Fifth Congressional District is entirely urban and has not a single farmer.)
The punch line of this chapter can be encapsulated in a single experience from
that campaign. At the first candidates’ forum, the moderator, a political
columnist
for a Chicago newspaper, asked each candidate to comment on his or
her view of federal earmarks. Earmarks are the mechanism by which members
of Congress insert pork into bills; an earmark directs federal money to a specific
project in a member’s district and is therefore insulated from any formal review
as to whether the project makes sense or not. For example, an earmark in a
transportation bill, such as the notorious “bridge to nowhere” in Alaska,
allocates money for the bridge even if the Department of Transportation never
would have funded it. The subject of earmarks had come up because the first
spending bill signed by President Obama had nearly nine thousand earmarks.
(No, that is not an exaggeration.)
One by one, each candidate excoriated both the concept of earmarks and the
politicians who support them. One candidate even
proposed arresting members
of Congress who cut such deals. But the earmark question was a trap, and a
clever one at that. The moderator asked a follow-up question, something like,
“So each of you would oppose an earmark to support Children’s Memorial
Hospital?” As you may have inferred, this particular children’s hospital is in the
Fifth Congressional District, about 300 yards from where we were sitting. The
answers to the follow-up question were less emphatic than the original assault on
earmarks and included comments like, “Of course, a hospital is different” and
“That particular earmark involves children” and “I will do everything I can as a
congressman to support Children’s Memorial Hospital” and so on. No one
suggested that politicians who support an earmark for
the hospital should go to
prison.
Everyone despises earmarks, except for their own. A member of Congress
who secures special funding to expand Children’s Memorial Hospital is a
success. A ribbon-cutting ceremony will celebrate the project, with cupcakes and
juice and speeches lauding this politician’s hard work in Congress. How did the
funding come to pass? Not because this one politician gave a speech on the floor
of the House that was so emotional and inspiring that the other 534 members
decided to lavish funds on a children’s hospital in Illinois. He did it by
supporting a bill with nine thousand earmarks, one of which was his. Such is the
political reality in a democratic system: We love
our congressman who finds
funding for the hospital; what we hate are politicians who support earmarks.
Would campaign finance reform change anything? At the margins, if that.
Money is certainly one tool for grabbing a politician’s attention, but there are
others. If the dairy farmers (who benefit from federal price supports) can’t give
money, they will hire lobbyists, ring doorbells, hold meetings, write letters,
threaten hunger strikes, and vote as a bloc. Campaign finance reform does not
change the fact that the dairy farmers care deeply about their subsidy while the
people who pay for it don’t care much at all. The democratic
process will always
favor small, well-organized groups at the expense of large, diffuse groups. It’s
not just how many people care one way or the other; it’s how
much they care.
Two percent who care deeply about something are a more potent political force
than the 98 percent who feel the opposite but aren’t motivated enough to do
anything about it.
Bob Kerrey, former Democratic senator from Nebraska, has said that he
doesn’t think campaign finance reform would lead to much change at all. “The
most important corruption that happens in politics doesn’t go away even if you
had full public financing of campaigns,” he told
The New Yorker. “And that is: I
don’t want to tell you something that’s going to make you not like me. If I had a
choice between getting a round of applause by delivering a twenty-six-second
applause line and getting a round of
boos by telling you the truth, I’d rather get
the round of applause.”
7
So, if I were asked again why our growing knowledge of public policy does not
always translate into a perfect world, this chapter would be my more complete
answer.