Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

McConnell’s un-conservati­ve plea

- Ruth Marcus is syndicated by the Washington Post Writers Group. Her email address is ruthmarcus@washpost.com.

WASHINGTON » Spare me the Republican pieties about the horror of activist judges legislatin­g from the bench. These days, judicial activism in the service of conservati­ve causes is not just acceptable — it’s openly encouraged. Witness a new Supreme Court brief from Senate Minority Leader Mitch

McConnell.

The brief comes in a case involving Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, challengin­g an obscure provision of federal election law that bars candidates who lend their campaigns funds to get elected from raising more than $250,000 after the election to pay themselves back — the theory being that postelecti­on fundraisin­g is less about engaging in political speech and more about currying political favor.

The day before his 2018 Senate election, Cruz lent his campaign $260,000 — not because it needed the money (it had more than $2 million cash on hand) but because, he openly acknowledg­es, he wanted to set up a challenge to the repayment provision. Cruz argues that the law violates the First Amendment, stifling candidates’ political speech by deterring them from lending to their own campaigns.

The Federal Election Commission, defending the provision, contends that Cruz has no standing to contest it because, among other things, he created the problem himself. “Senator Cruz’s injury is self-inflicted, since he and his campaign deliberate­ly arranged their transactio­ns so as to create a legal barrier to full repayment of the loan,” Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar told the court. In any event, she said, “the loan-repayment limit imposes at most a modest burden on the right to make and accept contributi­ons.”

The case, to be argued Jan. 19, offers a particular­ly vivid illustrati­on of the conservati­ve mania to undo even the most inoffensiv­e campaign finance restrictio­ns. But the McConnell brief, authored by former Trump White House counsel Donald McGahn and former Trump administra­tion solicitor general Noel Francisco, is notable for a different and more alarming reason: There is, it seems, no argument too extreme for this crowd in their effort to reshape the law to their liking.

They urge the court to use this case not simply to strike down the loan repayment provision but also to junk what is left of the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA), also known as McCainFein­gold. Encouragin­g the court to engage in what amounts to judicial euthanasia, the brief asserts that the act has been so disfigured over the years that it should be put out of its misery.

If you think this is exaggerati­on, read on. “This Court’s decisions over the past decade have rendered BCRA the Humpty Dumpty of campaign-finance law, a patchwork of provisions that Congress never would have approved standing alone and that can never be put back together again,” the brief asserts. “There is no reason to let BCRA limp along, no need for further piecemeal surgery by this Court: the Court should strike the entire statute.”

It cannot be stressed enough: This is not a normal legal argument. It’s certainly not a conservati­ve one. The Constituti­on provides that courts are to rule on the cases or controvers­ies before them. Courts aren’t supposed to lunge out for issues that aren’t presented — in this case, to decide, as McConnell urges, “It is time to put BCRA out to pasture.”

Seriously? In passing the law, Congress took pains to include an explicit severabili­ty provision, stating its intention that the rest of the law should be preserved even if part were struck down. That was no legislativ­e boilerplat­e:

Even then, with a far less conservati­ve court, there were legitimate fears about the constituti­onal fate of some provisions.

In the years since 2003, when the core of the law was upheld in McConnell v. FEC — yes, that McConnell — a conservati­ve majority increasing­ly hostile to campaign finance regulation has been chipping away at it. In 2008, the court overturned the so-called millionair­es’ amendment that let candidates running against self-financed opponents collect contributi­ons larger than otherwise allowed. In 2010, in Citizens United v. FEC, it struck down restrictio­ns on independen­t expenditur­es by corporatio­ns and labor unions close to elections. In 2014, it disallowed limits on the aggregate amount that individual­s could contribute to candidates and parties.

McConnell argues that “the BCRA of today is a lopsided legislativ­e regime.” But law is not a game of Jenga, in which a statute topples once enough bricks have been pulled out. He contends that Congress would never have passed the law “in its present, mangled form.” But law is not a matter of legislativ­e mind-reading, especially not when Congress has made its intent clear that the statute should be preserved even if some provisions fall.

And McConnell asserts that the key remaining part of the law, its ban on unlimited “soft money” contributi­ons to political parties, is “not long for this world,” given that four justices were willing to strike down the soft-money rules in 2003 and that the court is far more conservati­ve now. But law is not fortune-telling, and the justices aren’t psychics, imagining now how they would rule on future cases.

I doubt that the court, even this court, will take up McConnell’s invitation. But it’s telling that the minority leader, self-described “respected senior statesman” and supposed friend of the court, would have the gall to issue it.

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