Flash, if a politician is no longer getting campaign contributions from corporations or PACs, how is that politician going to get re-elected? By legislating on behalf of their constituents...you know...doing their actual job.
What makes you think the politician is not legislating on behalf of his constituents even if he does receive contributions from unions, PACs, corporations, or individuals? If he keeps getting reelected a plurality of voters must be happy with his work.
In reality very few voters have any clue what legislation their legislators vote for so they are seldom voting based on their voting behavior.
What competition? If a politician is elected and passes legislation their constituents want, why wouldn't they be re-elected? Why shouldn't they be re-elected?
Part of the antipathy towards elected politicians is the perception that they don't work for their constituents.
So in a system where they don't have to beg for campaign money, how would they go about getting re-elected? BY DOING THEIR JOB.
They must be doing their jobs and making their constituents happy under the current system because House members are reelected about 95-98% of the time and about 90% for the Senate.
Expanding the definition of "special interests" to say that every voter is a special interest.
Every voter is not a special interest but they are part of larger interests and candidates appeal to these voters based on those interests.
They are union members, blacks, Hispanics, seniors on Social Security and Medicare, teachers, parents, liberals/conservatives, Democrats/Republicans, members of civil rights, environmental, and gun groups.............
The idea of legislating for "the people" vs special interests is a traditional Populist pitch that has no real meaning.
So then you would prefer a system where your choice of elected representatives is made for you? Sounds anti-democratic to me.
The current system allows the voters to select their representatives whether they get campaign contributions or not. I'm sure you don't think special interest money is determining your vote. To think it is affecting the vote of others but not yourself is elitist snobbery.
Studies show legislators do not vote differently than they did before public financing, some found increased polarization. And many studies over the years have failed to find relationships between legislator's votes and campaign contributions.
The main reason is that groups (and individuals) tend to contribute (and vote) for legislators who already share their political views. They don't change their voting behavior because some union or corporation gave them money.
I didn't see any difference in governing or public perception when presidential candidates were prohibited from raising funds privately and given equal funding from 1976-2004 when both major party candidates accepted public financing for the general election.