- Tue Oct 29, 2013 7:23 pm
#12216
Hey Applesaid,
You are right to pick up on the disconnect from the stated premise and the conclusion. The author's argument definitely relies on an assumption that since wealthy persons are proportionally distributed across political parties, candidates will receive financial support regardless of their political views. That leads to the author's conclusion that candidates will not need to change their views to get financial support.
Once you identify the assumption, it is easier to see how answer choice (B) is a good criticism of the argument. If the views of candidates vary much more than political parties that wealthy patrons belong to, it is likely that some candidates will have views that do not align with any wealthy patrons. To take an extreme examples, imagine a proposed government regulation that both parties of a 2-party system support. If candidates have views that vary more than the parties, there will be some candidates who do not support the proposed regulation. Then, even though wealthy patrons are distributed across parties, they are not evenly distributed across all possible candidate positions. Some candidates (in this example, ones that do not support the policy) may feel pressure to change their views since none of the wealthy patrons share their current views, which contradicts the conclusion in the stimulus.
I hope that helps!
Jacques