Subject: Some Initial Thoughts on the Vermont Campaign Finance Decision |
From: Rick Hasen |
Date: 6/26/2006, 9:10 AM |
To: election-law |
The decision in Randall v. Sorrell today is a monumental one, because it marks the first time that the two new Justices have considered a campaign finance case. Though the decision is a defeat for Vermont and for those who supported Vermont's campaign finance laws, this is about the best decision that (realistic) supporters of campaign finance regulation could have hoped for from the new Roberts Court. The language about the rights of political parties may also turn out to be very important, suggesting laws regulating campaign financing must give them a special role in fundraising. In sum, this is something of a split decision for those who support and oppose campaign finance regulation.
I would say these are the headlines of the opinion in a nutshell:
1.Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito agree that some
campaign contribution limits are consistent with the First Amendment.
This was a huge question for those of us in the field. Justice Breyer
wrote a plurality decision joined by these two Justices, which, on the
question of contribution limits, distinguishes rather than
overrules recent cases such as McConnell and Shrink Missouri
upholding campaign contribution limits. Now it might be that Chief
Justice Roberts and Justice Alito will evolve toward the
Scalia-Thomas-Kennedy position that all (or most, in the case of
Kennedy) contribution limits violate the First Amendment. But for now,
you have these three Justices, along with dissenting Justices Ginsburg,
Souter, and Stevens, who believe that a great many of the country's
campaign contribution laws are constitutional. This is a very big deal
and good news for those of us who support such limits. Justice Kennedy
would have struck the limits down as well, though one senses that if he
wrote the majority opinion, it would have called into question many
more state and local (not to mention federal) campaign contribution
laws.
2. Battles will rage across the country over the constitutionality
of particular contribution limit laws.
Justice Breyer has set out a two part test to judge when a campaign
contribution limit is too low, and in typical Supreme Court fashion,
the second part of the test has five parts. This plurality opinion
(because it is narrower than the position taken by the three
dissenters) will set out the controlling test. Under the first part of
the test, courts will look for "danger signs" that a contribution limit
is so low as to stifle electoral competition. If the limit is too low,
there are five factors that led the plurality to conclude the Vermont
limits were too low:
-- Rick Hasen William H. Hannon Distinguished Professor of Law Loyola Law School 919 Albany Street Los Angeles, CA 90015-1211 (213)736-1466 - voice (213)380-3769 - fax rick.hasen@lls.edu http://www.lls.edu/academics/faculty/hasen.html http://electionlawblog.org