Monday, November 30, 2015

Supreme Court's Next Chance to Gut Campaign Finance Law


The next domino in the effort to erase campaign finance restrictions has just been pushed. A case attacking the McCain-Feingold reform law's ban on unlimited contributions to political parties has been set on a path that almost certainly ends at the Supreme Court.

With the help of Citizens United lawyer Jim Bopp, the Republican Party of Louisiana and the Jefferson Parish and Orleans Parish Republican Party sued to allow state and local parties to raise enormous sums under looser state laws and then spend them on federal elections. That practice is currently banned by restrictions on the use of "soft money", unlimited contributions to political parties that pay for so-called party-building activities, as opposed to supporting specific candidates.

The ban came after Senate investigations found that both parties had abused their soft money accounts to evade campaign contribution limits. Money meant for party-building activities was spent on ads promoting candidates. The Senate's investigations also found that soft money donors were provided increased access and influence in policy making.

To close that loophole, the 2002 McCain-Feingold law banned political parties from receiving and spending money in excess of the base contribution limits for spending on candidates. The law formally known as the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA) also banned the solicitation of soft money contributions by candidates. The Supreme Court upheld those restrictions in its 2003 decision in McConnell v. Federal Election Commission.

Republican Party of Louisiana v. FEC was approved for a fast-track process on Nov. 25. Legal challenges under BCRA can skip the usual single-judge trial and go straight to a special three-judge court with direct appeal to the Supreme Court. As University of California-Irvine election law professor Rick Hasen explained in The National Law Journal, the fast-tracking procedure makes it almost certain that the Supreme Court will take up the case.

Advocates for campaign finance deregulation have tried to bring cases similar to the Louisiana lawsuit through the fast-track process before. But lower courts decided that two such cases failed to meet the criteria to be accepted for a three-judge panel.

The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia determined that the Louisiana case could go to the three-judge panel because it was carefully drawn to challenge only the soft money ban in BCRA and not the base contribution limits created in the Federal Election Campaign Act. The district court did, however, acknowledge that overturning the soft money ban would effectively eviscerate those base limits.

"Make no mistake, a ruling for Plaintiffs on the merits would render largely meaningless FECA's limits on contributions to state- and local-party committees," Judge Christopher Cooper wrote.

Without those federal limits, the ability of wealthy donors and powerful interests to fund presidential and congressional elections through state and local party committees would vastly increase. Thirteen states have no state-level limits on contributions to political parties while another 14 have limits only on corporate and union donations, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. A victory would allow the parties in places like Louisiana, Virginia or Missouri to collect a $1 million check from a single donor under state contribution limits and then spend it on federal elections.











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1 comment:

sanchesginger@gmail.com said...

I have an expectation, this Court made worthy solution for campaign of finance deregulation. Maybe them were a little bit hardly find out most of the federal limits and congressional transaction. If they use paper writing service helper all would be nice. Anyway, thanks for news.