Labor Unions CANNOT compete with the large pockets of some of our largest corporations. If a politician is running on wall street reform heavy a Goldman Sachs can pump unheard of dollars into the opposing candidate. Now if a Pro-Business Candidate was running and his policies hurt workers would the labor unions really be able to spend as much as top multi-national corporations? Let's be serious here. It changes the landscape quite a bit. The flood gates of money is going to open and so will the influence. I don't get how you see this as either a good ruling or one that doesn't matter because 'it did nothing to change' the political landscape.
In Oregon we just had a 2 ballot measures to raise taxes on individuals earning more the $125,000 and couple earning $250,000, and on C Corporations by instituting a revenue tax for those C Corps that pay no income tax because they recorded a tax loss. Both passed.
Total amount spent by the proponents of the tax increases was $6.8 million, total spent by the opponents was $4.6 million. Here is a breakdown of the largest contributors.
For
Contributor Amount
Oregon Education Association[29] $1.65 million
SEIU Local 503 $850,000
Oregon AFT Political and Legislative Action Network PAC $400,000
Oregon Health Care Association $229,200
American Federation of Teachers $100,000
Oregon School Employees Association $75,000
Nurses United PAC $30,000
Alida Rockefeller Mesinger[33] $25,000
Senate Democratic Leadership Fund[44] $20,000
Oregon Senate President Peter Courtney[34] $10,000
Against
Contributor Amount
Associated Oregon Industries PAC $357,000
Oregon Bankers Association $150,000
Nike Chairman Phil Knight $150,000
Columbia Sportswear CEO Tim Boyle[33] $75,000
Weyerhauser Company $75,000
Qwest Communications $65,000
Portland Business Alliance $37,000
Oregon Restaurant Association[34] $20,000
There were 7 union affiliated organizations on the list, and only 2 corporations. Those 2 C Corps donated $140,000 compared to $3,334,000 from the seven unions. So unions can and do compete with corporations in fund raising and political spending.