Campaign Finance
Ongoing Issues in Campaign Finance Reform: Political Freedom and Recent Supreme Court Rulings
The issue of campaign finance reform comes and goes as a focal point of national attention, and though recent economic events have eclipsed attention to this issue in the past two years, recent changes ought to be carefully noted by the voting public. Over the latter half of the twentieth century, various pieces of legislation have been passed that limit the amount of funds that can be spent endorsing political candidates and have also regulated the release of politically potent media of certain types during election periods. Recent Supreme Court cases, however, have drastically changed the rules of campaign finance.
Current Policy
The McCain-Feingold Bill was finally signed into law in 2002 after languishing in the Senate for years due to Republican filibustering, limiting the funds that candidates could receive and making issue advertising illegal within sixty days of elections and thirty days before primaries (Policy Almanac 2002). Many of the provisions of this legislation have been determined to be unconstitutional either outright or for all practical purposes by recent narrowly decided Supreme Court rulings (Oyez 2010; Hasen 2010; Mencimer 2010). Current campaign finance policy is thus largely non-existent, with contributions and spending on advertisement -- as well as the running of advertisements -- facing few limitations from standing legislative acts (Mencimer 2010; Hasen 2010; Public Citizen 2010).
Two Supreme Court cases stand out as the predominant vehicles by which existing campaign finance and advertising limitations and regulations were eradicated. Citizens United V. The United States federal Election Commission abolished long-standing laws and judicial precedence by essentially agreeing that spending was speech, and thus corporations could donate directly to candidates and issues to whatever extent they desired to do so (Mann 2010; Hasen 2010). Prior to this ruling, Federal Election Commission v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. determined that rules limiting issue advertising were unconstitutional for similar free speech reasons, and even that narrowly avoiding explicit candidacy support or opposition was permissible so long as the ad could not only be construed as endorsing or opposing a particular candidate (Oyez 2010, Brennan 2010). With these rulings, virtually all campaign contribution limits and advertising rules in the country have been abolished.
Reasons for Change
The reasons used to make these drastic changes to campaign financing and advertising rules were ostensibly a preservation of First Amendment rights to free speech (also as applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment), though the true motives for both the original groups suing in these cases and the lawyers that argue their cases might have been less idealistic in nature (Hasen 2010; Mencimer 2010; Brennan 2010; Public Citizen 2010). It has been suggested that lawyers involved in these cases are truly protecting the interests of their corporate clients while representing small grass-roots special issue organizations (Mencimer 2010).
Regardless of the intentions of the attorneys involved, the law as they now stand (or more appropriately, as they don't stand) certainly benefit corporation insofar as they increase their ability to donate money to specific candidates and causes. This is dangerous to the average voter because the candidates become increasingly beholden to corporate donors or face their likely removal from office at the next election due to insufficient campaigning capabilities. Campaign finance laws and regulations must be changed -- via Constitutional amendment if necessary -- in order to ensure that candidates and decisions are not bought, but are still truly the result of a free and democratic process in this case, the freedom to spend on political candidates and issues is in conflict with the basic concept of a representative democracy and thus this freedom must be limited to persist in any country claiming this system of government.
Policy Options
There are several options that can be explored as a means of achieving realistic campaign finance reforms that have the desired effect of limiting corporate influence on political issues while at the same time remaining in keeping with existing laws and principles that serve as the foundation of the United States of America. Passing legislation such as the laws that have been passed in the passed but that is in keeping with the latest Supreme Court readings of prior law is one means for achieving change. Laws that limit the use of any public infrastructure, including airwaves and basic communications infrastructure that serves a vital community service, for political purposes could be a way to achieve media limitations without violating...
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