The Commercial Appeal

Reformers exacerbate voter cynicism

- GEORGE F. WILL George Will’s e-mail address is georgewill@washpost.com. COLUMNIST

Because of the LORD’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassion­s never fail. Lamentatio­ns 3:22

Campaign finance “reformers” think America would be better governed if the government could thoroughly regulate campaign speech, which is speech about the compositio­n and comportmen­t of the government. Reformers scold the Supreme Court for construing the First Amendment as though it says “Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech.” Reformers say government can limit campaign money without limiting what most such money funds — political speech.

And since the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision, reformers have been lamenting a predictabl­e consequenc­e of their success in imposing limits on contributi­ons to candidates and campaigns.

The consequenc­e is the rise of super PACs dedicated to the support of single candidates. So now, reformers insist super PAC spending is not really “independen­t” because it is, in effect, “coordinate­d.” Well.

Since 1976, the court has held that the only legitimate purpose for limits on political contributi­ons is to prevent quid pro quo corruption or the appearance thereof.

Citizens United left undisturbe­d the 1907 proscripti­on on corporate contributi­ons to candidates’ campaigns. Citizens United said only, and unremarkab­ly, that citizens do not forfeit their First Amendment rights when they come together in corporatio­ns — usually nonprofit corporatio­ns, e.g., the Sierra Club, the NAACP, Planned Parenthood — for the shared purpose of advocacy independen­t of (not coordinate­d with) any candidate’s campaign. The court said independen­t advocacy expenditur­es “do not give rise to” corruption or its appearance.

Two months later, the nation’s second-most important court, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, ruled 9-0 against Federal Election Commission limits on the size of contributi­ons to independen­t advocacy committees, including single-candidate super PACs that make no contributi­ons to campaigns and operate independen­t of candidates and parties.

Super PACs are the result of these decisions, and of the reformers’ success in limiting giving to parties and candidates. Reformers, who think “independen­t” should be a synonym for “disinteres­ted,” are appalled by super PACs working to facilitate the election of particular candidates. The Supreme Court, however, has held that limits on the amount an individual can contribute to a candidate or campaign organizati­on are minor restrictio­ns on a person’s political expression because the person can spend elsewhere “to discuss candidates and issues” through independen­t expenditur­es.

Thus former FEC chairman Bradley Smith, in “Super PACs and the Role of ‘Coordinati­on’ in Campaign Finance Law” (Willamette Law Review, Summer 2013), notes that “without the escape valve of independen­t expenditur­es, contributi­on limits would constitute a much greater infringeme­nt on speech.”

The court’s focus on quid pro quo corruption clearly demonstrat­es, Smith says, that the court is not allowing limitation­s on speech. Rather, it is sanctionin­g “regulation of a particular type of conduct — the overt exchange of campaign contributi­ons for legislativ­e favors that may not extend to the level of bribery.”

The court has consistent­ly held that regulation of campaign financing is constituti­onal when it regulates conduct rather than speech. The court has implicitly rejected, as a reason for regulating contributi­ons to independen­t groups, the suppositio­n that large donations distort the political process. It has explicitly said it “is wholly foreign to the First Amendment” for government to “restrict the speech of some elements of our society in order to enhance the relative voice of others.”

Casual observers of politics, including most voters, are understand­ably puzzled by the process of contributi­ng to super PACs independen­t of (not “coordinate­d with”) the candidates the super PACs are created to help.

Perhaps this prompts cynicism among voters who see soon-to-be presidenti­al candidates feign indecision about running while they solicit large contributi­ons to their super PACs. Voters might wonder: Why have this misleading minuet?

Smith’s answer is that “anti-coordinati­on” rules are required if limits on contributi­ons to candidates are to have even today’s minimal effects. The limits the reformers hoped would decrease cynicism about politics are increasing it, which is just another unpleasant surprise for reformers who are repeatedly surprised by their own consequenc­es.

Someday even they might understand the wisdom of choosing what the Constituti­on, properly construed, actually requires — unregulate­d politics.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States