Posted on 06/26/2007 4:53:13 PM PDT by no dems
The Supreme Court yesterday weakened a campaign-finance provision in a ruling that could disadvantage the 2008 campaigns of Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.): Officeholders now will be subject to corporate-and union-funded ads targeting their positions just before Election Day.
The majority opinion penned by Chief Justice John Roberts ruled that the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 violated the First Amendment rights of Wisconsin Right to Life by preventing the group from running ads before the 2004 election asking voters to urge Wisconsins senators to oppose a filibuster of judicial nominees.
The 2002 law, known as McCain-Feingold after its Senate sponsors, banned corporate- and union-funded ads that mentioned a federal candidate within 30 days of a primary and 60 days of a general election.
Yesterdays 54 ruling opens the door for corporations and unions to pour millions of dollars into television and radio ads that focus on an issue before Congress and other government bodies. In the weeks before Januarys Iowa caucuses, corporations and unions may fund ads urging voters to contact McCain to express dismay over his immigration policy or Clinton to register opposition to her stance on energy issues. Similarly, all members of Congress may be targeted in the days before their primary and general elections.
Advocacy groups funded with corporate and union dollars would have less freedom to launch similar ads criticizing former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney (Mass.), former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R) or former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) because they do not hold office. Lawyers for such groups would strain to argue that ads mentioning these candidates are intended to advocate for the advance or defeat of a legislative issue, according to election-law experts.
Many critics believed this part of the law was designed to make it harder to criticize incumbents close to an election, said Michael Toner, a former member of the Federal Election Commission now at the Bryan Cave law firm. But the upshot of this is that the Supreme Courts ruling makes it easier to criticize incumbents than [it is to criticize] other candidates who do not hold federal office, such as Mitt Romney and other candidates who are not in Congress.
Toner also said the decision opened up a new avenue for spending in the 2008 election.
A majority of the court has plainly indicated that corporations and unions have a constitutional right to take to the airwaves and discuss legislative issues even in the final weeks before an election, he said. The decision could have an impact on the advertising strategies for the 2008 presidential election.
The court, however, upheld the ban on corporate and union funds paying for ads that expressly advocate for the election or defeat of a candidate. Roberts sharply limited the scope of that prohibition, though, ruling that it should not infringe on the rights of groups to air ads on legislative issues before Congress.
[A] court should find that an ad is the functional equivalent of express advocacy only if the ad is susceptible of no reasonable interpretation other than as an appeal to vote for or against a specific candidate, Roberts wrote.
Liberal Justices John Paul Stevens, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer dissented.
Robertss conservative colleagues, Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and Anthony Kennedy, wanted to go further than the chief justice and strike down restrictions on any corporate and union ads aired in the weeks before an election.
There is a wondrous irony to be found in both the genesis and the consequences of BCRA [Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act,], Scalia wrote in an opinion that concurred in part with the majority. In the fact that the institutions it was designed to muzzle unions and nearly all manner of corporations for all the corrosive and distorting effects of their immense aggregations of wealth, were utterly impotent to prevent the passage of this legislation that forbids them to criticize candidates.
In his opinion, Scalia said the difference between political advertising and issue advertising can be unclear, comparing it to a line in the sand drawn on a windy day.
Indeed, election experts said that the majority did not draw any crisp lines for determining what corporate and union ads would be allowed immediately before an election. As a result, they predicted, aggressive groups would test legal boundaries and their opponents would flood the FEC with complaints.
Im sure a lot of lawyers are going to read it as a signal that theres a lot more they could do now than prior to the ruling, a former FEC commissioner now at the Dickstein Shapiro law firm, Scott Thomas, said. I have a feeling its going to lead to a lot of confusion and chaos in the current election cycle before it gets sorted.
The ruling raises the question of whether groups will seek now legal exemptions from the courts to air various ads targeting officeholders in the days before an election, Thomas said.
Thomas added that federal officeholders such as Clinton and McCain are now more vulnerable to corporate and union advertising than former government officials such as Romney and Edwards.
It does hurt federal officeholders more because its easier to construct an ad that is centered around an upcoming legislative battle in which theyre involved; that can be highlighted more easily than for someone who is not right now in federal office, Thomas said.
Kenneth Gross, an election expert at Skadden, Arps, Meagher & Flom, however, doubted whether the ruling would substantially increase funding for ads shortly before Election Day. Gross, who represents many corporate clients, said the bulk of corporate resources are spent on ads aired before the pre-election blackout periods, as well as on ground operations, and print and Internet advertising. Opening the door for corporations and unions to advertise during the weeks before an election would prompt strategists merely to review which pots of money they use to fund different activities, he said.
Being incumbents, Hillary and Barak Hussein Osama Obama will take a hit from this as well as John McCain. Oh happy day, oh happy day......
Woo hoo! Now if we can just get McPain himself declared unconstitutional, we’re getting somewhere.
Which side was for freedom of political speech today?
Excellent. The McCain-Feingold-Thompson bill is being neutered.
I like Fred. But I question his judgment at times.
Not nearly a big enough hit IMNSHO...
LOL. This guarantees Congress will find a way to fix this now very serious problem.
Another slap in the face for Juan McStain.
Is Wisconsin Right to Life corporate or union funded? You’d think from the first paragraph that it was so. Yes, those entities will make their voices heard close to election day. So what? As long as we know who is saying the message, whether it is the Teamsters, AT&T, or a group of individuals who pool their money and run the ad, let them speak.
Ooooooooh....that was a dig pissant. LOL!!!
THE SIDE THAT WON!!! Free Speech lives to see another day.
It was thompson who called it that. He was not just a supporter, but a very active member getting that albatross through.
I’m glad he has seen the light. A run for the GOP nomination tends to shift one rightward. Ask Mitt.
Yeah, that an angle I never thought of.
Can you imagine all of the issue ads targeting Hillary, while the liberal groups not being able to touch Thompson?
"Thompson went on the record as saying that while he supports the soft-money limits he voted for, the 30/60 day limits on political speech need to be repealed"
This crap could have and should have taken a fatal hit from George W. Bush, if he weren't so interested in trying to "get along" with every left-wing wacko and control freak that comes his way.
I don't think campaign contributions should be limited.
The money that funded the startup of the newspapers was not necessarily all derived from journalism, was it? In fact, when towns were founded in the western territories, the townspeople attempted to attract printers to their new towns as a top priority. So the money for the new newspapers in such hopeful little villages as Chicago, IL and Ada, OK wasn't all from newspapering in Philadelphia and New York. It would have been local money, paltry as it was.
There is nothing pure as the wind-driven snow about the money that comes from journalism, either - the business of journalism is the business of advertising and the business of hype. So why is journalism free to criticize politicians and the rest of us are not? Splitting hairs over how many "express advocacy" statements can dance on the head of a pin is fatuous nonsense.
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
True!!!
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