[DOWNLOAD] "Removing Corporate Campaign Finance Restrictions in Citizens United V. Federal Election Commission." by Harvard Journal of Law&Public Policy # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Removing Corporate Campaign Finance Restrictions in Citizens United V. Federal Election Commission.
- Author : Harvard Journal of Law&Public Policy
- Release Date : January 01, 2011
- Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 289 KB
Description
Since the Supreme Court's seminal campaign finance ruling in Buckley v. Valeo, (1) the Court continues to disagree over the best way to balance First Amendment free speech rights against the state's interest in fighting the reality or appearance of corruption caused by sizeable campaign expenditures. (2) The debate over corporate campaign expenditures has been a source of particularly sharp disagreement, generating at least six major decisions since the Court's ruling in Buckley. (3) In two recent decisions, the Court held that although corporations could use money in separate political funds for campaign spending, general treasury funds were off limits. (4) In Citizens United v. FEC, (5) however, the Supreme Court expanded corporate campaign spending power by holding that, although "It]he government can regulate corporate political speech through disclaimer and disclosure requirements," it is unconstitutional for the government to suppress corporate political speech entirely. (6) In doing so, the Court struck down parts of the two previous decisions (7) that limited the ability of corporations to spend money on electioneering communications in federal elections. Although it is too soon to know what effect the Court's decision will have on the electoral process, Citizens United likely will be most significant not for what it means for corporate campaign spending, but for what it signals for the future of campaign finance reform. Not only does the ruling mark the first time that the Roberts Court has struck down a previous campaign finance decision, but also it does so in a way that signals the Court's newfound hostility toward campaign finance regulation in all but the most limited of circumstances. Citizens United is a nonprofit corporation that receives funds from both individuals and for-profit corporations. (8) In 2008, Citizens United created Hillary: The Movie, a ninety-minute documentary about then-Senator and presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton, and sought to expand the film's distribution by using cable video-on-demand offerings in addition to movie theater and DVD releases. (9) The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA), (10) however, barred the use of corporate general treasury funds for electioneering communications. (11) The law did not, however, bar spending by segregated corporate or union funds through the use of political action committees (PACs). (12) Because Citizens United feared that its plans to make Hillary available through video-on-demand before certain 2008 presidential primaries ran afoul of the corporate expenditure prohibition contained in [section] 441b, it sought to have the federal ban as well as the disclaimer and disclosure requirements related to those corporate expenditures declared unconstitutional as applied to Hillary. (13)