Court Strikes Down Overall Limits On Campaign Contributions

Oldgamer

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2013
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The Supreme Court ruled in the case of McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission Wednesday, striking down overall limits on campaign contributions.

According to Reuters and the AP, the court left in place a cap on donations to a single candidate.

Below, more from the AP:

The Supreme Court struck down limits Wednesday in federal law on the overall campaign contributions the biggest individual donors may make to candidates, political parties and political action committees.

The justices said in a 5-4 vote that Americans have a right to give the legal maximum to candidates for Congress and president, as well as to parties and PACs, without worrying that they will violate the law when they bump up against a limit on all contributions, set at $123,200 for 2013 and 2014. That includes a separate $48,600 cap on contributions to candidates.

But their decision does not undermine limits on individual contributions to candidates for president or Congress, now $2,600 an election.

Chief Justice John Roberts announced the decision, which split the court's liberal and conservative justices. Roberts said the aggregate limits do not act to prevent corruption, the rationale the court has upheld as justifying contribution limits.

The overall limits "intrude without justification on a citizen's ability to exercise `the most fundamental First Amendment activities,'" Roberts said, quoting from the court's seminal 1976 campaign finance ruling in Buckley v. Valeo.

Justice Clarence Thomas agreed with the outcome of the case, but wrote separately to say that he would have gone further and wiped away all contribution limits.

Justice Stephen Breyer, writing for the liberal dissenters, took the unusual step of reading a summary of his opinion from the bench.

Congress enacted the limits in the wake of Watergate-era abuses to discourage big contributors from trying to buy votes with their donations and to restore public confidence in the campaign finance system.

But in a series of rulings in recent years, the Roberts court has struck down provisions of federal law aimed at limiting the influence of big donors as unconstitutional curbs on free speech rights.

Most notably, in 2010, the court divided 5 to4 in the Citizens United case to free corporations and labor unions to spend as much as they wish on campaign advocacy, as long as it is independent of candidates and their campaigns. That decision did not affect contribution limits to individual candidates, political parties and political action committees.

Republican activist Shaun McCutcheon of Hoover, Ala., the national Republican party and Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky challenged the overall limits on what contributors may give in a two-year federal election cycle. The total is $123,200, including a separate $48,600 cap on contributions to candidates, for 2013 and 2014.

Limits on individual contributions, currently $2,600 per election to candidates for Congress, are not at issue.

Relaxed campaign finance rules have reduced the influence of political parties, McConnell and the GOP argued.

McCutcheon gave the symbolically significant $1,776 to 15 candidates for Congress and wanted to give the same amount to 12 others. But doing so would have put him in violation of the cap.

Nearly 650 donors contributed the maximum amount to candidates, PACs and parties in the last election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

The court did not heed warnings from Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. and advocates of campaign finance limits that donors would be able to funnel large amounts of money to a favored candidate in the absence of the overall limit.

The Republicans also called on the court to abandon its practice over nearly 40 years of evaluating limits on contributions less skeptically than restrictions on spending.

The differing levels of scrutiny have allowed the court to uphold most contribution limits, because of the potential for corruption in large direct donations to candidates. At the same time, the court has found that independent spending does not pose the same risk of corruption and has applied a higher level of scrutiny to laws that seek to limit spending.

If the court were to drop the distinction between contributions and expenditures, even limits on contributions to individual candidates for Congress, currently $2,600 per election, would be threatened, said Fred Wertheimer, a longtime supporter of stringent campaign finance laws.

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Jesus Christ things just got worse. The Roberts court will be remembered as the most corrupt US supreme court in the last 80 years.
 

Newell Steamer

Diamond Member
Jan 27, 2014
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Aaaah, now we truly ARE a free market.

Elections are finally officially for sale!

In your face, Karl Marx!
 

Sonikku

Lifer
Jun 23, 2005
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All it is is free speech. Job creators merely have more speech to give. :)
 

thraashman

Lifer
Apr 10, 2000
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1,576
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And we thought our politicians were corrupt before. Wait until we start seeing the effects of this ruling.

I am getting really tired of the current USSC regularly ruling that the rich can buy greater rights than the rest of us.
 

Attic

Diamond Member
Jan 9, 2010
4,282
2
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Glad they drove over the pretense of the nation being ruled by anything other than money and those who have the most of it. Now if only politicians would have the integrity to help folks by telling them truth on this rather than covering for it while using it to remain in power.


Can't let voters have any real power for change, that would remove wayyyy to much power from the those engaged in the financialization(gutting) of the country who have politicians on strings.
 
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Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
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Am I reading this correctly? They are basically letting people contribute up to the max of $2600 for more candidates?
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
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Glad they drove over the pretense of the nation being ruled by anything other than money and those who have the most of it. Now if only politicians would have the integrity to help folks by telling them truth on this rather than covering for it while using it to remain in power.


