[EL] Why campaign spending is protected - in action

Schultz, David A. dschultz at hamline.edu
Sun Oct 11 11:30:35 PDT 2015


 Bracketing aside the rather artful and creative reading or interpretation
of the NY Times article which started off this thread, nearly everything
which is wrong in the theory and practice of election law, and more
specifically, the theory and practice (or application) regarding the role
of money in politics is on display in the posts here.  Moreover, reading
many of the posts is like the movie Groundhog Day meets election law–the
same old arguments are made, responded with likely retorts.

Let’s get to the root of the issue.  There really are two questions beyond
all the rhetoric and posturing here.  The first is to ask whether money is
a reasonable proxy for speech or a legitimate tool for the allocation of
political power within a democratic society.    There are some here who
really do argue, even though they deny it, that money is speech and
therefore any restriction on its use is a violation of the First
Amendment.  Period. Many of those arguing that position will deny that this
is their position but if money ain’t speech (pardon my grammar) and that is
not what you are arguing then what is money and what are you really
arguing?  Either the claim is money is speech or money is such a perfect
proxy for speech then restricting it is effectively violating the First
Amendment.

For those arguing for restrictions on the role of money in politics, once
the position is conceded that money implicate some First Amendment issues
(the Buckley position), then one gets into an almost how many angels can
dance on the head of a pin argument regarding how much money or what type
of regulations are permitted before the First Amendment is violated.  Thus,
the first question to me really is about the legitimate role of money in
politics.  Money cannot buy happiness and it certainly should not be able
to buy everything (look at the arguments of Michael Sandel, Michael Walzer,
and Margaret Radin on this).  Money should not be used to allocate kidneys,
and some would find other impermissible uses for money in our society, many
of them involving important legal values such as justice.  Think also of
the false allegations against Planned Parenthood, for example.

The second question is really one from a democratic point of view.  Even if
we accept that money is an acceptable medium for allocating political power
and influence, or that it is an acceptable proxy for speech, it and speech
need to be placed within a broader context of the other values and
institutions within a democratic society.  Simply stated, free speech is an
important requisite for a functioning democracy, but it is not the only
value (look at Robert Dahl, Carole Pateman, Carol Gould, or John Rawls for
a discussion of this).  A democracy must balance many competing values,
speech, equality, transparency, to be viable.  Values, like the meaning of
words, must be understood within a broader context in order to function
property.

Thus, even if money is speech, its role in a democratic society must be
understood and examined within a broader context of other values and
institutions that are also necessary for a democracy to work.  Moreover,
even if money is speech, we must ask how a democracy for one, two, or even
200 families works.  By that, if but only one person in the world existed
she would arguably possess the unlimited right to do whatever she wants.
But from the day societies formed we had to figure out how to live together
and accommodate each other.  A real theory of money in politics must be
situated in a larger theory of democracy which looks at the broader
collection of values and institutions necessary to make a democracy work–a
theory of campaign finance law or election law premised on a theory of
abstract individualism is simply not a theory–it is no better than ad
hocism or simply posturing.

These are the questions or issues I raise in my *Election Law and
Democratic Theory* book.  I do not claim to have the answers but hoped at
least to raise the right questions.    I would hope we can elevate the
level of dialogue on this listserv to engage these broader questions,
including the connections between capitalism and democracy which at the end
of the day, is really part of the debate over whether money is speech and
where it fits into a theory about how American democracy should operate.

On Sun, Oct 11, 2015 at 1:06 PM, Smith, Brad <BSmith at law.capital.edu> wrote:

> Well, let's find out:
>
> Trevor, is now your position that you agree with the rulings in
> SpeechNow.org, Buckley, and Citizens United pertaining to independent
> spending? And, content with those decisions, two of which were directly
> opposed by the Campaign Legal Center which you chair, all you are
> advocating now is government subsidized campaigns?
>
> Or would that be in error?
>
> *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 <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 [
> law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu] on behalf of Trevor Potter
> [tpotter at capdale.com]
> *Sent:* Sunday, October 11, 2015 1:48 PM
> *To:* Scarberry, Mark
> *Cc:* law-election at UCI.edu
> *Subject:* Re: [EL] Why campaign spending is protected - in action
>
> Mark
>
> I completely agree with you that Barrack Obama killed the general election
> Presidential funding system, just as George Bush's failure to participate
> in 2000 ( followed by John Kerry's on the Democratic side in 2004) killed
> the primary matching find system. That history, though, doesn't end the
> discussion-- it starts it, and points to a bipartisan responsibility for
> fixing it.
>
> But I am puzzled by the rest of your response-- I did not say anything
> about restricting anyone's speech ( including but not limited to the news
> media's). I wrote about increasing speech, and bringing the other 99.9 % of
> Americans into the game....
>
> Trevor
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Oct 11, 2015, at 12:44 PM, Scarberry, Mark <
> Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu<mailto:Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu>>
> wrote:
>
> Trevor,
>
> My point was that it is dangerous for government to be permitted to
> regulate spending. It's interesting to note that the first presidential
> candidate to refuse public money so that he could spend unlimited amounts,
> our current President, is the leader of the party that is so outraged by
> the Court's decisions. So who is responsible for the demise of the public
> funding system?
>
> Would you regulate spending by news media, who are thought by many (most?)
> people to be extraordinarily partisan, and to engage in herd-like
> repetition of memes (like this morning's characterization of competition
> for the position of Speaker as Republican "chaos")?
>
> Do you support return of the Fairness Doctrine?
>
> Mark
>
> Mark S. Scarberry
> Pepperdine University School of Law
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On Oct 11, 2015, at 8:28 AM, "Trevor Potter" <tpotter at capdale.com<mailto:
> tpotter at capdale.com>> wrote:
>
> Mark
>
> I am interested in your apparent assumption that the only alternative to a
> infinitesimal tiny percentage of wealthy Americans dominating the process
> by which we choose our President is restrictions on speech.
>
>
> Your post says: "I will say that I don't like rich people having so much
> influence; but the cure -- government regulation of the amount of money
> that can be spent to put forward a message -- may be worse than the
> disease. (Power of all kinds is dangerous, to state the obvious.)"
>
> From 1976 through 1996 we had a functioning system of public funding in
> both primary and general elections for President. It included a " matching"
> component to double the value of small ( up to $250) contributions. This
> system is widely credited with enabling Ronald Reagan to win the 1980
> Republican nomination despite some early primary losses that temporarily
> dried up his fundraising-- the matching funds arrived in time to finance
> wins in later primaries. As a result of the Buckley decision, individuals
> could still spend an unlimited amount of their own money on political
> speech-- but they had to speak themselves rather than give it to SuperPacs
> , which did not exist in today's form because of contribution ( not
> expenditure) limits.
>
> It is interesting that ALL of the discussion about the NY Times article so
> far on the ListServe has related to claims of " silencing" the speech of
> the highlighted 158 families, rather than enhancing the speech of 100
> million or more others. It seems to me that both sides of this debate--
> those concerned about preserving the ability of the ultra wealthy to speak/
> spend? without limit in elections , and those concerned about the dominant
> role such unlimited money provides to a tiny handful of Americans-- should
> agree on the virtues of proposals to enhance the speech of all other
> Americans.
>
> As a start, we have the model of the Presidential public funding system,
> which still exists in law, if not in reality: it could be reformed and
> improved. There are bills pending to do so. We have the model of the NYC
> 6-1 match of small contributions. We have the Minnesota model, where
> political contributors of small sums fill out a simple state form and
> immediately receive direct reimbursement of the contribution from the
> state. We have a proposal from Prof. Richard Painter, formerly of the
> George W. Bush White House, for a $100 " first fruits of their labor"
> taxpayer rebate, provided to all registered voters in the form of a voucher
> divisible and transferable to candidates or political parties-- sort of
> like a Starbucks card.
>
> All of these seem to be possible ways to address the problem-- a problem
> that you describe as " rich people having so much influence" --by expanding
> speech, not restricting it. It would likely produce a flood of new
> political speech-- surely music to the ears of those who say we need more,
> not less political speech. And any of these proposals ( or all, for that
> matter) would strengthen the voice of ordinary Americans in our political
> process-- surely something to be devoutly hoped for and worked for in this
> era of citizen disaffection with our political system, which poll after
> poll shows voters believe has been captured by the very few ( such as those
> in the NY Times article).
>
> Trevor Potter
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> > On Oct 10, 2015, at 9:11 PM, "Scarberry, Mark" <
> Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu<mailto:Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu>>
> wrote:
> >
> >
> > I will say that I don't like rich people having so much influence; but
> the cure -- government regulation of the amount of money that can be spent
> to put forward a message -- may be worse than the disease. (Power of all
> kinds is dangerous, to state the obvious.)
>
>
> <115101111283601206.png>
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-- 
David Schultz, Professor
Editor, Journal of Public Affairs Education (JPAE)
Hamline University
Department of Political Science
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My latest book:  Election Law and Democratic Theory, Ashgate Publishing
http://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9780754675433
FacultyRow SuperProfessor, 2012, 2013, 2014
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