. . . The majority of dollars that are funneled into lobbying and campaigns are liberal dollars. Fact. Fact. Fact.
A group of old doctors might sit around and talk about politics - but it's the big dollars that make a difference. Those dollars are sent to Democrat candidates. Period. . . .
One can see why you never cite sources, except some "Fact. Fact. Fact." of your own imagining.
In the real world, we can actually find data on where medical practitioners donate their money and where healthcare corporations and CEOs (typically bigger bucks) donate their money.
1) For healthcare practitioners it has morphed a bit; particularly among women doctors. They (and male physicians in some specialties) apparently seem to think our healthcare system is screwing patients:
The Political Polarization of Physicians in the United States: An Analysis of Campaign Contributions to Federal Elections, 1991 Through 2012 | Pediatrics | JAMA Internal Medicine | JAMA Network
2) One notes for the latest campaign cycle (this from Investopedia):
"The biggest industries represented among Trump donors overall this cycle were Health Services, Casinos/Gambling and Finance. Only $8,021 came out of the former president’s pockets this time around, versus $66 million in 2016."
3) There's also information to be found on pharma donations (aka bribes). These used to go predominately to Republican candidates. Now that some Democrats are talking about reform - and they're sort of in charge for a while - multiple Democrats are being given checks they can't seem to refuse. However, whoopee,
Republicans are still in the lead:
Two-thirds of Congress cashed a pharma campaign check in 2020
As that article states: "Drug industry lobbyists viewed Republicans’ control of the Senate as
critical to the industry’s interests. "
On the party preference front, an increasing number of doctors (often women) are voting for better healthcare over bigger paychecks. On the donation/bribes front, corporate healthcare is investing wherever it thinks it can buy regulatory and tax preference - and still somewhat more Republican than Democrat.
We'd all (except for the companies buying political favor) be better off if we got the hidden money out of politics. One might note (looking at the 2020 cycle) that we're being screwed by "health services," that "gambling" is pretty much taking over sports (ESPN now hugely supported by gaming and gambling, for example), and big "finance" continues to screw us - only visible to most in the next big bust.