Er, the dark money groups would still exist.
And it would be really interesting to see how they push for donors to retain "anonymity" because, why, they're entitled to their privacy as well as their "free $peech."
Here's an idea: any time a TV candidate makes a commercial on an issue or a TV appearance talking about an issue, the amount of contributions he's received from someone with skin in that game must appear on the screen. Say, like Pop-Up video. So like when Boehner goes on TV and weeps openly about the injustice of regulating Wall St. a little bubble pops up reminding us that he received about $400K from that industry in the past 12 months.
BTW guess who three of Obama's top five contributors are (not people, sort of-industries)? Weird.
http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/contr ... =N00009638And you'll never guess who the other two are...
Let me give you some perspective here. GM used to be a client of mine. One time out there, I invited my contact to lunch. Only if she paid, she said, because GM strictly prohibited employees from accepting free stuff from outside vendors. Why? To insure that GM employees are
making decisions based only on what's good for the company and not what's good for them as far as receiving gifts. Walmart has the same policy.
On the flipside, on the agency side in the digital world, it has become rampant that if you want to get on that buy, you need to bribe the media buyer out the ass--some have even put out wish lists!!! And not cheap stuff either: Hawks tickets, iPads, etc.
You know who gets hosed in those instances? The client that trusted them to buy media, because the buyer is only looking to benefit themselves.
Yet we tolerate that from our elected leaders? Amazing.