Chapter 1: Election Industry, Inc.Americans own the greatest political system in the world. It works wonderfully well for everyone involved, except two groups of people:
Voters. And candidates.
Political parties, pollsters, political consultants, fundraisers, media mavens, junk mailers, spammers, special interest groups, lobbyists, and various other meretricious sorts all profit handsomely from our current political system.
Who pays for it? You. And me. And, of course, any candidate brave enough to run for public office.
After over a dozen years trying to upgrade political communications, I have come to understand that some of the most fearsome obstacles our candidates face are their own political parties and Washington, D.C.-based political consultants.
Most political consultants and both major political parties treat candidates with disdain. They see candidates as virtually interchangeable: wind-up bad actors who would all be president if they could only follow the party's or the consultant's simple (but brilliant!) instructions, stand in the right place and recite their lines without drooling, tripping, or peeing in their pants.
They represent our politics at its worst: from party operatives to pollsters to direct mail merchants to media consultants to general strategists, the overwhelming majority of political consultants are a craven and narrow-minded bunch who would be failures in nearly every other field. They are hired guns with no soul and an inability to shoot straight (both ethically and functionally). They are disloyal to a fault, as quick to turn on a candidate or a cause as they are to be hired by one.
They give hucksterism a bad name.
Collectively, I call this monolith "Election Industry, Inc." Like the infamous "military-industrial complex" (but not nearly as productive), it is an inside-the-Beltway collective of toadies, fakes, crooks, character assassins, racketeers, party apologists, false scientists, phony experts, self-aggrandizers, backscratchers and backstabbers (often embodied in the same person). Election Industry, Inc. drives up the cost of our elections and drives down the number of people who participate in them. The people who populate it concern themselves with only two things: their own self-preservation, and money.
Election Industry, Inc. has killed some of our best candidates and kept many, many more of our best and brightest people from ever considering a run for office or a stint in public service. It owns and runs the two-party oligarchy that controls our country and refuses to let anyone outside its dominion near the levers of power. It makes the rules and legislates against new people, new political parties, new ideas, and new points of view.
The idiot wind blowing out of Washington is so manifest and so out-of-touch with the rest of the country that it is no wonder Election Industry, Inc.'s political advice is of little use to anyone but incumbents already ingratiated to their system. And with the advantages for incumbents that Election Industry, Inc. -- and the incumbents themselves -- have built into the system, perhaps it should be called ReElection Industry, Inc. Given their money and news media advantages, a consultant would have to give egregiously bad advice to ever have an incumbent lose.
Election Industry, Inc. likes to see its incumbents reelected, because they are already subordinated to the system. Elected officials who are used to being treated like royalty in Washington have little incentive to disturb the system that rewards them.
Political consultants and the other members of Election Industry, Inc. almost always align themselves exclusively with one party or the other. They brag about won/loss ratios, never stopping to consider that in elections with only two candidates that must have a victor, even a coin-flipper on a hot streak can do somewhat better than 50 percent. If you think the revolving door between Congress and lobbyists is confusing, try to track the back-and-forthing among the two major political parties and the denizens of Election Industry, Inc. Pollsters recommend political consultants and vice-versa. Political party operatives refer pollsters and political consultants to candidates, then turn around and go to work for the polling firms and consultants, or vice-versa.
Election Industry, Inc. is the chief reason why so little of value gets done in Washington to solve our most pressing problems, and why few people outside this one-industry town feel connected to our federal government. Social Security? Health care? Child hunger? Budget deficits? Fixing our schools? All of these are little more than political and rhetorical footballs for the players of the system.
Perhaps most frightening of all is that Election Industry, Inc. is intent on becoming one of our biggest exports. Like an old-time tonic salesman finished with the fleecing of one town and moving on to the next, Election Industry, Inc. has set its sights on other countries, hoping to control their elections the way they control ours in America and using the same bag of tricks: phony polls, expensive media campaigns, negative and dishonest advertising, and other tactics designed intentionally to hold down voter turnout.
Is it any wonder people outside our borders are less than enchanted with America?
In American politics, winning is everything. It is the ultimate zero-sum, winner-take-all game. As far as Election Industry, Inc. is concerned, to win is to survive, and winning automatically validates whatever tactics you used to get there.
Election Industry, Inc. is a vast and mendacious enterprise that has fooled all but the smartest and bravest candidates into believing that their way is the only way. Using the power of money and media, it is debasing our democracy and aligns itself against the best parts of our nature. Election Industry, Inc. is an enemy of the people, with colossal advantages and odds that are overwhelmingly in its favor.
This is how we beat it.
Copyright © 2004 by William G. Hillsman