Have you ever felt like the government doesn't really care what you think?

This video explains why you might feel that way – and it does it using one simple graph:

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Princeton University study: Public opinion has “near-zero” impact on U.S. law.

Professors Martin Gilens (Princeton University) and Benjamin I. Page (Northwestern University) looked at more than 20 years worth of data to answer a simple question: Does the government represent the people?

Their study took data from nearly 2000 public opinion surveys and compared it to the policies that ended up becoming law. In other words, they compared what the public wanted to what the government actually did. What they found was extremely unsettling: The opinions of 90% of Americans have essentially no impact at all.

Gilens & Page found that the number of Americans for or against any idea has no impact on the likelihood that Congress will make it law. 

“The preferences of the average American appear to have only a miniscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy.”

One thing that does have an influence? Money. While the opinions of the bottom 90% of income earners in America have a “statistically non-significant impact,” economic elites, business interests, and people who can afford lobbyists still carry major influence.

Nearly every issue we face as a nation is caught in the grip of corruption.

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From taxation to national debt, education to the economy, America is struggling to address our most serious issues. Moneyed interests get what they want, and the rest of us pay the price.

They spend billions influencing America's government. We give them trillions in return.

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In the last 5 years alone, the 200 most politically active companies in the U.S. spent $5.8 billion influencing our government with lobbying and campaign contributions.

Those same companies got $4.4 trillion in taxpayer support – earning a return of 750 times their investment.

It's a vicious cycle of legalized corruption.


Until it's addressed, corruption will continue to block progress on every issue.

RepresentUs has a plan to tackle corruption, and it's already winning:

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Sources

  1. Gilens and Page, “Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens,” Perspective on Politics, 2014.
  2. Washington Post, “Rich People Rule!” 2014.
  3. Washington Post, “Once again, U.S. has most expensive, least effective health care system in survey,” 2014.
  4. Forbes Opinion, “The tax code is a hopeless complex, economy-suffocating mess,” 2013.
  5. CNN, “Americans pay more for slower Internet,” 2014.
  6. The Hill, “Sanders requests DOD meeting over wasteful spending,” 2015.
  7. CBS News, “Wastebook 2014: Government’s questionable spending,” 2014.
  8. The Heritage Foundation, Budget Book, 2015.
  9. The Atlantic, “American schools vs. the world: expensive, unequal, bad at math,” 2013.
  10. CNN Opinion, “War on drugs a trillion-dollar failure,” 2012.
  11. Feeding America, Child Hunger Fact Sheet, 2014.
  12. New York Times, “Banks’ lobbyists help in drafting financial bills,” 2014.
  13. New York Times, “Wall Street seeks to tuck Dodd-Frank changes in budget bill,” 2014
  14. Sunlight Foundation, “Fixed Fortunes: Biggest corporate political interests spend billions, get trillions,” 2014.
  15. Sunlight Foundation, Fixed Fortunes database, 2015.
RepresentUs is America’s leading anti-corruption organization working city-by-city, state-by-state to fix our broken political system.