[EL] ALEC Boycott
Mark Schmitt
schmitt.mark at gmail.com
Wed Apr 11 19:31:54 PDT 2012
The problem with that theory is that ALEC isn't a public good.
Corporate giving to ALEC is entirely transactional -- companies give
because corporate sponsors get X number of seats at the annual
conference, and opportunities to weigh in on some of the task forces. If
you don't give, you lose that access. No corporation gives to ALEC
because it "does good work" in the abstract.
To some extent, in demonizing ALEC, the left has exaggerated what it is.
It's just a network for lobbyists connected to a network of legislators.
Mark Schmitt
Senior Fellow, The Roosevelt Institute <http://www.newdeal20.org>
202/246-2350
gchat or Skype: schmitt.mark
@mschmitt9 <https://twitter.com/#%21/mschmitt9>
On 4/11/2012 4:36 PM, Volokh, Eugene wrote:
>
> It's possible, but this might also be a classic public
> goods situation -- even if a corporation thinks ALEC is doing superb
> work, the marginal effect of that corporation's withdrawal of its
> contribution is likely to be fairly modest, so that the corporation
> might stop contributing.
>
> *From:*law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu
> [mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu] *On Behalf Of
> *Mark Schmitt
> *Sent:* Wednesday, April 11, 2012 12:50 PM
> *To:* law-election at department-lists.uci.edu
> *Subject:* Re: [EL] ALEC Boycott
>
>
> It's interesting how quickly some of the corporations have abandoned
> ALEC based on a very small boycott. That suggests to me that the
> corporations didn't feel they were getting much value from their
> involvement with ALEC, or not enough to offset the very small cost of
> a little of bad publicity in a limited community. A boycott effort by
> colorofchange.org is simply not going to prevent a company from doing
> something it really wants to do.
>
> Most likely, no one at a particularly high level of the companies had
> even been involved in the decision to fund ALEC. It was probably a
> decision made by the company's DC office, as a way of ensuring access
> to the ALEC member legislators, rather than an act of political speech.
>
> The effect of the boycott, then is to make the corporation notice what
> its lobbyists are doing and ask whether it makes any sense. That seems
> like a healthy development.
>
>
> On 4/10/2012 12:15 PM, Rick Hasen wrote:
>
> These are all excellent questions, and I'd recommend Economic Boycotts
> as Harassment: The Threat to First Amendment Protected Speech in the
> Aftermath of Doe v. Reed
> <http://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2776&context=llr>
>
>
>
> On 4/10/2012 8:57 AM, Smith, Brad wrote:
>
> "While I've heard some conservatives saying that political activism
> from liberals to get groups to not support ALEC is intimidation, it
> looks to me likeprotected First Amendment boycott-like activity
> <http://electionlawblog.org/?p=31462>."
>
> Of course, it can be both. One question we are going to have to ask
> ourselves is whether we want the meanness of the society that is
> shaping up. While boycotts have some honorable history and can be a
> useful tool, nobody really much wants to live in a boycott world.
> Labor law has long prohibited secondary boycotts, largely for that
> reason.
>
> We'll also have to address more honestly whether the government has a
> compelling interest in forcing people to disclose activity that may
> subject them to boycotts and other forms of harassment. Notice that
> those boycotting and organizing boycotts are not required to disclose
> themselves, neither their identity nor their sources of financing.
>
> Justice Scalia has voiced concern that a world without compulsory
> disclosure would be particularly nasty. I think he's got it backwards
> -- compulsory disclosure, supported primarily because it enables
> opponents of speech to engage in boycotts and other harassment, is
> creating an increasing nasty political environment.
>
> One can certainly see something as protected First Amendment activity
> while recognizing it as intimidation as well. And that raises the
> question as to what interest the government has in enabling intimidation.
>
> /Bradley A. Smith/
>
> /Josiah H. Blackmore II/Shirley M. Nault /
>
> / Designated Professor of Law/
>
> /Capital University Law School/
>
> /303 East Broad Street/
>
> /Columbus, OH 43215/
>
> /(614) 236-6317/
>
> /bsmith at law.capital.edu <mailto:bsmith at law.capital.edu>/
>
> /http://www.law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.asp/
>
>
>
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