Fix Election Spending: Opinion

Win, lose, or draw, the mid-term elections are over — except, of course for those candidates who are refusing to accept the results — and campaigning for the 2024 elections has already begun. This never-ending cycle has made American politics a virtual circus, a very expensive circus. The cost of the mid-term elections is predicted to exceed 16.7 billion dollars. It is an obscene amount of money, and it will only grow every two years unless we legislate to curb it. There are some simple fixes that could help.
For example, we could make it illegal to contribute any money to a candidate who is not your direct representative. In other words, no person (or corporation, person or not) could make any donation to a candidate outside of their own local, state, or congressional district. A donor must have a certified address within the district in order to make any contribution to that campaign; and no contribution can be made in any other way — not by direct gift to the candidate or their spouse, children, business, or any other exchange that would be beneficial to the campaign.
That would be a great start. Then we could consider additional ways to make an election fair, even if legislative or constitutional amendments need to be made:
- Do we want to allow unlimited gifts to local, state, or national registered political parties?
- Do we want to cap the amount that a candidate or party could spend on advertising?
- Do we want to require all advertising to contain only a candidate’s position on any given issue, and thereby eliminate the negative words and images about the opposing candidates?
- Will we demand that on-line material be demonstrably honest and fair?
- Will we choose to limit political ads to a restrictive number of weeks before an election?
- Will we make it a criminal offense to carry a firearm within at least the margin of restriction for political signs or personal politicking at the polls?
- Will we tighten the restrictions on voter intimidation by denying the right to congregate within a reasonably safe distance from the polls or the lines of voters waiting to cast their ballots?
We could also begin to demand that candidates not only have verifiable signatures on their petitions to be on the ballot, but also meet all qualifications to run, including knowledge of the requirements of the position they are seeking and the responsibilities and limitations of that position. If they do not understand the job, they should not be allowed to contend for it.
If we could fix the system of candidate selection and election spending, we would have a pretty good chance of fixing the rest of the representative system of government so that we have a real democracy where everyone has an equal opportunity and money does not control our country. Just imagine what we could do with that $16.7B!
Lanny Parks has always loved books. She was a librarian at the EPFL in Baltimore, at Kent School, and Queen Anne’s County, and owned a local bookstore. Her weekly newspaper column ran for over 20 years. She has lived with her family in Chestertown for over 50 years.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




