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I will point out that in Canada, there's not much money in politics. We don't have a Citizens United equivalent. Pretty sure European countries are more like us, although each one has a distinct system.
Alright, I guess I've delivered as much rebuttal as is appropriate, then.
You know, too much length on each analysis itself actually reduces strength, in my experience. If one's idea is that complicated, they need to put it in a modular, structured form (so not prose), or are guaranteed to have made logical errors somewhere inside.
For sure. Political campaigns are still too expensive for the average worker in Canada. The way I tell who is being represented is by looking at who and what's being prioritized. The LPC for example, while campaigning in part to represent workers, has trampled over multiple unions during important labour disputes. Whatever the influence channels are, they seem to be effective in prioritizing coroporations and their owners.
Having been involved in campaign treasury myself, you absolutely can run a campaign on a shoestring budget. A good campaign costs a bit more, but at the end of the day it all comes from small dollar donations, and if you're getting a meaningful amount of votes you should get some of those as well.
People tend to blame the government if their services aren't working or the economy preforms poorly, working class solidarity be damned. That's why it's tempting to shut strikes down even if you endorse the basic concept in theory.
That reminds me to donate to Rob Ashton's campaign. 😄