I'm pretty sure if corporate donations disappeared overnight, politicians would still have jobs?
Corporate donations aren't disappearing. If a politician seriously initiates tax reform, it means he's giving a large portion of his future campaign funds over to somebody else. That and it's socially unacceptable, with how much that politician owes them. It's like not tipping a waiter, or snubbing a client.
Hey, I'm not saying I would vote for the guy. I'm just saying, he can win.
I think Rubio will likely win the primary, but I don't think he can win the general election. I think Rubio and Hillary are both going to be seen as conventional politicians by Americans as a whole, so neither will embolden masses of people who don't usually vote Republican or Democrat. At that point, it will just be a power game, and there's no way Rubio can win at that. Hillary's probably one of the most powerful Americans. She'll get all the endorsements, most of the positive media coverage, and the greatest share of the campaign donations. Add that in with the shrinking private sector and the growing public sector, I think Hillary's got this election in the bag.
1
So let me get this straight - Trump is the reformer? Trump has the potential to play the Caesar role in this metaphor you're constructing?
Trump says he wants to initiate border reform and tax reform.
2 Over the last decade, a lot of different politicians have run quite prudently on those issues, but didn't care to do anything once they were elected (also prudent.) But Trump actually appears serious to me, and to a lot of Americans. Mad serious.
What I meant before: I think Rubio is using that ancient tactic of markedly outpromising the real reformers, and I think he has no real intention of trying to initiate any of his promises. I mean, most of the candidates are trying to match Trump's and Carson's proposals, and one could argue how genuine or disingenuous each is being, but Rubio's proposals don't even make sense to me. Rubio's new tax plan promises lower taxes AND a trillion dollars in new tax credits for "families." He promises to increase the military budget by a trillion dollars (close to tripling it). He promises to balance the budget. He's currently the Republican establishment's choice candidate.
3
Say Rubio wins the general election by outpromising Trump and doesn't follow through with any of his promises. Say shit like that happens repeatedly for like two centuries. At that point, Caesar. Of course, you hope your government can reform itself before the critical point and serious upheaval.
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1. Maybe Rubio has a chance if he chooses an unconventional vice president who excites a lot of people - maybe a businesswoman like Carly Fiorina. Even then, it probably wouldn't work because vice presidents usually don't get that kind of attention. But frankly, I don't think Rubio or his people have the mind to initiate anything like this. I think Rubio will pick a political elite circle jerk of a council, for the immediate prestige.
2. I disagree with Trump on the border issue because I view a controlled border in the same light as a controlled market - the rich and powerful suppressing competition in order to remain rich and powerful without having to make the natural effort. However, I think if Trump ships out fewer illegal immigrants than new legal immigrants he lets in, he'll be doing less harm than good. (Trump at least
appears to support increased immigration.) To me, the most important issue by far is that corporations don't pay taxes but companies have like a 40% tax rate (the highest in the world, so I've heard.) I want Trump's tax plan. To be honest, I prefer Carson's tax plan, but I believe Trump is the only man who could possibly succeed at getting his plan passed and fixing this particular issue. But even Trump, I think, can't. Even if Trump "succeeds", I imagine the tax plan getting bastardized by Congress to the extent it's no better than the current system.
3. If Rubio's actually serious about this stuff, and if he becomes president, he'll be the biggest federalist of a president we've ever had. More a proponent of corporations and larger government than George W Bush and Obama. He might even match Hillary.