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US Supreme Court rejects Millionaires Amendment
to campaign finance law
By Kate Randall
27 June 2008
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In a 5-4 vote on Thursday, the US Supreme Court struck down
a campaign financing provision that allows candidates to accept
larger-than-normal contributions if their opponents use their
own wealth to finance their campaigns.
The Millionaires Amendmenta provision
of the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, better known as the
McCain-Feingold Actallows a candidate for US Congress to
collect larger contributions from both supporters and political
parties if an opponent spends $350,000 or more of his or her own
money on the campaign.
The Millionaires Amendment, despite its nickname,
does not limit in any way the activities of millionaire, self-funding
candidates. They can spend as much of their personal fortune as
they please. The measure simply loosens the fund-raising restrictions
on candidates who must compete with a millionaire opponent. But
even this very meager effort at offsetting the power of great
wealth was too much for the court majority.
The case was brought by New York businessman Jack Davis, a
Democrat, who spent $3.5 million of his own money in unsuccessful
bids in 2004 and 2006 for a Buffalo-area congressional seat. The
high court agreed with Davis that provisions of the Millionaires
Amendment were unconstitutional and violated both his First
and Fifth Amendment rights.
The Courts opinion regards the provisions attempt
to limit the disparity in spending between candidates as unconstitutional.
Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito states that the
law requires a candidate to choose between the First Amendment
right to engage in unfettered political speech and subjection
to discriminatory fundraising limitations.
Alito was joined by conservatives Chief Justice John Roberts
and Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Anthony Kennedy.
The more liberal wing of the court, comprising Justices John Paul
Stevens, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer,
dissented on the key points of the case.
The decision basically views a candidates ability to
buy a political office with a private fortune as a freedom of
speech question, equating the unrestricted spending of money with
the exercise of First Amendment rights. Alito wrote that the provision
was unconstitutional because it imposes an unprecedented
penalty on any candidate who robustly exercises these rights.
Under the law, opponents of Congressional candidates spending
more than $350,000 of their own funds can receive increased donations
from individual donors$6,900 apiece instead of the usual
$2,300. The $40,900 limit a political party can spend on individual
US House campaigns is also waived. Both of these increased spending
allowances are suspended when the candidates total expenditures
equal those of the self-financed candidate.
The self-financed candidate is also required to submit additional
periodic financial statements, and may incur financial penalties
for failure to do so. The majority ruling objects to the disparities
between reporting requirements for competing candidates as well
as the differences in donation limits: We have never upheld
the constitutionality of a law that imposes different contribution
limits for candidates who are competing against each other,
writes Alito.
In a dissenting opinion, Justice John Paul Stevens writes:
We have long recognized the strength of an independent government
interest in reducing both the influence of wealth on the outcomes
of elections, and the appearance that wealth alone dictates those
results.
It is precisely this influence of wealth on the political system
that the majority opinion defends. Alito writes: Different
candidates have different strengths. Some are wealthy; others
have wealthy supporters who are willing to make large contributions.
Some are celebrities.... Leveling electoral opportunities means
making and implementing judgments about which strengths should
be permitted to contribute to the outcome of an election.
Alito equates legislative efforts to somewhat equalize the
amounts of money spent by Congressional candidates as an affront
to the democratic rights of voters, adding: The Constitution
confers upon voters, not Congress, the power to choose the members
of the House of Representatives.
Jack Davis and his attorney Stanley M. Brand contend that the
Millionaires Amendment discriminates against
candidates who finance their own campaigns, who do so to
convey a message of independence from lobbyists, large donors
and other political insiders. In reality, these
candidates in many cases spend millions of their own dollars,
outspending their opponents in an attempt to buy their way into
office. Substantial sections of the ruling elite object to any
restrictions on this process.
The US District Court for the District of Columbia last year
rejected Daviss challenge and granted summary judgment in
favor of the Federal Election Commission (FEC). The lower court
held that the amendment places no restriction on a candidates
ability to spend unlimited amounts of his personal wealth to communicate
his message to voters, nor does it reduce the amount of money
he is able to raise from contributors.
The Supreme Court judgment overturns this ruling and follows
a 2007 decision that loosened part of the McCain-Feingold campaign
finance law regarding corporate and union financing of advertising.
This latest decision points to an effort by the right-wing majority
on the Court to chip away at any provisions of campaign finance
that place restrictions on the use of private wealth in the US
election process.
The Supreme Court majority in the Davis case claims that the
Millionaires Amendment violates the Courts
1976 decision in Buckley v. Valeo, which upheld limits
on campaign contributions but said candidates could not be restricted
in spending their own money.
Representing the FEC and Congress before the high court in
the Davis case, Solicitor General Paul D. Clement said in his
brief that the amendment represents a modest and constitutionally
appropriate attempt to counteract the perception that a candidate
who is wealthy enough can buy a seat in Congress.
For good reason, such perceptions are widespread among the
US population. According to opensource.org, the average personal
wealth of a US Senator is more than $10 million, while the average
member of the House of Representatives has about $5 million.
Over the past 25 years, the amounts of money required to compete
effectively for federal office have risen astronomically. The
2004 election was the first $3 billion election, when all campaign
funds for presidential and congressional candidates are combined.
The 2008 election is likely to exceed $4 billion in spending,
with the Democratic Party, for the first time in recent history,
enjoying a pronounced financial advantage.
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