[EL] Check out TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow unlimited political c...

JBoppjr at aol.com JBoppjr at aol.com
Sat Jan 19 07:12:02 PST 2013


Because public disclosure of a person's political  activity and/or 
political viewpoints can lead to harassment and that, as a  result, lack of 
anonymity chills speech, the government needs a compelling  justification to require 
disclosure.  I agree that one of those instances  where disclosure is 
justified is contributions to candidates. Reformers  just dispute the premise 
that there is any harassment, despite enormous evidence  to the contrary, and 
that there is any value in anonymity. They hate what  the Supreme Court let 
Mrs. McIntyre do. But I commend Justice  Brennan's opinion in McIntyre for 
those who need a compelling  explanation why anonymity promotes political 
speech.
 
    I agree also that it is true that anonymous speech  prevents opponents 
from engaging in ad hominim attacks on the speaker -- see  below "without 
knowing speaker identity, we can not evaluate if the true  speaker contradicts 
themselves in their anonymous postings, whether the speaker  has flip 
flopped recently, and so on." -- so that the opponents just have to  deal with 
the arguments themselves, but this is why the Federalist Papers were  
published anonymously. And dealing with arguments without ad hominim  attacks on the 
speaker should be preferable to most. 
 
    But of course this thread is an example of just  this kind of attack on 
the speaker -- is Jim hypercritical for agreeing that  disclosure of 
candidate contributions is ok? -- rather then dealing with the  point of the 
original post that some reformers are finally understanding that  raising or 
eliminating contribution limits is the road to more accountability  and 
transparency.
 
    And finally, I never post anonymously, so it  is easy to determine that 
I never said "that real rights are only exercisable  anonymously." Nor 
would I since I understand the distinctions that reformers  don't seem to.  Jim 
Bopp    
 
 
In a message dated 1/19/2013 9:38:13 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
lehto.paul at gmail.com writes:


On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 8:46 PM, Margaret Groarke 
<_margaret.groarke at manhattan.edu_ (mailto:margaret.groarke at manhattan.edu) > wrote:

If I am mistaken, I apologize. Who was the person that  repeatedly made 
this claim [that real rights are only exercisable  anonymously], and referenced 
the fact that the Federalists wrote their  essays anonymously? Was it 
someone else? Perhaps my memory is poor -- a  search of the list archive would 
reveal my error. 

I recall who said these things and many broad statements in favor of  
speech anonymity rights by Jim Bopp. I checked my archives and  confirmed this.  
But now I'm having a bit of a crisis of conscience in  terms of whether I 
will offend anyone on the list by stating more  definitively, and "outing" via 
quotation, who said what.  There's a kind  of murky anonymity of authorship 
right now, and no speaker/author is choosing  to come forward into this 
quasi-public debate. 

Of course, there's an  easy argument for waiver of any such concern, given 
that all past messages to  this list are "signed" by email addresses and 
names that are believed  real.  But then, a person signing a petition would 
seem to waive, even  more strongly, any reasonable expectation of privacy under 
present law, but  this has not stopped emergency cert petitions and many 
strongly worded claims  to the contrary, arguing that petitioner signers 
should be secret or exempt  from disclosure.

So, would it be right and OK for me to answer the  questions above 
regarding the identity of the speakers who have made the  statements being 
discussed?  Isn't speaker identity  irrelevant?   ;) 

Of course, I'm being half-facetious with my  questions here, but they do 
seem at least half-fair if not more.  Speaker  identity is very important for 
various reasons.  For starters, without  knowing speaker identity, we can 
not evaluate if the true speaker contradicts  themselves in their anonymous 
postings, whether the speaker has flip flopped  recently, and so on.  

Anonymous postings are more like drive by  rhetorical shootings.  Anonymous 
people harass and flame other people  more than people with real names, as 
internet experience shows. Without  knowing identity, no rules of civility 
can be meaningfully enforced on this  list or elsewhere, because repeat 
offenders simply re-emerge under new  anonymous guises.  I guess I can safely 
quote only myself (given my  present considerations above) so I'll just say 
that "Anonymity creates more  harassment than it prevents."

Paul Lehto, J.D. 






On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 8:10 PM, Joe La Rue <_joseph.e.larue at gmail.com_ 
(mailto:joseph.e.larue at gmail.com) > wrote:

I'm really curious as to when  Jim would have ever said that "the only 
rights guaranteed were those one  could exercise anonymously." That's a 
remarkable quote, Ms. Groarke,  and I'd be most interested in seeing. With all due 
respect, I don't  believe Jim ever said any such thing. And I challenge you 
to produce  it. 
 
