From this recent Democracy Now interview:
"I mean, one of the most elementary principles of a functioning democracy
is that elected representatives should be responsive to those who
elected them. There’s nothing more elementary than that. But we know
very well that that is simply not the case in the United States. There’s
ample literature in mainstream academic political science simply
comparing voters’ attitudes with the policies pursued by their
representatives, and it shows that for a large majority of the
population, they’re basically disenfranchised. Their own representatives
pay no attention to their voices. They listen to the voices of the
famous 1 percent—the rich and the powerful, the corporate sector. The
elections—Tom Ferguson’s stellar work has demonstrated, very
conclusively, that for a long period, way back, U.S. elections have been
pretty much bought. You can predict the outcome of a presidential or
congressional election with remarkable precision by simply looking at
campaign spending. That’s only one part of it. Lobbyists practically
write legislation in congressional offices. In massive ways, the
concentrated private capital, corporate sector, super wealth, intervene
in our elections, massively, overwhelmingly, to the extent that the most
elementary principles of democracy are undermined. Now, of course, all
that is technically legal, but that tells you something about the way
the society functions."
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