[EL] Wisconsin John Doe decision

Greg P. Magarian gpmagarian at wulaw.wustl.edu
Wed May 7 07:24:39 PDT 2014


Hi everyone. I'm a law professor at Wash. U. in St. Louis. I primarily write and teach about First Amendment speech issues. I've dabbled in religion law and election law. Because of the dabbling, and because of the obvious doctrinal grounding in the First Amendment, I'm very interested in campaign finance. Normatively I identify quite strongly and consistently with the "reform camp."  At the same time, I have serious concerns about the workability of various campaign finance rules. I'm also fortunate to have a colleague known to most of you, Bruce LaPierre, who keeps me fairly honest.

When I asked Rick for the privilege of membership in this list, I decided not to post, because (a) I know less election law doctrine than most people here, and (b) I was worried about getting drawn into acrimonious fights. I've learned a lot by following this list, and I've often admired how people with sharp disagreements have engaged with one another.

Sent from my iPhone

On May 7, 2014, at 8:53 AM, "Smith, Brad" <BSmith at law.capital.edu<mailto:BSmith at law.capital.edu>> wrote:

This is an extremely important ruling. Under the theory advanced by the state, a great many of the individuals on this list, and the organizations with which many are affiliated, including many "reform" organizations, could be subjected to the same type of investigations that were underway in Wisconsin. People in politics know each other and work together on projects. Issues can and do affect campaigns for office. The decision does not dramatically alter federal law, but it makes clear that sweeping allegations of "coordination," and ensuing investigations, cannot be used as a substitute for the outright suppression of speech that many wish were in the law.

Coordination allegations are easily made. We know, for example, that Craig Holman is up on the Hill all the time, and we know some of the members with whom he speaks; we know of Trevor Potter's tight relationship with certain members of the Keating 5; we know that Fred Wertheimer and Norm Ornstein work closely with various members. We know that the groups with which they are affiliated trumpet issues of importance to these members, often favorably quote these members, sometimes give them awards at big dinners in New York City that raise hundreds of thousands for the Brennan Center, which can put those funds back into promoting these same issues and the candidates affiliated with them. A knows B who knows C who knows D, and they are all talking about X. Voila! Coordination! If, as most in the reform camp argue, there need be no election advocacy to bring an allegedly coordinated communication within the regulatory purview of the law, than the routine communications by all these groups could easily be deemed "coordinated." Fortunately, there has generally been some self-restraint in pushing coordination allegations, perhaps because all involved realize that under the expansive theories of "coordination" some advocate, a huge swath of routine and highly valuable political activity would suddenly be illegal.

But allegations are made at times, and once made, coordination investigations are among the most intrusive the government can undertake. By definition, they involve pawing through organizational records, learning who meets with whom, what they talk about, how officeholders and advocacy groups coordinate messages and work to pass legislation. They involve numerous depositions and demands for countless documents. Conducting these investigations under criminal law - and in secret, no less - merely makes the problem greater. Jim Bopp, Heidi Abegg and others have written about this at length in numerous law review pieces. Steve Hoersting and I addressed the problem in an Election Law Journal article, "A Toothless Anaconda," and also in my Statement of Reasons in FEC MUR 4626, available here: http://www.fec.gov/members/former_members/smith/smithreason6.htm. As I note in the outset to that SOR,

"Despite the fact that the Commission has now found no violations in this case, I strongly suspect that the original complainant, the Democratic National Committee, considers its complaint to have been a success.  The complaint undoubtedly forced their political opponents to spend hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars in legal fees, and to devote countless hours of staff, candidate, and executive time to responding to discovery and handling legal matters.  Despite our finding that their activities were not coordinated and so did not violate the Act, I strongly suspect that the huge costs imposed by the investigation will discourage similar participation by these and other groups in the future."

There are very few federal court decisions on coordination, but they have generally taken a similar hard line against the government. See FEC v. Christian Coalition, 52 F. Supp.2d 45 (D.D.C. 1999). So in that sense, the Wisconsin decision does not make new law. But it does emphasize good law in an area that has been largely unsupervised by the courts.

