Thomas Frank: It's a rich man's world: How billionaire backers pick America's candidates
While visiting Kansas City last December, I read a local
newspaper story lamenting the gradual transformation of Missouri into a
reliably Republican citadel—a red state, as we like to say. In the past,
I read, Missouri had been different from its more partisan neighbors.
It had been a “bellwether” state that “reflected national trends,”
rather than delivering votes for any particular party. But now all that
was over, and I assumed the article would go on to mourn the death of
judicious public reason—the tradition of giving rival arguments a
hearing and testing them with that famous “Show Me” skepticism.
I was wrong. Forget the death of open-mindedness. What was actually being mourned that day in the Kansas City Star
was a possible loss of advertising revenue by the state’s TV stations.
If Missouri was no longer a battleground state, then the two parties and
their various backers would no longer fight their expensive electronic
war over the airwaves between St. Louie and St. Joe, and “spending on TV
ads in the state [would] plummet.”
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
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