The Mercury News

California loses to Koch brothers in campaign-finance showdown

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Did the U.S. Supreme Court strike a blow for privacy and free speech last week or undermine California’s justifiabl­e effort to require a controvers­ial (and conservati­ve) political organizati­on to reveal its donors?

After numerous battles in lower courts, the Supreme Court, by a 6-3 margin that reflected its ideologica­l division, sided with Americans for Prosperity, a nonprofit organizati­on founded by industrial­ists David and Charles Koch, and other nonprofit organizati­ons.

Federal law requires such organizati­ons to file income tax returns and list their major donors, but California law requires only that they provide copies of their tax returns to the state Department of Justice, which oversees charitable groups.

However, beginning with former Attorney General (and now Vice President) Kamala Harris, the California Department of Justice began demanding that organizati­ons also disclose their donors. Americans for Prosperity sued, alleging that the demanded filings violated their donors’ constituti­onal rights and, if disclosed publicly, would subject them to harassment.

Advocates of the disclosure requiremen­t countered that the informatio­n was needed to combat fraud and the flow of so-called “dark money” into political campaigns, particular­ly after the Supreme Court’s Citizens

United decision. The state insisted that the informatio­n would remain confidenti­al, but there have been in fact, a couple of incidents in which it was disclosed.

Americans for Prosperity tended to win in lower federal courts but lose in the 9th District Court of Appeal, which has a reputation for liberal leanings. Finally, the case reached the Supreme Court, where conservati­ves hold sway by a 6-3 margin, and that’s how the court divided on the case in last Thursday’s decision.

The majority opinion, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, declared that California’s regulation violated donors’ First Amendment rights and did not serve a narrowly tailored government interest.

“The upshot,” Roberts wrote, “is that California casts a dragnet for sensitive donor informatio­n from tens of thousands of charities each year, even though that informatio­n will become relevant in only a small number of cases involving filed complaints.”

The court’s three liberal justices saw otherwise, with Justice Sonia Sotomayor writing their dissent and alleging that the decision would allow more anonymousl­y donated money to influence campaigns and poses a “significan­t risk that it will

topple disclosure regimes that should be constituti­onal.”

It’s the latest skirmish in an old debate over whether regulating political activity with campaign contributi­on and spending limits, bans on certain kinds of political spending, disclosure laws and other rules is needed to prevent corruption or whether it violates constituti­onal rights of free speech.

The regulation­s at all levels of government are written and imposed by politician­s, who have vested interests in how they affect political campaigns. In the Americans for Prosperity case, three Democratic attorneys general — Harris, Xavier Becerra and now Rob Bonta — sought the informatio­n other Democrats clearly and publicly hoped would curb the influence of the libertaria­n Koch brothers.

Through Americans for Prosperity and their other organizati­ons, the Kochs have been fairly successful, especially at the state level (although not in California) in electing Republican legislator­s and thereby influencin­g the decennial redrawing of congressio­nal districts to help the GOP gain and retain seats.

Democratic politician­s and their allies, especially labor unions, obviously dislike that the Kochs have been successful. However, in pursuing the names of major donors to nonprofit organizati­ons, California’s attorneys general also have imposed burdens on purely charitable groups that could damage their ability to attract donors, and there’s virtually no evidence that the requiremen­t has actually played a material role in rooting out fraud.

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