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Clarity Needed on Campaign Law-Campaign Finance Reform thread-day 49
Brookings Institution ^ | 9/17/03 | Thomas E. Mann

Posted on 01/29/2004 6:51:40 AM PST by Valin

After an extraordinary four-hour oral argument on Sept. 8, the Supreme Court justices retreated to deliberate on the constitutionality of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002. Their decision will confront our democracy with one of two futures: a continuing, necessarily imperfect effort to limit the troublesome ways in which money distorts elections and public policy making or a return to a 19th-century state of nature in which anything short of bribery or extortion goes.

This stark choice was lost in the oral argument before the court and in the commentary that followed. But it flows inexorably both from unrefuted findings about current campaign finance practices the justices appeared to accept and from the competing views of how the Constitution limits congressional regulation in this critical arena of democratic politics.

While Justice O'Connor and Chief Justice Rehnquist may well be the swing voters in the middle of two opposing blocs of their colleagues, there is no middle ground. Either the court will affirm the ability of Congress to allow application of principles long embedded in statutes and court decisions or it will effectively repeal a century of precedent, leaving an unregulated system in its wake.

Consider first the unchallenged findings about campaign finance prior to the passage of the campaign finance law. The "express advocacy" standard formulated by the 1976 Buckley v. Valeo decision defining which independent expenditures are properly subject to regulation is irrelevant to present-day campaigns. Justice Kennedy appeared to speak for the entire court when he cited the lower court's finding that the distinction between express advocacy and issue advocacy near the election is meaningless. Virtually all campaign ads avoid using words expressly advocating the election or defeat of a candidate. Corporations and unions drew on their treasury funds, contrary to the law, to sponsor issue ads and to make large contributions to the parties in order to influence federal elections. Political parties raised and spent hundreds of millions in soft money dollars to try to win federal elections, even though the law restricted these funds to state and local elections. Federal elected officials, who directly control four of the six national party committees and dominate the other two, used these committees and affiliated state party organizations to raise and spend soft money for federal election campaigns. Soft-money fund-raising by political parties facilitated access by large donors to elected officials.

This set of practices — which effectively gutted contribution source and size restrictions and weakened the disclosure regime — was the basis for Congress enacting the new campaign finance law. The court appears to accept this basis for action. The question is whether a majority of justices will conclude that the remedies adopted by Congress are constitutional.

Justices Scalia and Thomas have made no secret of their view that there is no compelling constitutional basis for regulating money in elections. Justice Kennedy appears close to that camp. These justices would strike down the law and much if not all of the campaign finance law that preceded it, including prohibitions on corporate and union financing of federal election activity. Deregulation of campaign finance is a principled position, one embraced by many of the plaintiffs in McConnell v. Federal Election Commission, and by their prominent attorneys Kenneth Starr, Floyd Abrams, and Kathleen Sullivan. Deregulation supporters usually couple it with disclosure, but effective transparency is impossible to achieve without a rigorous regulatory scheme specifying what must be disclosed. Congress has repeatedly rejected the "deregulate and disclose" alternative, and the public has shown no appetite for it.

A rejection of the new campaign finance law by the court would effectively establish an unregulated campaign finance regime in America. It would render the ban on corporate and union treasury financing of contributions and expenditures in federal elections completely unenforceable. By restoring parties as funding conduits, such a ruling would remove all limits on what wealthy individuals can contribute to federal candidates. And by exempting much campaign activity from full disclosure, it would render transparency a weak and ineffectual tool for disciplining the role of money in politics.

Congress made a good-faith effort to repair the campaign finance system within the constitutional framework articulated in Buckley and subsequent cases. At least four justices (Breyer, Ginsburg, Souter, and Stevens) appear ready to affirm the constitutionality of that effort. I hope Justices O'Connor and Rehnquist join them. If they don't, they should acknowledge openly what they are doing by explicitly overturning Buckley, repudiating the laws enacted in the last century, and announcing an era of deregulation of campaign finance. Simply ruling the reform act unconstitutional would restore a regime in which the plain meaning of the law is openly and routinely flouted by political actors. That is a recipe for public cynicism and a loss of legitimacy for American democracy.

© Copyright 2003 Brookings Institution


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: billofrights; campaignfinance; cfr; cfrdailythread; mccainfeingold; shaysmeehan
Your assignment today is to discover just where the writer goes wrong.(hint: After)
1 posted on 01/29/2004 6:51:43 AM PST by Valin
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To: RiflemanSharpe; Lazamataz; proud American in Canada; Congressman Billybob; backhoe; jmc813; ...
Yesterdays Thread
Ignoring the threat to free speech
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1066827/posts?page=1




Note: If you would like to be on/off this Campaign Finance Reform list please let me know
2 posted on 01/29/2004 6:54:16 AM PST by Valin (Politicians are like diapers. They both need changing regularly and for the same reason.)
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To: wildandcrazyrussian; King Black Robe; DustyMoment; Smile-n-Win; 4ConservativeJustices; Eastbound; ..
Hugh & Series, Critical & Pulled by JimRob
Special to FreeRepublic | 17 December 2003 | John Armor (Congressman Billybob)

This is nothing like the usual whine by someone whose post was pulled. JimRob pulled my previous thread for a good reason. "If direct fund-raising were permitted on FR, it would soon be wall-to-wall fund-raising."

