As the stakes of politics increase with government's size, so does voter engagement. And 2012 redundantly proved what 2010 demonstrated. The 2010 elections, the first after the Supreme Court's excellent Citizens United decision liberalized the rules about funding political advocacy, were especially competitive. Social science confirms what common sense suggests: More spending on political advocacy means more voter information and interest. The approximately $2 billion spent in support of this year's presidential candidates — only about two-thirds as much as Procter & Gamble spent on U.S. advertising last year — surely contributed to the high turnout in targeted states.
Media and other "nonpartisan" — please, no chortling — dismay about "too much money in politics" waned as seven of the 10 highest-spending political entities supported Democrats and outspent the three supporting Republicans, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The advocacy infrastructure that is being developed by both sides in the post-Citizens United world will, over time, favor the most plausible side, which conservatives know is theirs.
George Will's email address is georgewill@washpost.com.
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Until they can find a way back to being a party of good governance and sound policies AND stay out of the nations bedrooms, keep religion private and truly embrace the freedom they claim, I suspect starting over is just another road to the place More..
The party has certain problems that must be remedied.
One, the tea party folks do not want any compromise at any time. Which works well if you are a dictator but not so much in a democratic republic such as ours. Reagan was the master of More..
Start at being logical and not lying about everything.