Are politicians allowed to donate to their own party?
lettercrank on
They should just ask Gina r for some pocket change
patslogcabindigest on
They’ve been doing this for years, why is this a story?
Colossus-of-Roads on
Isn’t the best way to compete in the marketplace of ideas to have the most popular ideas?
Cannon_Fodder888 on
When ideas run out, buy them.
Maybe they could run a loyalty program like the coffee shops do where you present your card to get it stamped every time you vote.
Surv1v3dTh3F1r3Dr1ll on
They can’t be that oblivious, surely?
2 minutes Googling will show them how to do their own polling on Facebook or Reddit.
Why would they need to ask for donations to stop One Nation, when they can engage them where they all are instead?
NaiveEffort2760 on
reminds me of the wikipedia messages begging for $2
Jealous-Hedgehog-734 on
As Clive Palmer demonstrated at immense personal cost, if your policies don’t resonate with the electorate at some level you can spunk a lot of money and go nowhere. So the first question to ask is if money is the best tool for the job.
8 Comments
Are politicians allowed to donate to their own party?
They should just ask Gina r for some pocket change
They’ve been doing this for years, why is this a story?
Isn’t the best way to compete in the marketplace of ideas to have the most popular ideas?
When ideas run out, buy them.
Maybe they could run a loyalty program like the coffee shops do where you present your card to get it stamped every time you vote.
They can’t be that oblivious, surely?
2 minutes Googling will show them how to do their own polling on Facebook or Reddit.
Why would they need to ask for donations to stop One Nation, when they can engage them where they all are instead?
reminds me of the wikipedia messages begging for $2
As Clive Palmer demonstrated at immense personal cost, if your policies don’t resonate with the electorate at some level you can spunk a lot of money and go nowhere. So the first question to ask is if money is the best tool for the job.