- Fri Nov 27, 2015 1:26 pm
#22324
Hey Karen,
Great question! That's a tough one. An unwealthy candidate who wants to win non-fully-subsidized democratic elections needs wealthy patrons—so it’s plausible that the candidate might compromise on some views to keep these wealthy supporters happy.
The author doesn’t think this is a problem, though, because the wealthy are distributed among the population and among the political parties in roughly the same way, so each of the parties has its fair share of wealthy patrons. If a democrat wants wealthy supporters, for example, he doesn’t have to change his position to get support because the party has its fair share of wealthy patrons.
The problem with this argument is that a candidate might represent a given party and still conceivably compromise views regarding some specific issues. This is what correct answer choice (B) provides: the author doesn’t consider the fact that a candidate might take positions on many more varied issues than the party—so a candidate could be aligned with the party on all of its chosen political positions but could still potentially compromise on other issues to win over wealthy supporters.
Tough one! Please let me know whether this is clear—thanks!
~Steve
Steve Stein
PowerScore Test Preparation