[EL] Check out Study shows who breaks campaign laws - ThePuebloChieftai...

JBoppjr at aol.com JBoppjr at aol.com
Thu Aug 11 15:03:03 PDT 2011


No, because, unfortunately, CU does not solve all the problems and burdens  
of over 500 pages of federal campaign finance regulation. What it does do 
is  open up another outlet for political advocacy.  Now all unions can do  
political advocacy and union members dont have to do anything but contribute  
their dues, and they already do this.  No new organization needs to be  
established. Many people are already contributing to advocacy groups and these  
groups can just speak out on political issues, no need for a pac.   And for 
profit corporation, that most average americans already invest in,  can 
speak out too.  So more freedom, more options for involvement. What I  was 
addressing was that the PAC option is not a practical option for most  Americans, 
even though all the wealthy have the means to do it.   And when the wealth 
spend their own money they dont need to have either a  PAC or a corporation 
to do it -- like people of average means. Jim  Bopp
 
 
In a message dated 8/11/2011 5:20:11 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
mikealtschule at yahoo.com writes:

 
I will apologize in advance, by admitting that I haven't been following  
this thread closely.  Are you saying that the average Joe Blow/Six Pack  you 
mention below, who were discouraged from speaking because of the undue  
burden of forming and legally maintaining a PAC will, in light of CU, decide  to 
take on the burden to form and legally maintain a corporation for the same  
First Amendment purpose?
 
Mike Altschule



  
____________________________________
 From: "JBoppjr at aol.com"  <JBoppjr at aol.com>
To:  tpotter at capdale.com; BSmith at law.capital.edu
Cc: law-election at uci.edu
Sent: Thursday, August 11, 2011 2:03  PM
Subject: Re: [EL] Check  out Study shows who breaks campaign laws - 
ThePuebloChieftai...


But, Trevor, you did not respond to two points (1) that PACs are  difficult 
to administer and require, as you say, "sophisticated" advice.   As a 
result, they must be HUGE and 'sophisticaed operations," which precludes  the 
average person or group of persons to get together on their own to do  this.  
Result, fatcat corporations can afford to have them, but  the  average person 
cannot.  (2) This talk about PACs is  irrelevant.  I was comparing your 
average Stephan Colbert to your  average Joe Six Pack.  Colbert has the money, 
he just spends it, and  he files a one page FEC report. Two Joe Blows have 
to set up a PAC.   Much different and much more burdensome. Game, set, match 
to your fatcat  clients, Trevor.  Jim Bopp
 
 
In a message dated 8/11/2011 4:51:54 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
tpotter at capdale.com writes:

 
My  point was, and remains, that for years there were HUGE Pacs  in  
existence that played important roles in politics—and they did so through  
aggregating the funds of small donors (in the case of labor unions and the  NRA and 
Pro-Life groups usually REALLY small average donations). Political  parties 
and their direct mail bases had the same effect. These groups were  very 
sophisticated operations which provided an effective voice for their  
membership of “average people.” So to say that CU somehow allowed average  people 
to speak for the first time ignores historical record and turns  reality on 
its head—CU allows corporations to participate directly in  elections for the 
first time: individuals could already do that—on their own  if billionaires 
like Ross Perot, by banding together with others if   average citizens. 
 
 
 
From: Smith, Brad  [mailto:BSmith at law.capital.edu] 
Sent: Thursday, August 11, 2011  3:46 PM
To: Trevor Potter; JBoppjr at aol.com
Cc:  law-election at uci.edu
Subject: RE: [EL] Check out Study shows who  breaks campaign laws - 
ThePuebloChieftai...


 
 
 
Ah, that  explains why CLC has no political influence.

 


 
Seriously, it's really  an important point I would make. Political 
influence is exercised in so  many ways, and most of those are restricted to a 
relatively small elite, to  which most of us on this list belong, even if we may 
be near the bottom of  that elite. It would be ridiculous to say that CLC 
has no influence on  public policy, simply because it eschews direct electoral 
politics, or that  the Foundations that fund it don't wish to influence 
public  policy.

