Opinion: Why you should be thankful for Michael Bloomberg and his half-billion-dollar campaign (via latimesopinion)
I wasn’t a Bloomberg backer, but that’s just silly. We can play that game with every dollar spent on nonessential items — after all, the $1,400 you spent last year on cable TV could have bought quite a few meals for the homeless people of L.A. County. Bloomberg’s an attractive target because of the scale of his spending, but the principle is the same. It’s a rare human being who devotes more than 20% of his or her income to charity, let alone every available dollar.
Besides, for voters who put a top priority on responding to climate change, replacing President Trump with someone who recognizes the problem and tries to solve it instead of exacerbating it is worth half a billion dollars in campaign ads, isn’t it? Can you put a dollar value on averting the climate-related catastrophes heading our way?You could make that argument about other Bloomberg campaign planks too, such as his support for aggressive gun control.
Even people who are cynical about the role of money in politics should be thankful for Bloomberg’s effort and the valuable lessons it provided. First, it showed that personal wealth alone can’t guarantee you a place on the ballot. Second, it showed that policy proposals alone won’t make the sale either — voters care not just about the message, but the messenger.
Third, skipping the “retail” phase of the presidential race — the hobnobbing, the baby-kissing, the town halls and, yes, the Iowa caucuses — only postpones the reckoning that every candidate must face. Former Vice President Joe Biden’s resilience in the face of the drubbings he took in the early contests is a big part of his story. And fourth, debates matter. Yes, they can be boring, and yes, they go on too long, and yes, the format kinda stinks.
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