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Supreme Court Got it Right on Campaign Financing

&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">This writer has been a critic of the 1974 Campaign Finance law since it was passed — and I have expressed my opinion in commentaries several times since&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Restricting contributions to campaigns was a boneheaded idea that never worked to curb the flow of money into campaigns &&num;8212&semi; but has had many unfortunate unintended consequences&period; The Supreme Court&comma; however&comma; has on key occasions recognized the constitutional defects in these restrictions and has correctly acted to protect core First Amendment rights to political speech and association&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The most significant of these decisions came in <em>Citizens United v&period; Federal Election Commission<&sol;em> &lpar;2010&rpar;&period; There the Court held&comma; by a 5-4 margin&comma; that the government cannot prohibit corporations&comma; unions&comma; and other associations from making independent expenditures to advocate for or against candidates&period; The ruling struck down key provisions of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 that had extended the regulatory regime first imposed after Watergate&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Building on the earlier <em>Buckley v&period; Valeo<&sol;em> &lpar;1976&rpar; precedent — which invalidated limits on candidate expenditures&comma; including the use of personal funds — the Court affirmed that spending money to express political views constitutes protected speech&period; The government may not silence voices or ration expression simply because amplification requires resources&period; These decisions correctly rejected the premise that Congress could engineer a perfectly level political playing field by micromanaging who may speak&comma; how much they may spend&comma; and through what vehicles&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The 1974 law and its subsequent amendments instead produced a system that systematically advantages the super-rich – which explains the proliferation of self-funded candidacies in the past half century&period; By enabling candidates to spend unlimited amounts of their own money&comma; the regulatory structure — as shaped and limited by the courts — allowed billionaires to immediately outspend less wealthy opponents by wide margins&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">That advantage is compounded because billionaire candidates possessed the funds from day one rather than having to assemble them piecemeal from thousands of smaller donors over months or years&period; They also retained full use of those resources without paying the substantial fundraising fees&comma; commissions&comma; and consultant costs that burden every traditional campaign&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Millionaires and billionaires could — and repeatedly have — deployed sums that no reasonable grassroots or small-donor program could possibly match&period; As this writer warned decades ago&comma; the 1974 framework produced a steadily growing roster of wealthy self-funded candidates&period; High-level politics has increasingly become a game played by those who can write seven- or eight-figure checks without blinking&period; The result is fewer genuine grassroots challengers and more contests decided before most voters have even focused on the race&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The same law created loopholes that generated glaring imbalances between segments of society that could donate or spend more effectively and those that remained tightly restricted&period; Individual citizens faced low per-candidate caps that limited their direct voice&period; Organized interests&comma; by contrast&comma; could form Political Action Committees enjoying higher contribution limits and the ability to aggregate support across members or employees&period; Labor unions possessed structural advantages in mobilizing coordinated member activity that scattered individuals could not replicate under the caps&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Before the 2002 reforms&comma; unlimited &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;soft money” contributions to political parties for party-building activities allowed wealthy donors and corporations to pour resources into both major parties until public backlash forced a ban — only for the funds to migrate into new vehicles&period; These imbalances did not eliminate large money&semi; they merely rechanneled it toward those sophisticated enough to navigate the regulatory thicket&period; Average citizens found their ability to support favored candidates artificially constrained&comma; while well-heeled or well-organized factions retained multiple pathways to substantial influence&period; The reformers stated goal of reducing the power of money produced instead a system that rewarded regulatory arbitrage&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The restrictions also triggered the proliferation of a confusing and often opaque mix of Political Action Committees&comma; Independent Expenditure Committees &lpar;commonly called Super PACs&rpar;&comma; and what became known as dark money organizations — nonprofit entities that engage in political advocacy without full public disclosure of their donors&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">These structures did not emerge in a vacuum&period; They arose as direct&comma; predictable adaptations to the contribution limits&comma; source bans&comma; and expenditure rules imposed by the 1974 law and later amendments&period; Rather than cleansing politics of big money&comma; the regulatory regime merely drove it into increasingly complex and less transparent channels&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Voters now confront a bewildering array of funding vehicles&comma; many of which obscure the ultimate sources of support&period; The complexity serves the interests of compliance lawyers and professional fundraisers far more than it serves ordinary citizens seeking to understand who is trying to influence their votes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The irrationally and unrealistically low limits on individual contributions — which have grown even more restrictive in real terms as campaign costs exploded with television&comma; digital advertising&comma; data analytics&comma; and staffing — have forced candidates into a state of near-constant fundraising&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">In this writers judgment&comma; there should be <strong>no limit<&sol;strong> on individual political contributions&period; The original caps&comma; only modestly adjusted for inflation over half a century&comma; bear no sensible relationship to the cost of communicating with millions of voters in a modern media environment&period; Candidates spend endless hours dialing for dollars or attending donor events rather than debating ideas&comma; meeting ordinary citizens&comma; or developing policy&period; This perpetual money chase heavily favors incumbents with established donor lists and disadvantages challengers and political outsiders&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Eliminating arbitrary caps on what a citizen may voluntarily give to a candidate of his or her choice would restore an element of freedom&comma; reduce the professionalization of fundraising&comma; and allow campaigns to be supported more efficiently by those most committed to the outcome&period; Meaningful transparency through timely disclosure of significant gifts would still allow the public to evaluate patterns of support&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Finally&comma; the low reporting thresholds for small donations generate enormous lists of contributors that are so lengthy and cumbersome they are never meaningfully examined by average voters&period; Citizens obtain their understanding of donor patterns almost exclusively from news outlets — and even the media focuses attention on only a small handful of the largest contributors&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Public disclosure of donations remains beneficial&comma; but only large contributions need detailed and prompt reporting — perhaps those of &dollar;5&comma;000 or more in an election cycle&period; Beyond full and timely disclosure of significant gifts&comma; the money should flow freely and voters should decide what weight to assign to particular donations&comma; including their size and source&period; The current regime of micro-disclosure overwhelms databases and privacy without delivering useful information to the electorate&period; It substitutes government-mandated volume for genuine transparency&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The Supreme Court got it right when it refused to let the government impose the full menu of speech restrictions dreamed up by left-wing post-Watergate reformers&period; The 1974 Campaign Finance law and its descendants have not reduced the influence of money in politics&period; They have entrenched advantages for the super-rich through self-funding&comma; spawned a labyrinth of workarounds that obscure rather than illuminate funding sources&comma; and imposed a fundraising treadmill that distracts candidates from substantive engagement with voters&period; The proper path forward lies in robust&comma; timely disclosure of major contributions combined with the freedom of individuals&comma; candidates&comma; and groups to support the political speech they believe advances their values&period; Let the voters weigh the information and render their judgment at the ballot box&period; Government attempts to ration political expression in the name of equality have repeatedly proven both unconstitutional and counterproductive&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph"><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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