The Denver Post

Regulatory overkill

- A longer version of this column appears at denverpost.com/ opinion.

Occasional­ly, the Supreme Court considers questions that are answered merely by asking them. On Tuesday, the court will hear arguments about this: Should a government agency, whose members are chosen by elected officials, be empowered to fine or imprison any candidate or other participan­t in the political process who during a campaign makes what the agency considers “false statements” about a member of the political class or a ballot initiative?

An Ohio statute, which resembles laws in at least 15 other states, says, among many other stern things, that: “No person, during the course of any campaign … shall … make a false statement concerning the voting record of a candidate or public official.”

Former Rep. Steve Driehaus, a Cincinnati Democrat who considers himself pro-life, says he lost his 2010 re-election bid because the pro-life Susan B. Anthony List violated Ohio’s law with ads saying that when he voted for the Affordable Care Act, he voted for taxpayer funding of abortion.

When he learned that the SBA List planned to erect billboards proclaimin­g, “Shame on Steve Driehaus! Driehaus voted FOR taxpayer-funded abortion,” he filed a complaint with the Ohio Elections Commission. So the billboard company refused the SBA List’s business. The SBA List did air its message on radio.

Driehaus says the ACA does not specifical­ly appropriat­e money for abortions. The SBA List counters that the ACA can subsidize abortion-inclusive insurance coverage.

Driehaus says an executive order issued after passage of the ACA, which was promised to get him and a few other pro-life Democrats to vote for the act, prohibits ACA funds from being used for abortions. The SBA List says the executive order proved that the ACA itself allowed taxpayer-funded abortions. The president of Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider, seemed to agree, complacent­ly dismissing the executive order as a “symbolic gesture.”

Ohio’s law, which obviously is designed to encourage self-censorship, certainly chilled the SBA List’s political speech. Yet a lower court upheld the infliction of the intentiona­lly speech-suppressiv­e law on the SBA List because those challengin­g it supposedly must prove something impossible— that if they persisted in their speech they would be certainly and imminently and successful­ly prosecuted. Under this standard, politicall­y motivated people can, at little cost to themselves, make accusation­s that entangle adversarie­s in expensive speech-halting proceeding­s during a campaign.

The SBA List’s brief to the Supreme Court notes that “a law requiring citizens to pay $1 before they could publicly comment on electoral issues or candidates for office would be immediatel­y justiciabl­e (and promptly invalidate­d).” Yet Ohio’s law makes it easy for literally millions of Ohioans to subject participan­ts in the political process to much more expensive costs— not to mention the threat of incarcerat­ion.

This case involves the intersecti­on of two ominous developmen­ts. One is the inevitable, and inevitably abrasive, government intrusions into sensitive moral issues that come with government’s comprehens­ive and minute regulation of health care with taxes, mandates and other coercions. The other developmen­t is government’s growing attempts to regulate political speech, as illustrate­d by the Obama administra­tion’s unapologet­ic politiciza­tion of the IRS to target con

servative groups.

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