Every marginal dollar* taxed is a dollar politicians don't have to scrounge from a wealthy donor, in order to get that politician's pet interests achieved. You are saying MORE taxation means less wealthy donor influence on private citizens. And parent is saying LESS taxation means less policy influence on private citizens.

Here's what I say: how about both? Or neither? I think the scope of the problem is defined too narrowly so far in this particular thread.

*Or say, 10 dollars, since a donor's dollar is leveraged

>Every marginal dollar* taxed is a dollar politicians don't have to scrounge from a wealthy donor, in order to get that politician's pet interests achieved.

You fundamentally misunderstand the relationship.

The donors donate because the politician will then direct more money at the donors interests.

I spend $1mil on lobbying, $1mil on bunk science at labs I fund or astro turf'd grass roots support (something the government can point to to justify their action), $1mil on donations I get a preferential change in law or rule, or perhaps even government investment in my industry, that lets my business make billions, bringing back say $6mil in profit to me personally. Repeat for all my other business activities.

Politician, political appointees and regulatory agencies pet interests only matter insofar as I get better value for my money by choose one who's interests align.

If you're getting back $6 million, just spend $1 million each on both candidates so it doesn't matter which one wins.

Now I'm starting to understand why the US seems to end up funding both sides of every conflict in the Mideast

why assume extra marginal dollars arriving via taxes correspond to less wealthy donor courting, though?