What I find amazing is that Jim Bopp, along with Brad Smith, has  probably 
been quoted publicly more than anybody else in the  pro-freedom camp. He's 
had exposes done on him. He's had friendly  interviews and hostile 
interviews. His views on disclosure, along with  many other topics, are very much 
public knowledge. In spite of all that,  his opponents take delight in 
misconstruing his views in order to  set up straw man arguments to attack.
 
The strange views ascribed to Jim today bear no resemblance to  what the 
man has actually said. But I forgot: that's one of the rules  for radicals, 
isn't it? Demonize your opponents? 
 

Joe
___________________
Joseph E. La Rue

cell: _480.272.2715_ (tel:480.272.2715)  
email: _joseph.e.larue at gmail.com_ (mailto:joseph.e.larue at gmail.com) 


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On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 5:09 PM, Margaret Groarke  
<_margaret.groarke at manhattan.edu_ (mailto:margaret.groarke at manhattan.edu) > wrote:


When I joined this list, Mr. Bopp, the thing I found most odd was  your 
extremely frequent statement that the only rights guaranteed were  those one 
could exercise anonymously -- and thus the necessity of  secrecy for political 
contributions. 


Perhaps Professor McDonald, like me, gained our understanding of  your 
views from your frequent statement of them on this  list.

Sent from my iPhone
 
 

On Jan 17, 2013, at 5:44 PM, "_JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) " 
<_JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) > wrote:




I have never talked to Prof McDonald so it is  surprising that he is so 
certain about what I think.
 
    For those interested in my views, I have  been quoted repeatedly in the 
press that I agree with disclosure  for political actors, candidate, pacs 
and political parties (in the  case of political parties when they engage in 
election related speech)  at a level where the disclosure provides 
meaningful information to  voters, including their donors.  
 
    Further, I am in favor of disclosure of  speech that is unambiguously 
campaign related, such as express  advocacy, again at a level where the 
disclosure provides meaningful  information to voters.  This includes 
contributors where they  give money to a multipurpose group for that purpose.
 
    I have not seen any studies that  demonstrate at what level of 
contribution or spending triggers public  interest but I am certain it is more than 
$200.
 
    Finally, there are two disclosure  regimes, a one-time event driven 
report and comprehensive reporting of  all a groups contributions and 
expenditures.  Comprehensive  disclosure is only warranted for political actors and 
groups whose  major purpose is the election or nomination of candidates.   
Otherwise, for multipurpose groups, a one-time event driven report,  like the 
one the Court in Citizens United  upheld, suffices.
 
    And while I was Co-Chairman of the  Subcommittee on Restoring 
Constitutional Government of the RNC  Platform Committee, I did not write the whole 
paragraph on campaign  finance.  I did write this:  
 
> "As a result, we support
> repeal of the  remaining sections of McCain-
> Feingold, support either raising  or repealing contribution
> limits, and oppose passage of the  DISCLOSE Act
> or any similar legislation designed to vitiate  the
> Supreme Court's recent decisions protecting  political
> speech in Wisconsin Right to Life v. Federal  Election
> Commission and Citizens United v. Federal  Election
> Commission."
 
 
Thanks for your interest in my views,  Prof McDonald.  I hope this 
clarifies them for you.  Jim  Bopp
 
In a message dated 1/17/2013 5:10:15 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
_BSmith at law.capital.edu_ (mailto:BSmith at law.capital.edu)  writes:

Whatever.

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 17,  2013, at 2:23 PM, "Michael McDonald" <_mmcdon at gmu.edu_ 
(mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) > wrote:

