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John Hagelin on Government Reform


Role of third parties is to widen debate

If the Presidential Debate Commissions rules were in force then, Abraham Lincoln would not have qualified. Jesse Ventura would not have qualified during his successful gubernatorial run either. Furthermore, even if third parties don’t have 15% of the vote, they serve an important function: without third parties, numerous issues would never be brought into general consciousness. Slavery would never have been an issue without third parties, nor most of the civil rights movement.
Source: NPR’s “Morning Edition” (paraphrased) Sep 17, 2000

Supports holistic and pragmatic approach to government

Hagelin advocates what he says is a holistic approach to government, where health care is preventive, education is innovative, agriculture is sustainable and energy is renewable. “Government has been utterly lacking in knowledge or profound principles. Government has been ruled by those with the single skill of raising money. I have broad expertise in a very simple but profound political philosophy. Government should be what works, not what is bought and paid for by political interests.”
Source: Massie Ritsch, LA Times Aug 20, 2000

End special interest control by shortening election process

The election process is far too long and expensive. Elected representatives spend too much of their terms fundraising and campaigning for reelection. We have the longest campaign season, yet the lowest voter turnout, of any democracy in the world. The exorbitant cost of campaigns favors wealthy candidates and those who receive large contributions from political action committees (PACs) and other special interest groups. Research has shown that 90% of all campaigns are won by the candidate who spends the most. Consequently, government has become a competition for money and thus is hostage to special interests rather than responsive to the people.
    I will promote crucial democratic reform, including:
  1. public sponsorship of election campaigns,
  2. elimination of PACs and ‘soft money,’ and
  3. prevention of lobbying by former public servants on behalf of domestic and foreign interests.
Source: www.Hagelin.org, ‘What Hagelin will do’ Apr 1, 2000

Campaign finance: Public funding; ban PACs & soft money

Source: Vote-Smart.org 2000 NPAT Jan 13, 2000

Third parties with ballot access still barred from debates

If you are a third party, even with a broad base of support, it takes probably eighty percent of your efforts, of your creativity just to get on the ballot. Once you are on the ballot, you are thrown off the debates. Perot and I were thrown off the debates a week prior to those debates in 1996, and we are suing the Federal government due to the manner in which that was done. We are going to win that case, and when we do win that case, that is going to open up the process to make it at least fair.
Source: Jim Bohannon Show, Westwood One radio Nov 16, 1999

Congressional votes go to PACs that contribute the most

The interests of our government have to a large extent been sold. People need to realize the extent to which PAC contributions, for example, sway political decisions. Tracing the previous votes of the US Congress for the past several years shows that in every case these decisions that affect our lives always go in the direction of the people, the corporations, the PACs that contribute the most.
Source: Washington Journal, C-SPAN Sep 5, 1999

Those currently in power arrange permanent power

We have the least democratic democracy in the world. It’s the only democracy in which certain powers have legislated themselves into permanent victory, where we’re not actually voting on a level playing field.
Source: Washington Journal, C-SPAN Sep 5, 1999

Other candidates on Government Reform: John Hagelin on other issues:
Pat Buchanan
George W. Bush
Al Gore
Ralph Nader

Political Leaders:
John Ashcroft
Hillary Clinton
Elizabeth Dole
John McCain
Robert Reich
Janet Reno
Jesse Ventura

Opinion Leaders:
Noam Chomsky
Bill Clinton
Jesse Jackson
Rush Limbaugh
Ross Perot
Ronald Reagan

Party Platforms:
Democratic Platform
Green Platform
Libertarian Platform
Republican Platform
Abortion
Budget/Economy
Civil Rights
Corporations
Crime
Drugs
Education
Energy/Oil
Environment
Families/Children
Foreign Policy
Free Trade
Govt. Reform
Gun Control
Health Care
Homeland Security
Immigration
Infrastructure/Technology
Jobs
Principles/Values
Social Security
Tax Reform
War/Iraq/Mideast
Welfare/Poverty