SCOTUS Strikes Down Limits on Overall Federal Campaign Contributions

Matthew5

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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/03/us/politics/supreme-court-ruling-on-campaign-contributions.html

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday issued a major campaign finance decision, striking down some limits on federal campaign contributions for the first time. The ruling, issued near the start of a campaign season, will change and most likely increase the already large role money plays in American politics.

The decision, by a 5-to-4 vote along ideological lines, with the Court’s more conservative justices in the majority, was a sequel of sorts to Citizens United, the 2010 decision that struck down limits on independent campaign spending by corporations and unions. But that ruling did nothing to affect the other main form of campaign finance regulation: caps on direct contributions to candidates and political parties.


Wednesday’s decision in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, No. 12-536, addressed that second kind of regulation.

It did not affect familiar base limits on contributions from individuals to candidates, currently $2,600 per candidate in primary and general elections. But it said that overall limits of $48,600 by individuals every two years for contributions to all federal candidates violated the First Amendment, as did separate aggregate limits on contributions to political party committees, currently $74,600.
 
SCOTUS Strikes Down Aggregate Campaign Finance Limits

In 5-4 Decision, SCOTUS Strikes Down Aggregate Campaign Finance Limits

The Supreme Court today handed down their decision in McCutcheon v. FEC, and the 5-4 decision carried by the Court's conservative justices has overturned the aggregate limits on campaign contributions to political candidates. Candidate limits will remain intact - so while no individual may give more than $5,200 to a candidate, they are no longer limited in their overall direct contribution limits in each cycle.

As Justice Roberts writes in the majority opinion:
To put it in the simplest terms, the aggregate limits prohibit an individual from fully contributing to the primary and general election campaigns of ten or more candidates, even if all contributions fall within the base limits Congress views as adequate to protect against corruption. The individual may give up to $5,200 each to nine candidates, but the aggregate limits constitute an outright ban on further contributions to any other candidate (beyond the additional $1,800 that may be spent before reaching the $48,600 aggregate limit). At that point, the limits deny the individual all ability to exercise his expressive and associational rights by contributing to someone who will advocate for his policy preferences. A donor must limit the number of candidates he supports, and may have to choose which of several policy concerns he will advance—clear First Amendment harms that the dissent never acknowledges.

It is no answer to say that the individual can simply contribute less money to more people. To require one person to contribute at lower levels than others because he wants to support more candidates or causes is to impose a special burden on broader participation in the democratic process.

Continue Reading: http://townhall.com/tipsheet/keving...court-overturns-campaign-finance-law-n1817943


Very good ruling. A win for free speech.
 
Wow. I am surprised I can't hear the liberal heads exploding all across the entire country. You're right - this is a pro-freedom ruling.
 
Wow. I am surprised I can't hear the liberal heads exploding all across the entire country. You're right - this is a pro-freedom ruling.

Chief Justice Roberts made a good point in the majority opinion. Liberals will cry about who this will increase corruption, but Roberts said something along the lines of "Why is it fine to contribute $5,200 to 9 candidates, but automatically corrupt and illegal to donate $5,200 to 10 candidates?"
 
Chief Justice Roberts made a good point in the majority opinion. Liberals will cry about who this will increase corruption, but Roberts said something along the lines of "Why is it fine to contribute $5,200 to 9 candidates, but automatically corrupt and illegal to donate $5,200 to 10 candidates?"

Personally, I'd take off all the personal limits. Why it is fine to donate $5,200 to a candidate, but evil and corrupt to donate $5,201?
 
Personally, I'd take off all the personal limits. Why it is fine to donate $5,200 to a candidate, but evil and corrupt to donate $5,201?

I agree. But this is a good first step towards true political speech freedom.
 
Financial limits only gives the illusion that "the common man" actually has any power. I say uncap that bad boy and be ideologically consistent.
 
I agree. But this is a good first step towards true political speech freedom.

Yes, I'm certainly not an ideologue who won't celebrate winning a battle because the war isn't over. Baby steps forward are better than backward.
 
This is a great ruling. Trying to regulate campaign finance is classical treating the symptom rather than the problem. The symptom is money in politics. The problem is that the government has so much control over our money and economy.
 
Put the Guilt on the politicians who wrote the laws for themselves and their money masters...

This should be the number one issue to fire every politician that supported the McCain-Feingold Act. Heck fire them all because none of them have done anything to fix campaign bribery laws.
 
Wow. I am surprised I can't hear the liberal heads exploding all across the entire country. You're right - this is a pro-freedom ruling.

I do, all I hear are a bunch of retarded "if money is speech" non-jokes. Liberals are so good at strawmanning landmark decisions, they still haven't gotten tired of the Citizens United strawman that 'corporations are people'.

Next stop : allow foreigners to donate.
 
Personally, I'd take off all the personal limits. Why it is fine to donate $5,200 to a candidate, but evil and corrupt to donate $5,201?

if we take off personal limits, then the next logical step would be to keep donors private. why are votes private but donations public? that never made sense to me.
 
if we take off personal limits, then the next logical step would be to keep donors private. why are votes private but donations public? that never made sense to me.

A voter is presumably a U.S. citizen (ha!) who has a right to cast a vote in secret. Perhaps donations are private in order to ensure that a candidate isn't being paid off by a foreign power (ha!).
 
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A voter is presumably a U.S. citizen (ha!) who has a right to cast a vote in secret. Perhaps donations are private in order to ensure that a candidate isn't being paid off by a foreign power (ha!).

Donations are NOT currently private, but should be!
 
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