> Here is the  plank of the 2012 Republican Party platform authored by Jim:
>  
> The rights of citizenship do not stop at the ballot
>  box. They include the free speech right to devote one's
>  resources to whatever cause or candidate one supports.
> We  oppose any restrictions or conditions that
> would discourage  Americans from exercising their
> constitutional right to  enter the political fray or limit
> their commitment to their  ideals. As a result, we support
> repeal of the remaining  sections of McCain-
> Feingold, support either raising or  repealing contribution
> limits, and oppose passage of the  DISCLOSE Act
> or any similar legislation designed to vitiate  the
> Supreme Court's recent decisions protecting  political
> speech in Wisconsin Right to Life v. Federal  Election
> Commission and Citizens United v. Federal  Election
> Commission. (p.12)
> 
> _http://www.gop.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012GOPPlatform.pdf_ 
(http://www.gop.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012GOPPlatform.pdf) 
>  
> The phrase "any restrictions or conditions" would clearly  preclude
> disclosure, since disclosure is a  condition.
> 
> I am not calling out Jim as a hypocrite.  I do not believe that Jim 
supports
> disclosure. While Joe and  Brad say that Jim believes disclosure is
> acceptable at some  level, his stance against any disclosure is there in 
the
>  Republican Party platform. Perhaps I am wrong, but that is my prior  
belief,
> so I can't be calling Jim a hypocrite as Brad  claims. What I am calling 
Jim
> out for is providing only half  the story. It would be significant if Jim
> publicly states he  is willing to accept disclosure in exchange for 
unlimited
>  contribution limits, particularly whatever limits are to be found in  
this
> Florida proposal or disclosure at a general threshold  level.
> 
> ============
> Dr. Michael P.  McDonald
> Associate Professor
> George Mason  University
> 4400 University Drive - 3F4
> Fairfax, VA  22030-4444
> 
> _703-993-4191_ (tel:703-993-4191)  (office)
> e-mail:   _mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu)            
> web:     _http://elections.gmu.edu_ (http://elections.gmu.edu/) 
> twitter:  @ElectProject     
> 
> 
>  -----Original Message-----
> 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_ 
(mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu) ]  On Behalf Of Smith,
> Brad
> Sent: Thursday, January 17,  2013 1:10 PM
> To: _law-election at uci.edu_ (mailto:law-election at uci.edu) 
> Subject: Re: [EL]  Check out TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow 
unlimited
>  political contributi
> 
> Michael here seems to be  conflating two issues. One is disclosure of
> contributions to  candidates and parties. Jim's post, apparently endorsing
> the  initiative in Florida, suggests that he is open to that, and indeed  
that
> is the position of Senator McConnell and pretty much  all people in the
> pro-freedom camp. There is nothing new  here except the willingness of
> reformers to actually  consider that possibility. 
> 
> The issue here has  indeed been, if anything, one of the level for 
reporting.
>  What I personally would agree to would depend on the nature of the  full
> compromise. At a minimum, I tend to think that  reporting shouldn't be
> required for anything under $750,  which is roughly the current $200 
federal
> limit adjusted for  inflation. I'd like it to be higher, but I could
> compromise  on a lower number if the deal was worth it. There. Now,  
Michael,
> what's your threshold? $1? $25? What's your bottom  line negotiating
> position? Does $750 work for you? It might,  by the way, be noted that the
> pro-freedom side has offered  some exchange here for literally decades, 
but
> has always  been rebuffed, both rhetorically and in votes in Congress.  So
> this is real progress in Florida.
> 
>  Meanwhile, the issue in recent years has not been disclosure  and
> contributions to campaigns so much as the compelled  disclosure of 
membership
> in or support for organizations  that do not have political activity as a
> primary purpose.  Here, the pro-regulatory camp offers no compromise. They
>  simply want more disclosure. They offer nothing in return, except  that
> which, through their own intransigence, they already  lost in court. No
> disclosure laws have been weakened since  Citizen United and 
_SpeechNow.org_ (http://speechnow.org/) .
> Reformers could probably  have had a reasonable legislative compromise but
> they  rejected any talk of it - even $1 in corporate or union  independent
> expenditures was illegal, and had to stay that  way. Note that Michael has
> confused this issue with the  issue above in some of the quotes he has 
pulled
> from past  posts. Furthermore, it is not illogical to raise examples of
>  harassment even if one would be willing to accept such risks - the  
point may
> simply be to point out to the harassme   nt-deniers that it does take 
place,
> is a real costs, and  should lead us to undertake a serious cost/benefit
>  analysis.
> 
> We have, at least at the Center for  Competitive Politics, offered some 
ideas
