Why not pay to play in Senate chamber?
Steve Pagliuca
C/O Boston Celtics
226 Causeway Street, Boston
Dear Steve,
There comes a time in every political campaign to fish or cut bait. For you, that time is now.
You are not going to win Ted Kennedy’s Senate seat with your charm, nor with your clip ’n save policy positions downloaded from GenericLiberalPap.com. More debates won’t sway more voters, either. How many times did I hear you say, “I agree with Mike,’’ that night at the Kennedy Library, as you gestured over to Mike Capuano? If that’s the case, let’s just send Mike to the Senate, OK? You can finance his campaign.
Your saturation bombing ad campaign is definitely having an effect. My elite focus group, consisting of my mother, says: “I love his ads. He’s the one with the funny name.’’ So there is a 33 percent chance she’ll vote for you or Mr. Khazei or Mr. Capuano.
I have a better idea. I can get you into those marble halls, where giants like George (“Broadway Melody of 1938’’) Murphy and Strom (“Racist at Large’’) Thurmond once roamed. And unlike those pricey campaign advisers you have - in the clubby world of political consulting, you are known as “Pay-liuca’’ - I will charge you nothing. My advice is absolutely free.
Here is it is.
Fact: You have $400 million. Do the math. You can offer each voter up to $2,000, which is a lot better than the measly $250 President Obama wants to hand out to Social Security recipients, praying they don’t pull a Virginia or New Jersey on him in 2010.
It’s true that you will have to liquidate most of your net worth, and that is a financial decision you might want to discuss with your wife. But look at the upside. You’ll be in the Senate, making $174,000 a year, slurping as much Senate bean soup as you can drink!
Paying for votes isn’t, strictly speaking, legal, but we can get around that. You could offer each resident a “gratuity’’ or “consideration,’’ you know, like the drug companies that invite doctors down to Aruba for “informational’’ seminars. No implied obligation, but they always seem to remember Big Pharma when it comes time to write those ‘scrips.
Give the people what they want:
1. Celtics tickets. I know they are in short supply, but surely you could spring a few hundred here and there to get the Pagliuca Plan moving. FYI, I have never seen the Lakers play in the Garden. Just saying.
2. A cool gizmo. Not the iPhone, that’s so May 2009. I’m thinking of the Google-fueled Droid. It costs only $200 - why not buy 100,000? Have you heard about the “augmented reality’’ app? You train the cellphone camera on your home, and the tag appears: “Future dwelling of the junior senator for Massachusetts.’’
3. A job. Your rival Alan Khazei is organizing volunteer service days. Go him one better, announce a full-employment program raking leaves or cleaning pools in your hometown of Weston. People need jobs, just as your TV ads say, and, unlike your boon companion Mitt (“Toast of Guatemala’’) Romney, you could employ actual American citizens.
Steve, thank you for taking my call, knowing full well that you might be the butt of some gentle ribbing. “Your idea would never work,’’ you said. “In Massachusetts, the message is key. You can’t buy voters here; they would figure that out.’’
Maybe you are right, but if you change your mind, I am in the book.
Best wishes, Alex
P.S.: Don’t you wish you had bought the Globe? Then I’d be penning dithyrambs in your honor, instead of these snippy little columns.![]()



