Politics | Harold Meyerson Politicians Should Swear Off Wall Street Cash Harold Meyerson says going clean could be deceptively brilliant By Kevin Spak Posted Oct 12, 2011 12:33 PM CDT Copied Robert James Carlson, left, of Jersey City, N.J., shows a peace sign as he joined Occupy Wall Street protesters at Zuccotti Park in New York, Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2011. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens) See 1 more photo Washington is too dysfunctional to pass any laws in response to Occupy Wall Street, but if Democrats want to stand with the protesters, Harold Meyerson has a modest proposal: Refuse all campaign contributions “from the whole financial sector,” he suggests in the Washington Post. “Sign a pledge to go off the sauce." It would be a little like Grover Norquist’s no-tax pledge, only “lawmakers wouldn’t be asking voters to trust them once the election is over." Meyerson admits that forswearing by far the largest source of campaign contributions “appears at first glance—second, too—to be a sucker’s game, a form of unilateral disarmament." Perhaps Occupy Wall Street enthusiasts could chip in small donations to make up for some of that, and “the no-bank-money pledge could well be a winning political message." And once Wall Street couldn't buy its latest political whim, we'd also have "distinctly better public policy." Read These Next That 'buy now, pay later' loan may soon hit your credit score. Cops: Arizona 5th graders drew up plot to 'end' a classmate. Hall of Famer Dave Parker dies The Bezos-Sanchez wedding: guest list, cost, the dress, and more. See 1 more photo Report an error