Ah, MsBlack! I knew I wouldn't get away with just that from the likes of you! I was on deadline and didn't have much time to spare, but now deadline is over and the work is finished, so allow me to reply in turn...
This seems to me to presume that all campaigns would be allotted the same campaign resources. Were this the case, this would mean that all campaigns (regardless of size) would receive the same resources. So we might have campaigns of sizes (in persons) of different orders of magnitude but that would still receive the same resources. Is this desirable?
If you're talking about the difference between, say, a House district election and the presidential election, then, no, there should be different levels of funding. A presidential race is decided by a hundred million people. A House race, more like a hundred thousand.
If you're talking about giving a slice of the pie to any old schmuck who decides to run for office, we can impose a few simple barriers to entry, petition signatures being an obvious choice, since that is already widely used in state initiative processes. Also, it would be unnecessary to place more than a few restrictions on volunteer work.
That aside, I don't see that how well a campaign is run correlates with the preferability of that campaign.
You misunderstood. I was simply covering my bases--always sound practice with you! A well-run campaign is no indication that the candidate is preferable, although the two can correlate.
You mean that public financing is presently naive because it automatically favours the incumbent, not giving a fair shake to challengers?
Among other things, but that's the big one. It favors the incumbent, or anybody who goes into the race with superior name recognition. It's also naive on account of how money can be spent on behalf of a campaign, but not actually by a campaign, and it turns out that that kind of political spending is very hard to limit without infringing upon freedom of speech. A recent decision by our conservative Supreme Court enshrined into permanent law the right of corporations to spend money freely on behalf of political campaigns, as actual human individuals can. Only a Constitutional Amendment or another Supreme Court decision can change that now.
Also, how would you reconcile term limits with your own political ambitions?
Well, all of this pertains to liberal democracy, not the imperial meritocracy I prefer at the philosophical level. But, I will say this: With time, I have begun to appreciate power's corrosive influence on even the incorruptible. In an ideal society, nobody would
want the burden of it, and would strive to discharge their obligations and move on. I have come to admire those who knew when to walk away from the stuff, like Washington, whose Farewell Address was poignant in this regard. One of the things that's wrong with politics is that it attracts not only people who want the job, but people who want the job and want to
keep it till they keel over from old age. I have a different view of political power, which is that it is a public service. In this narrow but crucial sense, I think democracy is essentially correct. We should strive make the offices of political power fairly austere, with no opportunity for politicians to amass wealth while in office, and as little incentive as possible for the wealthy to enter politics for the purpose of eventually increasing their wealth. If an officeholder were given a stipend from which they would have to pay
all of their non-catastrophic living expenses for the duration of their term of office, and were disallowed from using private wealth to supplement that life, I think we would attract a few fewer freeloading plutocrats. Much of this would translate over to the meritocracy, although in an
ideal meritocracy the use of term limits would be unnecessary.
Although, would there not also be a lot more government work created to ensure compliance with the rules governing use of campaign resources and to ensure that private funds weren't used?
There would need to be a considerable expansion of the FEC, or perhaps even the creation of a whole new body. This is certain. But consider the money that is lost on elections now. It's in the ten figures in America. That's crazy. That money does not increase economic output. It does not increase standards of living. People would still get elected even if no money at all were spent on campaigning. To spend billions instead of a few million is extravagant. Also: All of the time that people spend fundraising and volunteering...that's a tremendous opportunity cost to the nation, on top of the directly lost money. Compare that with the expense of overseeing publicly financed elections, and I think the numbers would work out favorably with room to spare.