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Can democracies corrupt themselves from within without breaking a single law? This line of inquiry examines how corruption in democratic systems extends far beyond bribery into the legal mechanisms that democracies themselves create — political financing regimes, the sale of access, policy capture, and the emergence of a mini-class of ultra-wealthy donors whose influence over electoral outcomes and public policy is traceable, documented, and yet permitted. When the rules of the game are written by those who can afford to fund the game, the distinction between governance and capture disappears. This program investigates how money reshapes democratic legitimacy, how citizens respond when they perceive that democracy no longer belongs to them, and what institutional and educational responses remain available before the damage becomes irreversible.

Since the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision in 2010, unlimited money has flowed into American presidential elections — producing a reality in which fewer than one hundred billionaires fund nearly seventy percent of Republican presidential campaigns. This research stream traces the emergence of an ultra-wealthy mini-class whose financial dominance over electoral competition translates directly into policy influence, examining the impact on three critical constituencies across the 2012, 2016, 2020, and 2024 presidential elections: voters who declare independent status in a two-party system with no independent option on the ballot, registered voters who do not cast ballots, and eligible citizens who do not register at all. What motivates these forms of democratic withdrawal? What is their connection to the transformation of campaign financing? And what do they reveal about a democracy in which growing numbers of citizens believe that democracy, as they once understood it, no longer exists?

If corruption breeds populism, does populism in turn breed more corruption — and what happens to democracy when no one resists? This research stream examines the underexplored feedback loop between the rise of the ultra-wealthy donor class and the populist movements that claim to oppose elite capture while often deepening it. Drawing on comparative analysis across Western democracies, the project investigates how society's very definition of corruption shifts across periods and political contexts, how the connection between money in politics and populist mobilization operates in practice, and how democratic decline accelerates not when corruption is most visible but when resistance to it is absent. The question is not only how democracies corrode — but why, in so many cases, they let it happen.
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