 


 
Trevor says PACs are a  satisfactory alternative for most small donors, but 
most of the  time that's just not true. The burdensome PAC regulation and 
reporting  requirements, the corresponding need for counsel, the difficulties 
of  getting PACs off the ground and raising substantial enough funds to 
compete  with large organizations and wealthy individuals who can exercise 
influence  in a host of ways, prevent a great deal of speech. After I agreed to  
serve as counsel to Liberty Advertising in 2007, which did the Ron Paul  
Blimp _http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2008/story?id=3965657&page=1_ 
(http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2008/story?id=3965657&page=1) ,  I was 
beseiged with calls from eager Ron Paul fans brimming with ideas for  political 
activities to help their candidate. Once I described the  regulatory system, 
and the burden of forming a PAC, virtually all dropped  the idea - some 
because the regulation and potential liability was too much,  some because they 
knew that they couldn't raise the necessary funds in small  contributions, and 
some from a combination of both. (Sadly, this was  pre-SpeechNow.org and 
the advent of "superPACs.") The PACs most likely to be  able to get around 
these problems were and are those connected to large  businesses and labor 
unions, largely defeating Trevor's arguments that PACs  are the avenue for "the 
little guy."

 


 
I don't think you have to  assume bad faith in the reformers to note that 
few, if any, proposals to  regulate reduce the political influence of those 
making the proposals.  Trevor's influence, for example, benefits from a 
system in which  participating in campaigns is relatively complex, and spending 
unaccountable  501(c)(3) money to influence policy is relatively easy. Not 
coincidentally,  he advocates a system in which participating in campaigns is 
relatively  complex, but spending unaccountable 501(c)(3) money is 
relatively esy. It's  not that's he's more evil or machiavellian than the rest of us, 
it's just  human nature to see your own sources of influence as legitimate 
in ways that  "the other guy's" are not.

 



 
 
Bradley A. Smith

 
Josiah H. Blackmore II/Shirley M. Nault  Designated Professor of Law

 
Capital University Law  School

 
303 E. Broad St.

 
Columbus, OH  43215

 
(614) 236-6317

 
_http://www.law.capital.edu/Faculty/Bios/bsmith.asp_ 
(http://www.law.capital.edu/Faculty/Bios/bsmith.asp) 


 

  
____________________________________
 
From:  law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu on behalf of Trevor  
Potter
Sent: Thu 8/11/2011 3:17 PM
To:  JBoppjr at aol.com
Cc: law-election at uci.edu
Subject: Re:  [EL] Check out Study shows who breaks campaign laws -  
ThePuebloChieftai...

 
 
I hate to puncture all this air with facts,  but donors (publicly disclosed 
too,  of course)  to the Campaign  Legal Center are 99 percent 501 c 3 
foundations, prohibited from intervening  in campaigns.....

 
As to the point of my post, though--that  small donors have been able to 
pool their contributions together through  PACs to be heard for many years, 
and CU and WRTL simply chose not to use  this vehicle available to their 
"Little Bo Peeps" --Jim has not a word to  say in response, except to attempt to 
change the subject....

 

Sent from my iPad

 

On Aug 11,  2011, at 2:55 PM, "_JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) " 
<_JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) >  wrote:


 
 
What  Trevor (always) forgets is that the fatcats who fund his CLC can  
always spend their own money, both before Citizens United and  after. So before 
Citizens United, Daddy Warbucks could spend his money to  influence 
elections and, after CU, he can spend his money to influence  elections. The only 
change is that, before CU, Soros had to do so in his  own name and after he 
can give to a group who does it. I acknowledge that  this is a change, but it 
has no effect on the fact that either way, he is  spending his money to 
influence elections.

 


 
But  what about Little Bo Peep? Well before CU, she didn't have enough 
money to  spend to make a difference and when she gave some to CU, to pool her  
resources with others of average means, CU  could not spend it to influence 
elections.  CU was  prohibited.  But after CU, now they  can.

 


 
So  Trevor is mad about CU -- because now people of average means can now  
compete with Trevor's wealthy benefactors.  About time, I would  say.  Jim 
Bopp

 


 
So  the difference, before and after CU, the Sugar Daddies can spend their  
money to influence elections, but only after CU could people of average  
means by pooling their recourses in CU.