A potentially unique element is that Wisconsin substantive law requires "express advocacy" even for "coordinated communications." This clearly shows the wisdom of having some type of "content standard" for determining if something is "coordinated"  as a threshold barrier to exactly this type of intrusive investigation. As I point in MUR 4626 quoted above, absent a "content" threshold, coordination allegations are very easy to make and the process is itself the punishment, as we saw both in MUR 4626 and in this very case in Wisconsin. The key paragraph to understanding yesterday's ruling is the paragraph beginning at the bottom of page 19,  and footnote 7 which immediately precedes this paragraph. I'll quote it here in it's entirety,:

"fn.7
 Moreover, if Wisconsin could regulate issue advocacy ¡ª coordinated or otherwise ¡ª it
would open the door to a trial on every ad ¨Don the theory that the speaker actually intended to affect
an election, no matter how compelling the indications that the ad concerned a pending legislative or
policy issue. No reasonable speaker would choose to run an ad . . . if its only defense to a criminal
prosecution would be that its motives were pure.¡¬ WRTL at 468.

TEXT: "Defendants¡® attempt to construe the term ¨Dpolitical purposes¡¬ to reach issue
advocacy would mean transforming issue advocacy into express advocacy by
interpretative legerdemain and not by any analysis as to why it would rise to the level
of quid pro quo corruption. As the defendants argue, the Club would become a
¨Dsubcommittee¡¬ of a campaign committee simply because it coordinated therewith.
Wis. Stat. ¡ì 11.10(4). If correct, this means that any individual or group engaging in
any kind of coordination with a candidate or campaign would risk forfeiting their right
 to engage in political speech. The legislative tail would wag the constitutional dog.8

fn8
 For example, if the Boy Scouts coordinated a charitable fundraiser with a candidate for
office, the Boy Scouts would become a campaign subcommittee subject to the requirements and
limitations of Wisconsin campaign-finance laws, exposing them to civil and criminal penalties for
touting the candidate¡®s support. See, e.g, Clifton v. Fed. Election Comm¡¯n, 114 F.3d 1309, 1314 (1st
Cir. 1997) (¨Dit is beyond reasonable belief that, to prevent corruption or illicit coordination, the
government could prohibit voluntary discussions between citizens and their legislators and candidates
on public issues¡¬). Similarly, if a 501(c)(4) organization like the Club coordinated a speech or
fundraising dinner with a Wisconsin political candidate, all of its subsequent contributions and
expenditures would be attributable to that candidate¡®s committee and subject to the limitations of
Wisconsin law. This would preclude the organization from making any independent expenditures
after initially engaging in coordinated issue advocacy. Wis. Stat.¡ì¡ì 11.05(6), 11.16(1)(a). It would
also bar the organization from accepting corporate contributions which could then, in turn, be used for
independent expenditures. ¡ì 11.38."

So this is a very important decision - a ruling the other way would have really led to some nasty politics, because, I've noted, it is very easy to file these complaints, if there is no content standard, and believe me, we would have started to see them being filed all over. I have a long list of organizations and their activities and contacts that would be ripe for coordination complaints under the type of theory advanced here by the State of Wisconsin.




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

http://law.capital.edu/faculty/bios/bsmith.aspx

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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 Confessore, Nicholas [nconfess at nytimes.com<mailto:nconfess at nytimes.com>]
Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2014 8:35 AM
To: Law-election at department-lists.uci.edu<mailto:Law-election at department-lists.uci.edu>
Subject: [EL] Wisconsin John Doe decision

Hello everyone,
Curious to hear folks' opinion on the district judge's ruling in the Wisconsin case. Apart from one's views on the politics of the investigation, does this ruling change push federal law in a new direction on the question of coordination rules? Or is it relatively narrow?
best regards,
Nick Confessore

--
Nicholas Confessore
The New York Times
W (212) 556-5911
C  (917) 456 2446
gchat: @nconfessore
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