> for addressing the  concerns of the pro-regulation lobby in a reasonable
>  fashion, but I've seen no interest in discussing any of them from  the
> regulators. 
> 
> In any case, there is no  reason for Michael's sarcasm and thinly veiled
> accusations  of hypocrisy.
> 
> Bradley A. Smith
> Josiah H.  Blackmore II/Shirley M. Nault
>   Professor of  Law
> Capital University Law School
> 303 E. Broad  St.
> Columbus, OH 43215
> _614.236.6317_ (tel:614.236.6317) 
> 
> _http://law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.aspx_ 
(http://law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.aspx) 
>  
> ________________________________________
> From: _law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu_ 
(mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu) 
>  [_law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu_ 
(mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu) ] on  behalf of Michael
> McDonald [_mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) ]
> Sent: Thursday, January  17, 2013 12:38 PM
> To: _law-election at uci.edu_ (mailto:law-election at uci.edu) 
> Subject: Re: [EL]  Check out TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow 
unlimited
>  political contributi
> 
> Please, no $25 hypothetical  argument against small donations since 
whatever
> threshold is  actually proposed can be attacked for being too low by  
raising
> the hypothetical bar. State the acceptable  threshold. Is it $200? Is it 
$5
> million? $1 trillion? Would  you like to index it to inflation? Specifics,
>  please.
> 
> ============
> Dr. Michael P.  McDonald
> Associate Professor
> George Mason  University
> 4400 University Drive - 3F4
> Fairfax, VA  22030-4444
> 
> _703-993-4191_ (tel:703-993-4191)  (office)
> e-mail:   _mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) 
> web:     _http://elections.gmu.edu_ (http://elections.gmu.edu/) 
> twitter:  @ElectProject
> 
> From: Joe La Rue [_mailto:joseph.e.larue at gmail.com_ 
(mailto:joseph.e.larue at gmail.com) ]
> Sent:  Thursday, January 17, 2013 12:25 PM
> To: _mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) 
> Cc: _law-election at uci.edu_ (mailto:law-election at uci.edu) 
> Subject: Re: [EL]  Check out TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow 
unlimited
>  political contributi
> 
> Jim can (and I presume will)  speak for himself. But I can tell you as
> someone who once  worked for him that I never heard Jim say he opposed all
>  disclosure. My perception of Jim is that he opposes disclosure at  levels
> that make no sense and do not actually further the  informational 
interest.
> That was the type of disclosure we  attacked when I worked for him. The
> question for Jim (as it  should be for everyone) is what level of
> contribution makes  sense to be disclosed. Does anybody really have the 
time
> (or  care!) to review disclosures of $25 to a campaign? Does the fact  
that my
> neighbor, who I don't like, gave $25 to a campaign  really make me want to
> vote for the other guy? Or, does the  huge volume of small disclosures 
make
> it more difficult for  me to figure out who the big-money funders of
> campaigns (or  independent expenditures) are?
> 
> 
> Joe
>  ___________________
> Joseph E. La Rue
> cell: _480.272.2715_ (tel:480.272.2715) 
> email: _joseph.e.larue at gmail.com_ (mailto:joseph.e.larue at gmail.com) 
> 
> 
>  CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:  This e-mail message, including any  
attachments, is
> for the sole use of the intended  recipient(s) and may contain 
confidential
> and privileged  information or otherwise be protected by law. Any
>  unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited.  If 
you
> are not the intended recipient, please contact the  sender by reply e-mail
> and destroy all copies of the  original message.
> 
> On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 10:13 AM,  Michael McDonald <_mmcdon at gmu.edu_ 
(mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) >  wrote:
> No, I was not implying that Jim is hypocritical since  I thought it was
> common knowledge that Jim believes  disclosure leads to harassment and 
worse.
> Through the power  of e-mail archives, we have such gems from Jim in the 
last
>  election as:
> 
> 7/27/12 "Another Romney supporter  harassed after Obama campaign posts a
> negative story about  him on their campaign web site."
> 
> And
>  
> 7/25/12 "Romney donor bashed by Obama campaign now target  of two federal
> audits | Fox News"
> 
> After  debating disclosure over the past year, I am truly surprised that  
I
> completely misunderstood Jim's position on disclosure.  Disclosure is
> okay(!); the issue is just setting the right  contribution amount for
> disclosure. But, I'm struggling to  understand what level is the right 
amount
> since the second  story that Jim graced us with is about Frank 
Vandersloot,
>  whose company gave $1 million to a Romney SuperPAC and claimed to  have
> raised between $2 to $5 million for the Romney campaign  as a national
> finance co-chair.
> 
> _http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0512/76899.html_ 
(http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0512/76899.html) 
