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Title: Fact-Checking Clinton: Obama Never Said Money Wasn’t Corrupting—He Said the Opposite
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.truthdig.com/articles/f ... rrupting-he-said-the-opposite/
Published: Apr 15, 2016
Author: Alexander Reed Kelly
Post Date: 2021-09-19 13:21:26 by BTP Holdings
Keywords: None
Views: 49

Fact-Checking Clinton: Obama Never Said Money Wasn’t Corrupting—He Said the Opposite

by Alexander Reed Kelly

Barack Obama. (Marc Nozell / CC-BY-2.0)

In the CNN debate Thursday, Hillary Clinton invoked Barack Obama and his record to deflect Bernie Sanders’ suggestion that voters should not “feel confident about a candidate” who says “she’s going to bring change in America when she is so dependent on big-money interests.”

“Make no mistake about it, this is not just an attack on me, it’s an attack on President Obama,” Clinton said during the exchange. “President Obama had a super PAC when he ran. President Obama took tens of millions of dollars from contributors. And President Obama was not at all influenced when he made the decision to pass and sign Dodd- Frank, the toughest regulations on Wall Street in many a year.”

But in his 2006 book, “The Audacity of Hope,” Obama described the “subtle but real corrupting effect the fundraising process has on politicians, including himself,” writes Jon Schwarz at The Intercept.

Quoting from the book (boldface added):

I can’t assume that the money chase didn’t alter me in some ways. …

Increasingly I found myself spending time with people of means — law firm partners and investment bankers, hedge fund managers and venture capitalists. As a rule, they were smart, interesting people, knowledgeable about public policy, liberal in their politics, expecting nothing more than a hearing of their opinions in exchange for their checks. But they reflected, almost uniformly, the perspectives of their class: the top 1 percent or so of the income scale that can afford to write a $2,000 check to a political candidate. They believed in the free market and an educational meritocracy; they found it hard to imagine that there might be any social ill that could not be cured by a high SAT score. They had no patience with protectionism, found unions troublesome, and were not particularly sympathetic to those whose lives were upended by the movements of global capital. Most were adamantly prochoice and antigun and were vaguely suspicious of deep religious sentiment.

And although my own worldview and theirs corresponded in many ways — I had gone to the same schools, after all, had read the same books, and worried about my kids in many of the same ways — I found myself avoiding certain topics during conversations with them, papering over possible differences, anticipating their expectations. On core issues I was candid; I had no problem telling well-heeled supporters that the tax cuts they’d received from George Bush should be reversed. Whenever I could, I would try to share with them some of the perspectives I was hearing from other portions of the electorate: the legitimate role of faith in politics, say, or the deep cultural meaning of guns in rural parts of the state.

Still, I know that as a consequence of my fund-raising I became more like the wealthy donors I met, in the very particular sense that I spent more and more of my time above the fray, outside the world of immediate hunger, disappointment, fear, irrationality, and frequent hardship of the other 99 percent of the population — that is, the people that I’d entered public life to serve. And in one fashion or another, I suspect this is true for every senator: The longer you are a senator, the narrower the scope of your interactions. You may fight it, with town hall meetings and listening tours and stops by the old neighborhood. But your schedule dictates that you move in a different orbit from most of the people you represent.

And perhaps as the next race approaches, a voice within tells you that you don’t want to have to go through all the misery of raising all that money in small increments all over again. You realize that you no longer have the cachet you did as the upstart, the fresh face; you haven’t changed Washington, and you’ve made a lot of people unhappy with difficult votes. The path of least resistance — of fund-raisers organized by the special interests, the corporate PACs, and the top lobbying shops — starts to look awfully tempting, and if the opinions of these insiders don’t quite jibe with those you once held, you learn to rationalize the changes as a matter of realism, of compromise, of learning the ropes. The problems of ordinary people, the voices of the Rust Belt town or the dwindling heartland, become a distant echo rather than a palpable reality, abstractions to be managed rather than battles to be fought.


Poster Comment:

I bet they had to fumigate the White Hut after eight years of Obama's living there to get that funky black smell out of the place.

Dogs that were raised with whites can tell blacks have a different odor about them. The same is true in reverse for dogs that are raised with blacks.

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