In Politics, Is Your Voice Actually Heard?
You care about America. You think of yourself as a good citizen and have strong feelings of association with one political party. You relate to their message. In your heart, you know the changes they want to make are the right changes. You donate money to your party and may even actively campaign, canvass or pick up a sign and wave it at a busy local intersection.
It is important for you to do this; you are a part of the political process. You want to help your party “Save the World.”
Up to this point, we have been discussing your feelings, your beliefs and your stand on the issues, but there is another side to the political coin. What does your candidate want? What are his or her beliefs? Where are your candidate’s loyalties? Will they keep their campaign promises to you?
In order to mount a successful political campaign, a candidate must raise huge sums of money for media advertisements. Candidates obtain these sums from large corporations, special interests and even foreign governments. What must a candidate do for this money? It is a fair assumption that your candidate promises something that each contributor wants, loyalty on issues important to each donor. To put it simply, campaign contributors want votes.
By the time Election Day arrives, your candidate has made many promises. Not only do they make promises to you, the voter, they make them to their donors as well. Is your candidate honorable? Will he or she represent you as promised? Do promises made to you or the donors ever come into conflict? How will your candidate vote in the event of a conflict; will they represent you or the campaign donor? In the entire political process, how they vote in the event of such conflict is the most important question you can ask.
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