Can't let voters have any real power for change, that would remove wayyyy to much power from the those engaged in the financialization(gutting) of the country who have politicians on strings.

So what is stopping voters from having any power over an election?
 

PokerGuy

Lifer
Jul 2, 2005
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Good ruling. For the dimwits (like the OP) that didn't bother to actually read the arguments, the court basically said that there has to be justification in order to restrict someone's first amendment right to spend / give money as they please. Corruption is used as justification to limit contributions to a single candidate, so the court allowed those limits to stand. Nobody was able to demonstrate in any way that aggregate limits on giving in any way prevented corruption. You can't just take away fundamental rights without demonstrable justification.

Looks logical, so of course the left wing loonies will go battie over it.
 

Knowing

Golden Member
Mar 18, 2014
1,522
13
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I wish I could understand where the myth that there was no money in politics before Citizens United v. FEC came from. That decision came down in 2010, so if we look at statistics for donors from 1989-2008...

Feel free to compare the figures from 1989-2014, the old top donors are the new top donors and their favorite parties haven't changed.

tl;dr - much ado about nothing
 

glenn1

Lifer
Sep 6, 2000
25,383
1,013
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Remove all limits and require full transparency. If you want to give $100 million to a candidate then so be it so long as the media and voters can ask the appropriate foll0w-up questions.

Or we can just go with the far simpler solution of just banning polictial advertising on television and other mass media, without which all this money raising has no point.
 

senseamp

Lifer
Feb 5, 2006
35,787
6,197
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This is what you get if you vote for Republican presidents and Senators. They will appoint judges who legalize bribery. And they are just getting started.
 
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Newell Steamer

Diamond Member
Jan 27, 2014
6,894
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Remove all limits and require full transparency. If you want to give $100 million to a candidate then so be it so long as the media and voters can ask the appropriate foll0w-up questions.
And who is going to enforce that? Big government? Or, self regulation?

Or we can just go with the far simpler solution of just banning polictial advertising on television and other mass media, without which all this money raising has no point.
Will ads on ham radio still be allowed??

Also, newspapers - how will we convey the sense of horror and urgency to NOT vote for the candidate that approved to increase spend for school lunches, with out loud ominous music playing??
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
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This is what you get if you vote for Republican presidents and Senators. They will legalize bribery. And they are just getting started.

If bribery and corruption is the complaint. Why don't we the people elect politicians who wont take a bribe or act corrupt?
 

Jhhnn

IN MEMORIAM
Nov 11, 1999
62,365
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Remove all limits and require full transparency. If you want to give $100 million to a candidate then so be it so long as the media and voters can ask the appropriate foll0w-up questions.

As if that applies in a nation where corporations are people & where donors to highly political non-profits have their identities shielded.

This ruling just allows the top .01%, the funders of the radical right, a bigger megaphone.

Stacking the SCOTUS has been their life long obsession, and their efforts are paying off, for them, not necessarily for the rest of us.

At $2600 per candidate, it only costs $26M to fund 10,000 candidates, a pittance to America's uber-wealthy. Some of them "earn" more than that in a day or a week.

The majority of the SCOTUS is dishonest in referring only to individual rather than systemic corruption. Not that rank & file right wing ravers would notice.

Freedumb!
 

senseamp

Lifer
Feb 5, 2006
35,787
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This is the Court that threw out voting rights, but upheld the "right" of billionaires to buy elections.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
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Why don't we all learn to breathe underwater and poop diamonds?

So what is your complaint then? It sounds like you would rather not take responsibility for the electorate electing scumbags and instead blame money. What an easy scapegoat.
 

Atreus21

Lifer
Aug 21, 2007
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To take a page from the multitude of abortion threads or Obamacare threads: "It's constitutional. Deal with it."
 

senseamp

Lifer
Feb 5, 2006
35,787
6,197
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So what is your complaint then? It sounds like you would rather not take responsibility for the electorate electing scumbags and instead blame money. What an easy scapegoat.

Wow, you are really that naive? Corrupt politicians don't go around with a sign that says they are corrupt. They get contributions and then some time later they "coincidentally" vote for things that are beneficial to the contributor because they "believe" in those things. Since they are the ones who get money, they will drown out the message of those who are just regular folks trying to stand up to this kind of corruption. Average Joe doesn't have $5M to buy the whole Congress in individual contributions.
 

Bowfinger

Lifer
Nov 17, 2002
15,776
392
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If bribery and corruption is the complaint. Why don't we the people elect politicians who wont take a bribe or act corrupt?
Because we live in the real world, and the minority of people who are so upstanding that they are immune to corruption are also so upstanding that they don't want to subject themselves and their family to such a filthy process and political environment.
 
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