So, let's start again correctly. This is about civil disobedience to support the First Amendment and challenge the TERRIBLE CFR decision of the Supreme Court to uphold a terrible law passed by Congress and signed by President Bush.

All who are interested in an in-your-face challenge to the 30- and 60-day ad ban in the Campaign Finance "Reform" Act, please join in. The pattern is this: I'm looking for at least 1,000 people to help the effort. I will run the ad, and risk fines or jail time to make it work -- AND get national support.

But there should be NO mentions of money in this thread, and not in Freepmail either. This is JimRob's electronic home, and we should all abide his concerns.

Put your comments here. Click on the link above, and send me your e-mail addresses. I will get back to you by regular e-mail with the practical details.

This CAN be done. This SHOULD be done. But it MUST be done in accord with JimRob's guidelines.


Fair enough?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1042394/posts



Update
I've already tested the idea of my in-your-face challenge ads, first in the print media and then deliberately illegal on TV, with certain editors I have a long relationship with. I could trust these two gentlemen, one in the print media and the other in the broadcast media, with a "heads up" on what I am planning. Both said they wanted to know, in advance, when I am about to do this.

The bottom line is clear. If I am willing to put my neck on the line, with the possibilities of a fine and jail time, THAT effort will put CFR back on the front page in all media. And that is part of the point. There's not much value of going in-your-face against the enemies of the First Amendment unless the press takes up the story and spreads the word. It is now clear they will do exactly that.

Update 2
QUICK PROGRESS REPORT, ANSWERING A SUPPORTER'S QUESTION:
We have about 15% of the needed 1,000 sign-ups.

Spread the word, direct folks to the front page link on my website.

Google-bomb the phrase "anti-CFR" directing readers to that page and link. (We're already #2 and #4 on Google.)

Target date is now August, since the NC primary looks to be put back to September. (Remember, the ad isn't illegal until the 29th day before the election.)


Cordially,

John / Billybob


Note if you are interested in more on this please contact myself or Congressman Billybob
3 posted on 01/29/2004 6:55:26 AM PST by Valin (Politicians are like diapers. They both need changing regularly and for the same reason.)
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To: Valin
Mr. Mann doesn't understand the concept of "free speech", and how CFR limits/restricts the same. From his opening sentence he is hopelessly misguided.

Mr. Mann writes "Recall that a fundamental objective of campaign finance regulation is to ensure that the inequalities generated by the market economy do not undermine the political equality that is a central feature of our democracy."

I'll be a monkey's uncle if I ever find that in our Constitution.

4 posted on 01/29/2004 7:15:10 AM PST by 4CJ (||) Support free speech and stop CFR - visit www.ArmorforCongress.com (||)
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To: Valin
BUMP!
5 posted on 01/29/2004 7:17:19 AM PST by jimkress (Save America from the tyranny of Republican/Democrat hegemony. Support the Constitution Party.)
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To: Valin
Oh, let me play the game. Right at the beginning the writer refers to "unrefuted findings" concerning corruption in politics. As the dissenting Justices pointed out, there were ample statements from various politicians that politicians are being bought, or at least rented. But in each case the person asserting that was quick to deny that he, or anyone he knows personally, is corrupt.

Every legitimate decision, note the use of the word "legitimate," rests on two bases: facts and law. In the McConnell decision, five Justices first faked the facts, and having done that, faked the law to applu those "facts." Other than those two minor defects, the Court's decision in the CFR case is a fine example of judicial craftsmanship.

Do I win the prize for analyzing the decision and the article? LOL.

John / Billybob

6 posted on 01/29/2004 7:55:51 AM PST by Congressman Billybob (www.ArmorforCongress.com Visit. Join. Help. Please.)
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To: Valin
He goes wrong after the first sentence:

Their decision will confront our democracy with one of two futures: a continuing, necessarily imperfect effort to limit the troublesome ways in which money distorts elections and public policy making or a return to a 19th-century state of nature in which anything short of bribery or extortion goes.

Our government is a constitutional republic, not a democracy. I like how the name of this forum attests to this fact.

7 posted on 01/29/2004 8:24:31 AM PST by The_Eaglet (Conservative chat on IRC: http://searchirc.com/search.php?F=exact&T=chan&N=33&I=conservative)
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To: Congressman Billybob
Do I win the prize for analyzing the decision and the article?

Indeed you do. You win, our warmest personal regards. That and a buck will buy you a cup of coffee.
8 posted on 01/29/2004 8:42:28 PM PST by Valin (Politicians are like diapers. They both need changing regularly and for the same reason.)
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To: Valin; Congressman Billybob
Do I win the prize for analyzing the decision and the article?

I thought I had it. Oh well. Congratulations! May this be the first of many campaign victories for you.

9 posted on 01/29/2004 10:49:44 PM PST by The_Eaglet (How's that for a concession speech?)
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Forward Link:
The perils of legislating in the dark-Campaign Finance Reform thread-day 50

10 posted on 01/31/2004 7:25:26 AM PST by The_Eaglet (Michael Peroutka for President)
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