The First Amendment does not say a single thing about the "rights of
citizens." Jim Bopp
In a message dated 1/19/2011 5:05:36 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
faskin@kinoy.rutgers.edu writes:
I agree
that the first Amendment prohibits the government from
interfering with the
inherent rights of citizens. I just don't consider
corporations "citizens."
If they were they could vote. FRANK
Prof. Frank
Askin
Distinguished Professor of Law and
Director
Constitutional Litigation Clinic
Rutgers Law
School/Newark
(973) 353-5687>>> "Bill Maurer"
<wmaurer@ij.org> 1/19/2011 4:48 PM >>>
But "The People" are
not individuals either--"The People" sounds like
a
collective. If
it's only "The People" who have rights, then
individuals
do not.
And what if "The People" decide to incorporate? Or does the
fact that
only certain portions of "The People" go ahead and
incorporate
deprive
them collectively as their status as individuals (who are not
"The People"
collectively but who can vote), and as "The People" as
well, because they
are acting collectively but cannot vote?
I kid, of
course. You and I have a fundamental difference on
the
First
Amendment. As I understand your view, you appear to view
the First
Amendment as a positive grant of rights. If a positive
grant is not
there, then the government may constrain the speech of anyone
not
specifically listed. Thus, Citizens United is wrong. I view
the
First
Amendment as a restriction on the power of government to
interfere
with
inherent rights of citizens, which were "endowed by their
Creator,"
who
may decide to exercise those rights in any way--or through
any legal
entity or association--they prefer. Thus, Citizens United
is right.
-----Original Message-----
From: Frank
Askin [mailto:faskin@kinoy.rutgers.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2011
1:32 PM
To: Sean Parnell; Bill Maurer; election-law@mailman.lls.edu
Subject: RE: [EL] 12 Months After: The Effect of Citizens
United
Who do you think "We the People" are? Or do you think it
really means
We the Corporations? FRANK
Prof. Frank
Askin
Distinguished Professor of Law and
Director
Constitutional Litigation Clinic
Rutgers Law
School/Newark
(973) 353-5687>>> "Bill Maurer"
<wmaurer@ij.org> 1/19/2011 4:27 PM >>>
But individuals are
also not given special status in the First
Amendment
and the First
Amendment says nothing about individuals one way or
the
other.
-----Original Message-----
From: Frank Askin
[mailto:faskin@kinoy.rutgers.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2011 1:25
PM
To: Sean Parnell; Bill Maurer; election-law@mailman.lls.edu
Subject:
Re: [EL] 12 Months After: The Effect of Citizens United
Press
corporations are no more "people" than other corporations, but
their
special status is recognized in the First Amendment, which says
nothing
about not abridging the freedom of other corporations to speak
OR try to
influence the electoral process.. FRANK
Prof. Frank
Askin
Distinguished Professor of Law and
Director
Constitutional Litigation Clinic
Rutgers Law
School/Newark
(973) 353-5687>>> "Bill Maurer"
<wmaurer@ij.org> 1/19/2011 3:58 PM >>>
What about for-profit
press corporations? Are they people? And what
is
the
"press"? Will we have a commission that determines whether
an
association of people is sufficiently "press-y" to qualify
for
personhood? And is the ability to vote the standard by
which
personhood
is determined? The New York Times does not vote
and it influences
election outcomes.
________________________________
From:
election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu
[mailto:election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu] On Behalf Of
Sean
Parnell
Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2011 9:07 AM
To:
election-law@mailman.lls.edu
Subject: Re: [EL] 12 Months After: The Effect
of Citizens United
Ran across the following in the Public
Citizen report:
"Corporations are not people. They do not vote,
and they should not be
able to influence
election outcomes. It is
time to end the debate about the freedom of
speech of
for-profit
corporations by amending the Constitution to make clear
that
for-profit
corporations do
not have the same First Amendment
rights as people and the press."
p.
27-28
Wondering how "Corporations are not people" apparently
morphs into
'For-profit corporations are not people.' Are nonprofit
corporations
people then? And of course there's the union issue, most of
which
aren't
incorporated - are unions people? So
confusing...
Sean Parnell
President
Center for
Competitive Politics
http://www.campaignfreedom.org
http://www.twitter.com/seanparnellccp
124 S. West Street,
#201
Alexandria, VA 22310
(703) 894-6800
phone
(703) 894-6813 direct
(703) 894-6811
fax
From: election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu
[mailto:election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu] On Behalf Of
Craig
Holman
Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2011 11:18 AM
To:
election-law@mailman.lls.edu
Subject: [EL] 12 Months After: The Effect of
Citizens United
Colleagues:
Public Citizen has just
released a report documenting the aftermath of
the Citizens United decision
on its one year anniversary --
Excerpted press release and link to the
report follows:
A year has passed since the U.S. Supreme Court's
decision in Citizens
United v. Federal Election Commission, and the damage
is clear,
according to a new Public Citizen report.
The
tally:
* Outside groups are making record expenditures (more than four
times
as
much spent in the 2010 midterm election cycle as in the last
midterm
election cycle in 2006);
* Congressional staffs and
lawmakers are intimidated by corporate
lobbyists like never
before;
* Laws designed to protect the political system from the
corrupting
influence of money have been rendered dead in 24 states;
and
* Power has shifted in dozens of congressional seats in races won
with
the help of undisclosed outside money.
The 76-page
report, "12 Months After: The Effects of Citizens United
on
Elections
and the Integrity of the Legislative Process," reveals a
year's worth of
damage done by the court's decision is available
at:
http://www.citizen.org/12-months-after.
Craig
Holman, Ph.D.
Government Affairs Lobbyist
Public
Citizen
215 Pennsylvania Avenue NE
Washington, D.C.
20003
TEL: (202) 454-5182
CEL: (202) 905-7413
FAX: (202)
547-7392
Holman@aol.com
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