III On Political Rights and Freedom 
The United States has always boasted itself as the "model of democracy" and 
hawked its mode of democracy to the rest of the world. In fact, American 
"democracy" is always one for the wealthy and a "game for the rich." 
The democratic elections in the United States, to a great extent, are driven 
by money. During the mayoral election of New York City in November 2005, 
billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg spent 77.89 million U.S. dollars of his 
fortune for re-election. That came to more than 100 U.S. dollars per vote. The 
election was termed by the Associated Press as the most expensive mayoral 
re-election in history. In the race for governor of New Jersey, the dueling 
multimillionaires spent 75 million U.S. dollars combined, with 40 million 
dollars by Jon S. Corzine, who won the election. Taking into account the 60 
million U.S. dollars he spenton a Senate seat in 2000, Corzine had spent 100 
million U.S. dollars in five years for elections. According to a survey, in 
Washington D.C. a U.S. senator needs about 20 million U.S. dollarsto keep the 
seat in the Senate. The Washington Post criticized theU.S. political system in 
an editorial: "But a political system that turns elective office into a bauble 
for purchase is not a healthy one." 
Decisions of the U.S. Congress and the Administration are deeply influenced 
by money. It is known to all that in the United States, various firms and 
interest groups hire public relations and consulting companies to lobby the 
Congress and the Administration, spending money to influence their decisions and 
win government contracts. On Jan. 4, 2006, mainstream U.S. media carried reports 
on super lobbyist Jack Abramoff pleading guilty to three felony charges 
including a conspiracy involving corruption of public officials and agreeing to 
cooperate with U.S. prosecutors in investigating members of Congress and aides 
suspected of corruption. The case is the largest power-for-money scandal in 
American politics for several decades. It was reported that 20 members of 
Congress and their aides have been involved in this unusual large-scale scandal. 
But the Abramoff case is just a tip of an iceberg. According to the Washington 
Post and the British Observer, lobbying has become a great growth industry with 
huge profits in Washington. Currently, the number of registered lobbyists has 
reached 34,750, that comes 60 to 1 compared with thetotal number of the U.S. 
federal officials elected. Meanwhile, the lobbyists handle more than two billion 
U.S. dollars of funds a year. Washington downtown's K Street with many lobbying 
firms is called "the road to riches" and "the fourth largest power" next to the 
President, the Congress and the Court. From 1998 to 2004, lobbyists spent 13 
billion U.S. dollars to promote realization of their clients' wishes. In 2004, 
2.1 billion U.S. dollars was spent on lobbying the federal government and the 
Congress, and 3 billion U.S. dollars for elections of the President and members 
of Congress in the United States. The USA Today revealed that since 2000, 5,410 
trips of Congress members were financed by undisclosed sources and Congress 
members have taken 16 million U.S. dollars in privately financed trips. It's a 
"revolving door" for lobbyists toturn into politicians and retired politicians 
from government service to engage in influence peddling in the private sector. 
It was reported that since 1998 more than 2,200 former U.S. government employees 
have become lobbyists; among them are 273 former White House staff members and 
250 former Congress members and department heads from the Executive branch.