http://elections.nytimes.com/2012/campaign-financeWe'll use the New York Times, since that's fairly neutral for this.
If you look at the breakdown of private contributions, the majority of Obama's private contributions (57%) are less than $200. This is really important, because all contributions exceeding $200 to a single candidate must be recorded and kept as a matter of public record. Contributions less than $200 are not. There were several stories about the possibility of non-domestic funds ending up in Obama's < $200 pool, but we don't care about that (it didn't matter then; doesn't matter now). The distribution of contributions matters, however.
Opensecrets.org says that works out to $233,000,000 or so for
Obama; and $80,000,000 or so for
Romney in 2012. Obama certainly got more poor, more lower-income, more less-involved people to throw money at his campaign (in 2008 and 2012). And the Democrats have been working the small, non-tracked contributions angle pretty heavily since. That someone who is an avowed liberal, who makes jokes at the conservatives expense, and talks about Global Warming as his primary non-political funding issue picks a funding source that favors his party is not coincidence.
There are problems with ballot and representation access in the United States; money isn't the issue. The Democrats AND the Republicans (in willful collusion) strive to keep third-parties, independents, and recognized parties off ballots. Michael Badnarik, in 2004, would have been the first third-party candidate on EVERY ballot, had the Republicans lost law suits in 2 states and the Democrats in 3. As it was, they got court orders, injunctions, and other legal action to keep the Libertarians (a total non-threat overall) from appearing in markets where it would have changed the outcome. Ballot access is restricted through force of law and Party Dominance; not funding disparities.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.