"The FEC Is As Good As Dead; The new Republican
commissioners are gutting campaign finance law."
I have written this
Jurisprudence column for Slate. It begins:
Last week, the press was full of retrospectives on the one-year
anniversary of the Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United
v. FEC, which freed corporate cash for use in federal elections.
The Federal Election Commission, the six-member bipartisan body
charged by Congress with administering and enforcing federal
campaign finance laws, marked the anniversary with a 3-3
partisan deadlock over proposed rules to revamp those laws in
light of the Citizens United opinion. Unfortunately, this was
business as usual at the FEC: For the past several years the
three Republican FEC commissioners have blocked enforcement of
much of what remains of federal campaign finance law. As we
enter the 2012 election season, the FEC is as good as dead, and
the already troubling campaign finance world of secret unlimited
donations is bound to get worse.
Posted by Rick Hasen at
08:30
AM
Rahm Emanuel Files Appeal with Illinois Supreme
Court
You can read the 24-page document here.
See also this
Chicago Tribune report, this
report on ballot printing and the possibility of a
write-in campaign, and this
legal analysis from NBC's Pete Williams. My Slate
column on yesterday's 2-1 decision is here.
I'm not sure how quickly the Illinois Supreme Court will move.
But today I'm giving a workshop
at USC, presenting my Lobbying
paper. So I may not be up on any breaking news.
Posted by Rick Hasen at
08:26
AM
Hearing in Important Shelby County Voting Case
I just received this announcement via email, with a heading
noting that Bert Rein will be arguing for Shelby County:
Hearing on Motions for Summary Judgment Scheduled for February
2, 2011 in Shelby County, Alabama v. Holder
Lawsuit Challenges Constitutionality of 2006 Reauthorization of
Sections 4(b) and 5 of the Voting Rights Act
(Washington, DC) On February 2, 2011, arguments will be made in
Shelby County, Alabama v. Holder (Case 1:10-cv-00651).
Date: February 2, 2011
Time: 9:30 AM
Place: U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia;
Courtroom 8.
333 Constitution Ave. NW. Washington, DC.
The case will resolve the important question left unanswered by
the Supreme Court in 2009 in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility
District No. One v. Holder: whether Section 4(b) and Section 5
of the reauthorized (2006) Voting Rights Act remain
constitutional more than 45 years after the statute's original
enactment.
Posted by Rick Hasen at
08:15
AM
"National Voting Rights Groups Put Georgia
Secretary of State Kemp on Notice of Voting Rights Violations"
See this
press release, with the subhead: "Georgia Failing to Offer
Voter Registration to Public Assistance Clients; National Voting
Rights Groups Put Secretary of State Kemp on Notice of Voting
Rights Violations."
Posted by Rick Hasen at
08:10
AM
More Comments on the House Bill to End
Presidential Public Financing
WaPo
(editorial)
LA
Times (editorial)
The White House also released a statement, which is not yet on
the official website:
STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 359 - Termination of Public Financing of Presidential
Campaigns and Party Conventions
(Rep. Cole, R-Oklahoma, and 18 cosponsors)
The Administration strongly opposes House passage of H.R. 359
because it is critical that the Nation's Presidential election
public financing system be fixed rather than dismantled.
The Presidential election public financing system was enacted in
the aftermath of the Watergate scandal to free the Nation’s
elections from the influence of corporations and other wealthy
special interests. Rather than candidates having to rely on
raising large sums of private money in order to run, the system
provides qualifying presidential candidates with the option of
accepting matching funds in the primary and a public grant in
the general election. It has done so at minimal cost to
taxpayers, who fund it by voluntarily choosing to direct $3 of
their Federal taxes to this beneficial system. For many years,
the system worked well and attracted wide participation. In
time, however, it became clear that a system introduced in the
1970s was in need of modernization and repair. Beginning in the
2000 Presidential campaign, candidates began to opt out. Since
that time, promising proposals for the strengthening of the
system have been made.
H.R. 359 would kill the system, not strengthen it. Its effect
would be to expand the power of corporations and special
interests in the Nation’s elections; to force many candidates
into an endless cycle of fundraising at the expense of
engagement with voters on the issues; and to place a premium on
access to large donor or special interest support, narrowing the
field of otherwise worthy candidates. After a year in which the
Citizens United decision rolled back a century of law to allow
corporate interests to spend vast sums in the Nation's elections
and to do so without disclosing the true interests behind them,
this is not the time to further empower the special interests or
to obstruct the work of reform.
Posted by Rick Hasen at
08:03
AM
"The Incumbent's Bane: Citizens United and the
2010 Election"
Brad Smith has written this
WSJ oped.
Posted by Rick Hasen at
07:55
AM
"Congress Cools, Agencies Heat Up for K Street"
Roll Call offers this
report, which begins: "Divided government could well mean
gridlock for Capitol Hill, but it also may bring a windfall for
K Street law firms as the focus shifts from legislating to
regulating."
Posted by Rick Hasen at
07:52
AM
Interesting Letter Filed by Initiative
Proponents on Prop. 8 Standing Question in Cal. Supreme Courtt
See this
Pacific Legal Foundation letter (via SCOTUSBlog).
Posted by Rick Hasen at
08:50
PM
"Report: George W. Bush aides violated Hatch
Act"
Politico offers this
report, which begins: "A long-running federal
investigation has found that White House political aides to
President George W. Bush engaged in widespread violations of a
federal law which limits partisan political activity by
government employees during the 2006 midterm elections." You can
find the 118 page report, by the Office of Special Counsel, here.
Posted by Rick Hasen at
08:20
PM