New York Post

NY’S ILLEGAL CAMPAIGN-FINANCE LIMITS

- TERRY PELL

GET ready to see a major New York campaignfi­nance rule get tossed out by the courts. The state’s limit on PAC donations, even when the PAC is spending independen­tly of a campaign, is plainly unconstitu­tional.

For more than a quarter century, courts have been striking down state efforts to limit spending by individual­s to speak about elections (independen­t of any campaign). The reason is simple: A person has a right under the First Amendment to speak out about public issues. Public debate is improved when individual­s are free to participat­e without government interferen­ce.

But New York law has a limit of $150,000 on donations to PACs. New York Progress and Protection PAC, a political action committee formed to advocate independen­tly for mayoral candidate Joe Lhota, has filed suit to get the limit tossed.

I’m president of the Center for Individual Rights, a public interest law firm with a long history of defending First Amendment rights, particular­ly in the area of elections. We are the PAC’s cocounsel in the case.

We’re going to win, because everyone agrees that neither a PAC nor its individual donors are subject to limits so long as the PAC is independen­t of any political campaign. Every court that’s looked at the question has ruled that states can’t limit individual donations to an independen­t PAC.

Yes, a state may limit contributi­ons to a candidate or a campaign, so as to prevent a candidate from offering an illegal quid pro

quo (such as a favorable vote) in return for a large donation. But the Supreme Court has been clear that independen­t expenditur­es do not give rise to corruption, or even the appearance of corruption.

There’s no link between the donor and the candidate, who neither receives money from the PAC nor has any control over its message. Since the PAC operates independen­tly, no candidate has the need or interest in trading a favor for its support.

This has been well settled law since long before Citizens United v. FEC, in which the Supreme Court ruled that corporatio­ns are just as free of campaign limits as individual­s.

Inexplicab­ly, the New York Board of Elections is arguing that, while Citizens United freed independen­t committees from spending limits, it didn’t change limits on donations to these committees. The argument is a stretch, to put it mildly. Since a state can’t directly limit a PAC’s independen­t expenditur­es, it cannot attack those same expenditur­es by limiting individual contributi­ons to the PAC.

The only legitimate reason a state might have for limiting campaign contributi­ons — limiting corruption — doesn't apply to contributi­ons to an independen­t committee. Nor is there even the chance of an appearance of corruption since contributi­ons to an independen­t committee are twice removed from direct contributi­ons to a candidate.

Tossing New York’s limit would also make the mayoral race more democratic. One candidate, Bill de Blasio, now enjoys name recognitio­n, a 50point lead in the polls, and an almost overwhelmi­ng advantage in financial contributi­ons. The other candidate, Lhota, has little name recognitio­n, much less financial backing and is mostly unknown to city voters.

It’s absurd to claim that ending New York’s unconstitu­tional limits will produce a “gusher” of spending by outside individual­s and groups that will unfairly benefit Lhota, much less harm New York voters. On the contrary, New York voters will get the benefit of a more evenlymatc­hed race — one where ideas can count for more than de Blasio’s builtin advantages of clout and easy access to campaign contributi­ons.

Yes, some donations to the PAC will come from out of state. But independen­t spending made possible by donors with no ongoing connection to New York politics poses even less of a threat of quid pro

quo corruption. Such donors can’t possibly expect to benefit from New York City political favors.

So what is the Board of Elections afraid of ? New York’s limits on donations to independen­t campaign committees are clearly unconstitu­tional. And the mayoral race would just as clearly benefit from the freer debate those independen­t donations would make possible.

Most important: The Empire State’s campaignfi­nance laws cannot continue to ration speech in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendment right of individual­s to engage in political expression free of government restrictio­n.

Terry Pell is president of The Center for Individual Rights and cocounsel with Michael Carvin, partner at Jones Day, in the New York Progress and Protection PAC’s suit challengin­g New York’s campaignfi­nance law.

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