>  
> What I was thought I was doing was poking Jim for approving  only half of 
the
> reform package and conveniently ignoring  the part he doesn't agree with. 
A
> reform trajectory on  campaign finance has been for reformers to be 
willing
> to  give in on contribution limits if there would be disclosure, a deal  
that
> many conservatives agreed to at the time. Once the  contribution limits 
were
> gone, the attack on disclosure  commenced. But I'll play Brad's game: The
> Tallahassee  newspaper story does not say what contribution limit would  
be
> subjected to disclosure...perhaps Brad and Jim would be  willing to state 
for
> posterity what disclosure threshold  they would be willing to accept in
> exchange for unlimited  contribution limits.
> 
> ============
> Dr.  Michael P. McDonald
> Associate Professor
> George Mason  University
> 4400 University Drive - 3F4
> Fairfax, VA  22030-4444
> 
> _703-993-4191_ (tel:703-993-4191)  (office)
> e-mail:   _mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) 
> web:     _http://elections.gmu.edu_ (http://elections.gmu.edu/) 
> twitter:  @ElectProject
> 
> -----Original Message-----
>  From: Smith, Brad [_mailto:BSmith at law.capital.edu_ 
(mailto:BSmith at law.capital.edu) ]
> Sent:  Thursday, January 17, 2013 10:03 AM
> To: _mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) ; _law-election at uci.edu_ 
(mailto:law-election at uci.edu) 
> Subject: RE: [EL]  Check out TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow 
unlimited
>  political contributi
> 
> This is a point, not a  question. Michael seems to imply, rather unsubtly,
> that Jim  is being hypocritical here. Probably I should let Jim speak  for
> himself, but I have never understood Jim to oppose the  disclosure of
> campaign contributions to candidates and  parties.
> 
> I think there is a growing majority of  those who seriously study the 
issue
> (i.e. academics, not the  activists) that disclosure thresholds should be 
set
> higher  than they have been, but that's another issue. I've not known Jim 
 to
> oppose disclosure of contributions to candidates, as  Michael suggests he
> does.
> 
> Bradley A.  Smith
> Josiah H. Blackmore II/Shirley M.  Nault
>   Professor of Law
> Capital  University Law School
> 303 E. Broad St.
> Columbus, OH  43215
> _614.236.6317_ (tel:614.236.6317) 
> _http://law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.aspx_ 
(http://law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.aspx) 
>  
> ________________________________________
> From: _law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu_ 
(mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu) 
>  [_law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu_ 
(mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu) ] on  behalf of Michael
> McDonald [_mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) ]
> Sent: Thursday, January  17, 2013 9:23 AM
> To: _law-election at uci.edu_ (mailto:law-election at uci.edu) 
> Subject: Re: [EL]  Check out TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow
>  unlimited       political contributi
>  
> Jim, I take it your positive comment means you also approve  of their call
> unlimited contribution limits if there is  within 24-hour on-line public
> disclosure.
> 
>  ============
> Dr. Michael P. McDonald
> Associate  Professor
> George Mason University
> 4400 University  Drive - 3F4
> Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
> 
> _703-993-4191_ (tel:703-993-4191)  (office)
> e-mail:   _mmcdon at gmu.edu_ (mailto:mmcdon at gmu.edu) 
> web:     _http://elections.gmu.edu_ (http://elections.gmu.edu/) 
> twitter:  @ElectProject
> 
> 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_ 
(mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu) ]  On Behalf Of
> _JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) 
> Sent: Thursday, January  17, 2013 7:08 AM
> To: _rhasen at law.uci.edu_ (mailto:rhasen at law.uci.edu) ; 
_law-election at uci.edu_ (mailto:law-election at uci.edu) 
> Subject: [EL] Check  out TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow unlimited
> political  contributi
> 
> Another state facing the reality that  only by eliminating candidate
> contribution limits can there  be real accountability and transparency.
> Interestingly, this  time proposed by campaign finance reformers.  Jim 
Bopp
>  
> Click here: TALLAHASSEE: Support mounts to allow unlimited  political
> contributions in Florida - Florida - _MiamiHerald.com_ 
(http://miamiherald.com/) #stor
> 
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Margaret Groarke  
Director, Core  Curriculum
Associate Professor,  Government





Riverdale, NY 10471
Phone: _718-862-7943_ (tel:718-862-7943) 
Fax: _718-862-8044_ (tel:718-862-8044) 
_margaret.groarke at manhattan.edu_ (mailto:name.name at manhattan.edu) 
_www.manhattan.edu_ (http://www.manhattan.edu/) 



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-- 
Paul R Lehto, J.D.
P.O. Box 1 
Ishpeming, MI   49849 
_lehto.paul at gmail.com_ (mailto:lehto.paul at gmail.com) 
906-204-4965  (cell)






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