I'm not an expert of US politics, but isn't Washington DC quite Democrat LIBERAL-friendly, making it advantageous for Conservatives to try to keep them suppressed?
According to the 2010 Census, the population distribution of Washington, D.C. is 50.7% Black or African American, 38.5% White, 3.5% Asian, and 0.3% American Indian. Individuals from other races made up 4.1% of the District's population while individuals from two or more races made up 2.9%. In addition, Hispanics of any race made up 9.1% of the District's population.[73] There were also an estimated 74,000 foreign immigrants living in Washington, D.C. in 2007.[74] Major sources of immigration include individuals from El Salvador, Vietnam, and Ethiopia, with some concentration of Salvadorans in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood.[75]
DC is actually a Southern State. We don't really view it that way though, because it's the seat of US power and all the white guys hang out there. So yes, the argument has been made that DC residents are disenfranchised because they have no electoral representative in Congress, and if they did, it would probably be a Democrat.
It would probably be a liberal thing to do, to grant them a representative.
* As far as I can see, it doesn't affect anything while it would make sense if the corporations could vote C+ with dollars when laws are conservative. Should the reform actually do something?
Sure. Campaign financing is a big part of election reform. Even if it doesn't do anything, it's still flavorful and appropriate to mention it. It would logically dictate that more conservatives win house and senate seats...but that's kind of double-jeopardy for the player, isn't it?
There recently was a Supreme Court decision (IRL) that, if I recall correctly, was in favour of CONSERVATIVE corporations funding the campaigns. Should this be reflected in the initial setup of the laws?
The Supreme Court could pretty much be considered conservative right now, thanks to Bush's appointments and the still-serving conservatives. So the continuum of Election Reform would look to me like:
L++ - Corporations and no one that works for a corporation can donate to election campaigns. (That's so liberal it's broken heh.)
L+ - Corporations cannot donate to election campaigns.
M - Corporations can donate small amounts to campaigns
C+ - Corporations can donate large amounts to election campaigns.
C++ - Corporations can donate unlimited amounts to election campaigns.