San Francisco Chronicle

Conservati­ve judges criticize campaign finance ruling

- Bob Egelko is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: begelko@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @BobEgelko

Judge Raymond Fisher, writing for the court majority, said there was evidence in Montana of “attempts to exchange campaign dollars for official legislativ­e acts” that justified the state’s contributi­on limits. He also noted that 40 states and the federal government limit the amounts individual­s can give to political candidates, restrictio­ns the Supreme Court has left intact while striking down other campaign finance restrictio­ns.

In its 2010 Citizens United ruling and follow-up cases, the high court allowed corporatio­ns to give unlimited amounts to independen­t political committees as an act of free speech, but did not disturb restrictio­ns on donations to individual candidates.

But the Ninth Circuit dissenters — Ikuta and Judges Consuelo Callahan, Carlos Bea, Milan Smith and N. Randy Smith — invited their fellow conservati­ves on the Supreme Court to take up the Montana case and rewrite the rules for campaign contributi­ons. The court may be receptive, said Richard Hasen, a UC Irvine law professor and election law commentato­r.

If the high court looks at this case in the same way it has considered other campaign finance issues, “it is hard to see how it will conclude many campaign contributi­on limits will stand” in any state, Hasen said on his Election Law blog. “The court may not want to go down that road, given how disruptive and crazy such a ruling would be.”

James Bopp, the lawyer for challenger­s to the Montana law, said he was encouraged by the dissents and hoped the Supreme Court would use the case to strike down limits in Montana, California and other states.

“Contributi­on limits in the vast majority of states are way too low” and “were passed for illicit reasons ... to stop as much private spending on campaigns as they can,” said Bopp, general counsel for the James Madison Center for Free Speech. Referring to California’s limit of $4,200 for individual contributi­ons to legislativ­e candidates, he said, jokingly, “You can’t even buy a Democrat for $4,200.”

But Los Angeles attorney Robert Stern, former general counsel of the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission and co-author of the 1974 ballot measure that first regulated campaign financing in California, noted that the state’s limits are higher than the federal law maximum of $2,700 for individual donations to candidates for Congress, U.S. Senate or president.

“I don’t see how this (case) has much effect on California unless the court says, and it’s a possibilit­y, that all contributi­on limits are unconstitu­tional,” Stern said.

In addition to the $4,200 limit on legislativ­e contributi­ons, California allows individual­s to give as much as $28,200 to a candidate for governor and $7,000 to a candidate for another statewide office.

Montana, with a far smaller population and much less expensive campaigns, allows donations of $1,320 to candidates for governor, $660 for other state offices and $340 for legislator­s.

A federal judge declared the limits unconstitu­tional, but an appeals court panel led by Fisher reversed that ruling in November, and on Wednesday, the full court said a request for a rehearing had fallen short of a majority.

In a separate opinion Wednesday endorsing that decision, Fisher cited a letter one legislator sent to fellow Republican­s, urging them to vote for an insurance bill in order to “keep the contributi­ons coming our way” from a lobbying group.

Such evidence showed enough of a “risk of ... corruption” to support contributi­on limits, Fisher said. But Ikuta, in dissent, said it fell far short of showing actual vote-buying.

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