From the Washington Post
Supreme Court Upholds Political Money Law
'Soft Money' Ban, Ad Limits Maintained
By Fred Barbash
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, December 10, 2003; 2:22 PM
The Supreme Court today upheld the most important provisions of the McCain-Feingold
campaign reform act of 2002, an attempt to control the unregulated, uncontained
and often underground system of fund-raising and spending that now dominates
federal election campaigns.
The decision, allowing a ban on "soft money" and restrictions on "issue
ads" that benefit individual candidates, means the current election campaign
can proceed without interruption under the new law, according to attorneys on
both sides of the case.
The law sought to control the influence of money in politics. It was aimed primarily
at two widespread practices designed to get around existing campaign disclosure
laws and contribution limitations.
It prohibited national parties and federal candidates from raising and spending
so-called "soft money," donations that are not subject to federal
limits because they technically go to state political parties.
And it clamped new regulations on "issue ads," commercials financed
by interest groups, purportedly to advance their causes, but which critics have
said are thinly disguised partisan promotions of particular candidates for office.
While it did not ban any kind of ad, the law required that the funding of "electioneering
communications" be publicly disclosed just as other campaign spending is
disclosed. It defined "electioneering" ads as those that run in close
proximity to scheduled elections and refer to a particular candidate or are
aimed at a particular candidates constituency.
Challengers to the law said it violated First Amendment rights of free speech
in political campaigns.
But the justices upheld all of the major new restrictions by 5-to-4 votes.
Justices John Paul Stevens and Sandra Day O'Connor, writing for the majority
on the main issues, said that Congress had carefully and successfully tailored
the new law to avoid constitutional problems after determining that the current
system of campaign finance led to corruption, or the appearance of corruption.
"The idea that large contributions to a national party can corrupt or create
the appearance of corruption of federal candidates and officeholders is neither
novel nor implausible," the majority said. "There is substantial evidence
in these cases to support Congress' determination that contributions of soft
money give rise to corruption and the appearance of corruption."
The court said Congress also has power to act against all or any "circumventions,"
of campaign laws, whether in the form of "soft money" or sham "issue
ads."
The justices rejected as "unpersuasive" arguments that the new provisions
intrude on constitutionally protected rights of free speech and free political
association. They similarly rejected claims that the soft money restrictions
cut too deeply into the prerogatives of the states to regulate elections.
On the main provisions of the law, Stevens and O'Connor were joined by Justices
David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer.
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist dissented from the primary holdings, as did
Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony M. Kennedy and Clarence Thomas.
The broad philosophical dividing line on campaign finance regulation revolves
around the extent to which money is regarded as "speech."
Supreme Court Upholds Political Money Law Challengers of the law -- and dissenters
today -- believe that campaign activity, including the deployment of campaign
money, deserves the same high level of protection accorded to, say, campaign
speeches and debates. Their position was reinforced by the 1976 ruling in Buckley
v. Valeo, which struck down parts of an earlier campaign reform act because
it impinged on the right of individuals to express themselves by giving money.
On the other side are those in the majority today, who simply do not take the
speech-money equation that far. They believe Congress has great leeway to regulate
activities once it has established that they may corrupt the political process.
"The evidence in the record," wrote Stevens and O'Connor, "shows
that candidates and donors alike have in fact exploited the soft-money loophole,
the former to increase their prospects of election and the latter to create
debt on the part of officeholders. . . . For their part, lobbyists, CEOs, and
wealthy individuals alike all have candidly admitted donating substantial sums
of soft money to national committees not on ideological grounds, but for the
express purpose of securing influence over federal officials."
Scalia, on the other hand, condemned today's outcome as a First Amendment disaster.
"This is a sad day for the freedom of speech," he wrote. "Who
could have imagined that the same Court which, within the past four years, has
sternly disapproved of restrictions upon such inconsequential forms of expression
as virtual child pornography . . . would smile with favor upon a law that cuts
to the heart of what the First Amendment is meant to protect: the right to criticize
the government."
There were eleven different challenges to the law, all of which were consolidated
in today's ruling, called McConnell, United States Senator, et al., v. Federal
Election Commission et al. The court worked with uncommon speed to get the decision
published before the actual beginning of the formal election year, 2004. On
only one minor matter did the challengers prevail. The court said congress went
too far in banning contributions by minors. This provision was designed to prevent
adults from funneling money through children.
"I think the result is disappointing but not altogether unexpected,"
said Jan Baran, one of the attorneys representing the main challenger of the
law, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). "And the 5-4 decision reflects how evenly
divided opinion is on these issues."
"I'm thrilled by the court's decision," said Randolph Moss, who represented
the chief senate sponsors, Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz) and Russell Feingold (D-Wis.)
"It's a great victory for the parties defending the law but really for
the country. The court has reaffirmed Congress's ability to regulate campaign
finance in a way that protects the democratic process."
The new rules have been in force during the early stages of preparation for
the 2004 elections for president and Congress. A lower court panel of federal
judges had issued its own, fractured ruling on the new law earlier this year,
but the Supreme Court got the last word.
The two parties hauled in nearly $500 million in soft money in the two-year
election cycle that ended in 2000, most of it from large corporations, labor
unions and a relative handful of wealthy individuals.
The idea of "soft money" picked up steam in the 1980s in response
to federal election laws enacted after Watergate limiting the size of individual
campaign contributions and requiring extensive disclosure.
Lawyers for both parties found that channeling money to state political parties
for their own activities could provide an alternative way of financing campaigns
that was not subject to the federal law. The parties could and did use the money
for such things as "get out the vote" drives and ads that directly
benefited party presidential candidates.
Since then, literally billions of dollars have been spent in this fashion, including
contributions from individuals far in excess of the amounts permitted under
federal law.