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What Everyone Needs to Know: Campaign Finance by Robert E. Mutch read ebook FB2, PDF, MOBI

9780190274696


0190274697
In 2015, well over half of the money contributed to the presidential race came from roughly 350 families. The 100 biggest donors gave as much as 2 million small donors combined. Can we still say we live in a democracy if a few hundred rich families provide a disproportionate shares of campaign funds? Congress and the courts are divided on that question, with conservatives saying yes and liberals saying no. The debate is about the most fundamental of political questions: how we define democracy and how we want our democracy to work. The debate may ultimately be about political theory, but in practice it is conducted in terms of laws, regulations, and court decisions about super PACs, 527s, 501(c)(4)s, dark money, small donors, public funding, corporate contributions, the Federal Election Commission, and the IRS. Campaign Finance: What Everyone Needs to Know(r) explains those laws, regulations, and Supreme Court decisions, from Buckley v. Valeo to Citizens United, asking how they fit into the larger discussion about how we want our democracy to work., The one percent has been providing an ever larger share of campaign funds since the 1980s. In 2015, well over half of the money contributed to the presidential race came from roughly 350 families. One-fourth of it came from just seventy-eight donors, all of whom made contributions of $1 million or more. Can we still say we live in a democracy if a few hundred rich families provide such disproportionate shares of campaign funds? Congress and the courts are divided on that question, with conservatives saying yes and liberals saying no. The debate is about the most fundamental of political questions: how we define democracy, and how we want our democracy to work. The debate may ultimately be about political theory, but in practice it is conducted in terms of laws, regulations, and court decisions about PACs, super PACs, 527s, 501(c)(4)s, dark money, the Federal Election Commission, and even the IRS. Campaign Finance: What Everyone Needs to Know® explains those laws, regulations, and court decisions, and asks how they fit into the larger debate about how we want our democracy to work.

Read Robert E. Mutch - What Everyone Needs to Know: Campaign Finance in MOBI, FB2

The last chapter examines questions of legal philosophy.The chapters collected in the volume employ the concepts and methods developed within argumentation theory to investigate the specifics of political discourse across various deliberative arenas: from debates in the European Parliament, consensus conferences and public hearings in France, discussions in Dutch online forums, to exchanges of comments in online versions of British newspapers.The gap between what the brain does and the mind experiences remains uncharted territory.Focused specifically on the law as it applies to the nonprofit sector, the Bruce R.This is the inaugural volume in the series Studies in Constitutional Democracy, sponsored by the Kinder Institute on Constitutional Democracy.Lysias (ca.Part Three, Socio-Legal Theory, considers the various socio-legal theories which view law as a central social phenomenon and the principle of utility, as adjunctive to the substantive issues of legal theory.Horner and Endersby also discuss the African American newspaper journalists and editors who mobilized popular support for the NAACP s strategy.We argue that the managerial approach to solving the crisis violates 'a right to politics', that is, a right that our collective life be guided by genuine politics: by discussion of and decision among genuinely alternative principles and policies.Lewis Esq. Chair of the American Bar Association s Museum Law Committee and practicing New York attorney; Mark S.