 


 
 
In a  message dated 8/10/2011 3:17:24 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
_tpotter at capdale.com_ (mailto:tpotter at capdale.com)   writes:


 
For  many years people of average means pooled their funds and contributed  
“small” sums (in the greater scheme of things) to political parties and  
political committees—PACS. Those parties and PACS pooled the funds and  
amplified the voices of average citizens. Wisconsin Right to Life and  Citizens 
United had that option too, but they served as  stalking  horses for other 
interests, so they instead demanded the courts  recognize a  constitutional 
right to limitless participation in the  political process through their 
treasury funds, and corporate funds they  received.
 
So,  thanks to Mr. Bopp and others, we now have a world in which the big  
players—the corporations and billionaires-- have the same ability to  
influence the system that the “citizens of average means” had before—but  with far 
less accountability and disclosure. A victory for the “average  citizen”? 
Seems Alice in Wonderland to me…
 
Trevor  Potter
 
 
 
From: _law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu_ 
(mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu)   
[mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu] On Behalf Of  _JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) 
Sent:  Wednesday, August 10, 2011 2:45 PM
To:  rhasen at law.uci.edu
Cc: law-election at uci.edu
Subject:  Re: [EL] Check out Study shows who breaks campaign laws - 
ThePueblo  Chieftai...


 
 
While I  don't know what "reformers" whisper in Rick's ear, "reformers" 
have  been quite open and candid that there is a great big list of people  they 
want to shut up -- foreigners, the Wylie Brothers, all  corporations, 
"outside interests," Citizens United, Wisconsin Right to  Life, "special 
interests," etc etc etc. Most, but not all, of these are  people of average means or 
made up of people of average means. They have  never said that that bothers 
them one whit.  Jim Bopp

 


 
 
In a  message dated 8/10/2011 1:26:00 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
_rhasen at law.uci.edu_ (mailto:rhasen at law.uci.edu)   writes:


Jim,

Do you really  believe reformers' goals are "to drive citizens of average 
means out  of our political system?"  That certainly does not match up with  
my experience in talking to people who are strongly in favor of  regulation. 
 Usually they express to me concerns about large  money corrupting the 
system, concerns about inequality/lack of a level  playing field, or concerns 
about the high costs of campaigns.  I  cannot recall a single conversation 
over many years of speaking with  reform-minded individuals who ever--publicly 
or privately--expressed a  desire to drive citizens of average means out of 
our political  system.

That's not to say that complex laws cannot have this  effect.  I believe 
they can, and that to the extent that campaign  finance laws do so, they need 
to be changed.  But you suggest a  motive for such laws which seems so off 
from reality that I'm not sure  if you are serious.

Rick

On  8/10/2011 10:19 AM, _JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com)  wrote:  
 
_Click here: Study shows who breaks campaign  laws - The Pueblo Chieftain: 
Local_ 
(http://www.chieftain.com/news/local/study-shows-who-breaks-campaign-laws/article_9cf187fc-c185-11e0-baff-001cc4c002e0.html?mode=story)  

 


 
“Our  office did a study and looked at who pays campaign finance fines, who 
 doesn’t, who violates the law a lot, things like that,” said Secretary  
of State Scott Gessler. “And the bottom line is this: Volunteers and  
grass-roots groups are far more likely to run afoul of the law because  the law is 
so complex. Large, big-money groups are able to hire  attorneys and 
accountants and pay very, very few fines.”

 


 
But  this is the purpose of campaign finance laws -- to drive citizens  of 
average means out of our political system. Nice to see it is  working. The 
"reformers" will be very pleased, I am sure.   Jim Bopp

 
 
--  
Rick Hasen
Professor of Law and Political Science
UC Irvine  School of Law
401 E. Peltason Dr., Suite 1000
Irvine, CA  92697-8000
949.824.3072 - office
949.824.0495 - fax
_rhasen at law.uci.edu_ (mailto:rhasen at law.uci.edu) 
_http://law.uci.edu/faculty/page1_r_hasen.html_ 
(http://law.uci.edu/faculty/page1_r_hasen.html) 
_http://electionlawblog.org_ (http://electionlawblog.org/) 



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