Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Campaign finance reformers had a really bad night on Tuesday

Greg Orman, an independent candidate for US Senate from Kansas, received support form the Mayday PAC but did not win his election.
Greg Orman, an independent candidate for US Senate from Kansas, received support form the Mayday PAC but did not win his election.
Greg Orman, an independent candidate for US Senate from Kansas, received support form the Mayday PAC but did not win his election.
Julie Denesha/Getty Images

Larry Lessig’s Mayday PAC was supposed to build support for public financing of election campaigns by electing a new crop of public-financing supporters to Congress. Lessig hoped victories in 2014 would create momentum for an even bigger campaign in 2016 that would elect enough like-minded members to overhaul the way elections are financed in 2017.

But as Recode reports, Mayday’s election scorecard doesn’t look so great. Mayday spent millions of dollars to support Democrat Rick Weiland’s campaign for Senate from South Dakota and Democrat Paul Clements’s challenge to Rep. Fred Upton (R-MI). In both cases, Mayday’s candidate lost by wide margins. Several other Mayday picks also lost:

Rep. Carol Shea-Porter in New Hampshire, who lost to Republican Frank Guinta, who has held the seat before. In Iowa, Staci Appel lost to Republican David Young 53 percent to 42 percent. And in Kansas, independent candidate Greg Orman wasn’t able to knock off incumbent Sen. Pat Roberts, who gained help from all corners of the Republican party who were terrified he was about to lose the seat (and their chance to retake the Senate).

Two Mayday candidates won: Democrat Ruben Gallego, who Mayday had supported in the primary, and who won easily in a race that had no Republican candidate. And Republican Walter Jones, who represents a safe Republican seat in North Carolina, won re-election easily.

Lessig hoped to challenge conventional wisdom that voters don’t care about campaign finance issues, by helping candidates who run on the issue win. Yet Tuesday’s results seemed to suggest the opposite: most of the candidates Mayday backed lost, and at least one of the two Mayday candidates who did win, Jones, almost certainly would have won anyway.

Politics
A Trump judge’s new decision would undo more than 50 years of voting rights lawA Trump judge’s new decision would undo more than 50 years of voting rights law
Politics

Trump Judge Lee Rudofsky’s decision could completely neutralize the Voting Rights Act when the GOP controls the White House.

By Ian Millhiser
Politics
President Trump is considering pardoning himself. I asked 15 experts if that’s legal.President Trump is considering pardoning himself. I asked 15 experts if that’s legal.
Politics

Is a self-pardon constitutional? The answer is strangely murky.

By Sean Illing
Politics
Sexual assault allegations against Donald Trump: more women come forwardSexual assault allegations against Donald Trump: more women come forward
Explainers
Trump’s long history of racism, from the 1970s to 2020Trump’s long history of racism, from the 1970s to 2020
Explainers

Trump has repeatedly claimed he’s “the least racist person.” His history suggests otherwise.

By German Lopez
Politics
New Hampshire shouldn’t be the first primaryNew Hampshire shouldn’t be the first primary
Politics

Take it from me, a New Hampshirite: The current system is horrendously unfair.

By Dylan Matthews
Politics
New Hampshire primary 2016: updates and resultsNew Hampshire primary 2016: updates and results
Politics

The New Hampshire primary kicks off on Tuesday, February 9. Polls will close for nearly all of the state at 7 pm Eastern, while some additional polling places will close at 8 pm Eastern.

By Vox Staff