Ultimately court ruling won't matter much

Published April 4, 2014

Editorial by Burlington Times-News, April 3, 2014.

The U.S. Supreme Court decision Wednesday striking down limits on total campaign contributions by individuals elicited strong disapproval from a host of Democrats and liberals, as well as from good-government groups. President Barack Obama, a spokesman said, was “disappointed,” and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., predicted that henceforth, “billionaires like the Koch brothers and Sheldon Adelson will control our political process.”

While big money in politics is a reasonable concern we share — and anonymity in donations is downright wrong — we have to wonder what provoked the vociferous backlash. The court ruled that while Congress may limit the amount of money an individual contributes to each candidate for office, it may not limit how many candidates that individual can support financially.

Federal law restricts one person’s donations to a single candidate to $2,600 per campaign (a total of $5,200 for a primary and a general election), which the court left in place. But it said the overall limit of $48,600 in contributions to federal candidates per individual donor every two years effectively prevents donations to some candidates, in violation of the First Amendment.

Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts argued that while the per-candidate ceiling protects against candidates being effectively bribed through oversized donations, the aggregate limit is superfluous: If it is impossible to corrupt one candidate with a $2,600 check, it is also impossible to corrupt 25 of them with one $2,600 check apiece.

By putting a ceiling on one person’s total donations, the law prevents some people from supporting as many candidates as they would like. “The government,” wrote Roberts, “may no more restrict how many candidates or causes a donor may support than it may tell a newspaper how many candidates it may endorse.”

The crucial reality in campaign finance regulation is that in a modern society, money and the people who have it will always play a large role in election contests. So will corporations and labor unions. Government policy is too important for those with resources not to try to influence its direction.

Lawmakers can impede or divert the flow of dollars. But trying to eliminate it from politics is like trying to halt a landfalling hurricane on the North Carolina coast.

In reality, this decision isn’t likely to have much effect on the total amount of money spent on electioneering. Adelson reportedly laid out roughly $100 million in the 2012 election cycle, which he was free to do by giving to various “super PACs” and other groups that ran ads backing particular candidates. The Koch brothers’ group, Americans for Prosperity, spent $122 million.

Under this ruling, these magnates may send more of their money to the actual campaign organizations of particular candidates. But there is no reason to think they spent a smaller total than they wanted to on the last election, or that this verdict will cause them to spend more on the next one.

In his dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer said the court should defer to “Congress’ concern that a few large donations not drown out the voices of the many.” But rich people already have ways to spend as much as they want communicating their views. The most significant effect of the ruling is likely to be the strengthening of political party organizations at the expense of super PACs and other nonparty groups — which just might be a helpful development.

The dissenters are right in arguing that lifting the ceiling may make it easier for donors to circumvent the limits on contributions to individual candidates. But as Roberts stressed, Congress is free to address the danger by tightening the rules.

What it isn’t free to do is ration speech, even if it would make future campaigns less noisy, irritating and full of misleading information.

 Parts of this editorial originally appeared in the Chicago Tribune.

http://www.thetimesnews.com/opinion/our-opinion/ultimately-court-ruling-won-t-matter-much-1.300517

April 4, 2014 at 10:53 am
Norm Kelly says:

Don't know who Adelson is. Know only what most lib political ads tell me about the Koch brothers.

I find it interesting that this editorial doesn't mention union donations. Why is this group always left out of discussions of political donations?

It seems that every time Congress makes any rule regarding political donations, the DemocRAT party finds a way to exempt their supporters in the union business. When too many editorials appear, like this one, unions are not mentioned, as if their money doesn't influence elections. As if their donations are somehow different and less influential. These politicians expect that the general public is unaware that unions typically support Demons for elected office. These politicians expect that the general public doesn't pay attention to the paybacks provided to unions for their generous donations to the union party. . . I mean democRAT party. What's the difference between a union and the average liberal democrat elected official? The office they sit in. Other than that they are the same person, with the same agenda, purchased by the unions. Except they are unregulated by the politicians they have purchased.

Fair & balanced.

April 5, 2014 at 8:46 am
Richard Bunce says:

Union power is in their compliant drones who will go out into the neighborhood and strong arm their neighbors.

Dollars do not vote, TV ads do not vote, never met anyone who voted for the candidate who runs the most ads. This is an effort to limit the speech of one group who find another group disagreeable. More speech is always better than less speech, especially is the less speech is due to government regulation of speech.