Posted by Orin Kerr:
Political Ideology and the Constitutionality of Campaign Finance Reform:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_09_06-2009_09_12.shtml#1252541227 One of the interesting aspects about the constitutional debate over
campaign finance reform is that conservatives tend to think it's
unconstitutional while liberals tend to think it's lawful. It's
interesting to step back and ask, why is that?
As best I can tell, constitutional theory doesn't provide an answer.
Both sides seem to make their arguments using modern cases and policy
arguments. Even when self-proclaimed originalist like Justice Scalia
and Justice Thomas write opinions explaining votes to strike down
campaign finance laws, they generally gloss over the history pretty
quickly before focusing on modern court-made legal doctrine (see,
e.g., [1]here and [2]here).
My best guess is that the legal positions polarize as they do for
two reasons. The first is that the constitutional questions are
genuinely hard. The doctrine as it comes to us is unusually murky, and
there are reasonable arguments on both sides. Murky precedents and
good arguments on both sides tend to trigger ideological divisions:
The less traditional legal arguments provide clear answers, the more
judges are likely to gravitate to their political views.
That brings me to the second point, that the politics of campaign
finance are pretty polarized. For the most part, conservatives have
opposed campaign finance reform on policy grounds and liberals have
favored it. If you look at the [3]vote on McCain-Feingold in the
Senate, for example, 48 of the 59 "yes" votes were Democrats, with
most of the 11 GOP Yes votes coming from moderates like Specter,
Chafee, Collins and Snowe. In contrast, 38 of the 41 "no" votes were
Republican, with the three Demoratics voting "no" being moderates like
Ben Nelson.
So for the most part, I think the votes in campaign finance cases
pretty much just track the Justices' political views, without much
more explanation required. An interesting exception is Justice
Kennedy, who is a very strong opponent of campaign finance laws. I
tend to think his opposition is not a result of his policy views or
political commitments as much as a result of his [4]consistently
robust view of the First Amendment.
References
1.
http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/02-1674.ZX.html 2.
http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/02-1674.ZX1.html 3.
http://mentata.com/ds/retrieve/congress/vote/VC107S22 4.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=994604 What are your thoughts on this ? It seems to me that most modern attempts at reform are aimed at stifling debate, while the REAL issue of candidates buying their wins by outspending their opponent goes unaddressed.
How would YOU reform campaign finance ?
Off the top of my head I think that Federal election box on the tax form should be divided up among all candidates evenly, if you spend more than that you are disqualified, no donations, discounts or sponsorships allowed.