough people would do that, the cable providers would be forced to step in and let the advertisers know just how small the audience is. Corporations need to reach people with their advertising...if their ads do little more than "preach to the choir" they will soon drop them.

Sadly, I am well aware that not many people will do this. It's why we have the government we deserve.
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flyovermark
...Obamacare is tyranny...
10:48 AM on 01/30/2010
You seem all too willing to ASSUME a culture of corruption. Your question is premised upon the idea that I must in any way prove it does NOT exist. One has to look no farther than the Blago/Burris debacle to point out that there IS corruption in politics, but it also proves that corruption is neither tolerated, nor institutionalized. I would point out that before we believe any of the conclusions that Hera jumps to, he has failed to prove that there IS a culture of corruption. Let J Hera offer more than just an insinuation of corruption before buying into the rest of HIS rant.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kd45music
The truth is out there.
10:39 AM on 01/30/2010
Why does it take a European to see how corrupt our government has become? By the time you wake up, it'll be too late.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
09:12 AM on 01/30/2010
Briliant! Except for this:

"Quasimodo healthcare proposal so feeble and misshapen that even the people of Massachusetts turned away in disgust"

The Senate/House health care plans are almost identical to the law here in Massachusetts, and as a State Senator, SCOTT BROWN VOTED FOR THE MASS HEALTH CARE PLAN!

Most of the media missed it, but we here in Mass did not. Simple truth: Scott Brown is likeable, Martha Coakley is not. (Plus there is some sexism involved; men resent a strong woman, like Hillary.)

resident, forced to buy insurance, I can tell you the simple truth: Scott Brown won because he is likeable, and Martha Coakley is not.
09:25 AM on 01/30/2010
"Likeable"? "Likeable?!"
07:54 AM on 01/30/2010
"His attempt at healthcare reform is dying because he
thought he could only get through the Senate a system
that the giant healthcare corporations and drug
companies pre-approved."

Why do thoughts of Alan Greenspans beliefs keep
running through my mind?

"But corporations are not people......
They are a legal fiction, invented by the state-"

Is it a contradiction to refer to a corporation as both
"them" and "it"?
02:38 AM on 01/30/2010
Strong stuff.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Articulator
11:19 PM on 01/29/2010
This is an incredibly excellent summation.