CPAC Panel: ‘Celebrate’ Citizens United Ruling

Michael Beckel
iWatch News / News Report
Published: Saturday 11 February 2012
Conservative lawyers dismiss threat of foreign money, anonymous political spending at CPAC.
Article image

Anonymous political speech. Foreign money in U.S. elections. The proliferation of super PACs. How grave a threat do any of things pose to American democracy? Not much, according to a panel of conservative attorneys, who gathered Thursday at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C.

The high-profile legal minds on the CPAC panel largely agreed that the changes to the campaign finance landscape are grounds for celebration.

Thanks to the Citizens United decision, we’ve seen “more voices, more competition, and more accountability,” said panelist Benjamin Barr, a senior fellow at the Goldwater Institute, a conservative think tank.

“Without SpeechNow.org, the Republican nomination would have been sewed up weeks ago,” added Brad Smith, the former chairman of the Federal Election Commission who co-founded the Center for Competitive Politics, a nonprofit that promotes First Amendment political rights. “And in 2010, we would have had fewer competitive races.”

In the Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission case in 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts of money from their treasuries on ads and other activities to influence the election or defeat of federal candidates so long as they are not coordinating with the candidates’ campaigns.

A few months later, in SpeechNow.org v. Federal Election Commission, used the Supreme Court’s reasoning and decided that limits on individual contributions to groups that make independent expenditures are unconstitutional.

These rulings gave rise to the creation of what are called super PACs — political organizations that can receive unlimited corporate, union and individual contributions and make unlimited expenditures to advocate for the election or defeat federal candidates. During his 2010 State of the Union, President Barack Obama condemned the court’sCitizens United ruling and warned that foreign interests would be able to “spend without limits” — a criticism that earned a rebuff from Justice Samuel Alito, who mouthed “not true,” while listening to Obama’s address in the chamber.

Smith, during the panel, said that he is “not frightened” by the prospect of Brits, Colombians or even Syrians spending money in the U.S. political process.

“I’m not that alarmed if foreigners [want to be involved in U.S. elections],” Smith said. “It doesn’t worry me.”

He expressed more concerned about the prospect of forcing government contractors to abstain from making political contributions.

“One of the new things the left is trying to do is get anyone who is a government contractor silenced,” he said.

The panel, entitled, “What’s Up With Campaign Finance?,” was moderated by Dan Backer, the principal attorney for DB Capitol Strategies PLLC. Backer’s legal career has included spearheading the major campaign finance case Carey v. Federal Election, which, last year, opened the door for all political action committees to morph into hybrid super PACs.

At CPAC, Backer speculated that before the 2014 elections, the nation could see a “fundamental rewrite” of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, including a “major increase” in the amount of money individuals can contribute to candidates, the amount of money individuals can contribute to PACs and the amount of money that PACs can donate to candidates.

If contributions aren’t adjusted, Backer said, the rules are “disincentivizing political association and speech by making it easier/more effective to speak alone than with others.”

Additionally, Backer posited, that a rewrite of this law would allow corporate contributions to candidates at the same levels as individuals. And he further predicted that groups on the left would continue to clamor for the IRS to investigate the nonprofit status of organizations that spend large sums on political messages.

In the past, nonprofits organized under section 501(c)(4) of the U.S. tax code and known as “social welfare organizations” were permitted to make independent expenditures and electioneering communications — but only if they did not accept corporate or union contributions. Thanks to Citizens United, and another ruling in 2007, that restriction has been removed.

But unlike the super PACs, the nonprofits do not report who funds them.

With this tax designation, these groups, such as conservative-aligned outfits Crossroads GPS and the American Action Network, can engage in political spending while keeping their donors anonymous. Only if a person specifically earmarks his or her contribution for a particular advertisement does the FEC require public disclosure. That doesn’t occur frequently.

In 2010, there was a surge of spending by super PACs and nonprofit organizations.

Super PACs alone reported spending more than $65 million on ads and other express advocacy, and nonprofit groups reported spending more than $134 million, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

In response, Democratic lawmakers and campaign finance reform groups have pushed for new reporting requirements and disclosure rules for these groups.

This year two bills have been introduced in this vein: the DISCLOSE Act, which is sponsored by Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and the SUPERPAC Act, which is the brainchild of the Sunlight Foundation, a nonpartisan, transparency-focused nonprofit advocacy organization.

Both bills were mentioned, and dismissed, by the CPAC panelists.

“The people in favor of this want people to think twice before they participate in the political process,” said attorney Stephen Hoersting.

“Let’s say you have a trade association takes dues from Ford, do they really want to know who bought the last Fusion or the last F-150?” he continued. “I’m not for knowing the names behind the names."

Panelist Allen Dickerson, the legal director of the Center for Competitive Politics, predicted that it would be the courts, not Congress, that would make any changes to campaign finance laws in the next few years.

“I don’t think there’s any chance of that kind of legislation passing,” he said. Former FEC Chairman Smith agreed.

“The action on this will be in the courts, for better or for worse,” he said, “for the time being.”

Reprinted by permission from iWatch News



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21 comments on "CPAC Panel: ‘Celebrate’ Citizens United Ruling"

jwvaugh

February 12, 2012 4:39pm

I heard this story about an ex county sheriff, he is in prison, he got caught paying
$25 to $50 for votes.
He is thinking he should appeal his case.
He said that he was only doing what the Supreme Court said he could do when
they ruled money was voice and a corporation was a person.
He said that he was only using his voice to ask people to vote for him.

And that the Koch Brothers, other Billionaires and Corporations And the super pacs
are doing the same but to a much higher degree. He wants to know why if it is illegal
to use ones voice (money) to ask for or to influence the way someone votes, why
they are not in prison with him.

Richard Townsend

February 12, 2012 9:31am

Citizens United insured that all political parties must Dial-For-Dollars to stay in the game. The liberal and conservative platforms of the Democrat and Republican parties of thirty years ago hasn't existed for decades as both are now motivated to tailor their objectives to the wishes of their biggest contributors. We've known for years that most members of Congress spend one third of every day soliciting money from private sources just to fund their next election. Why do so many Americans persist in their loyalty to political institutions that haven't existed for almost three decades. We will continue on the current course of destruction as long as we continue to believe that this system is still working in our behalf. Living in denial for so long has left us with one option to reclaim our country, a bloody mass revolution against a fully functional police state. A positive outcome under these conditions is doubtful at best as the frogs continue to ignore the slowly rising temperature of the water in the pot !

palsimon

February 20, 2012 1:49am

I agree. And I'd like to know who doesn't find all this legislation confusing. We need money out of politics, specific professional standards for each political office, candidate qualifications, free advertising with public funding only. We are wasting billions for campaigns and coming up with real jerks in the process. The GOP candidates for president are a laughing stock in Europe. See http://bit.ly/xNwWow for the kind of European Press GOP candidates are getting.

jwvaugh

February 12, 2012 7:36am

I heard this story about an ex county sheriff, he is in prison, he got caught paying $25 to $50 for votes. He is thinking he should appeal his case. He said that he was only doing what the Supreme Court said he could do whenthey ruled money was voice and a corporation was a person.He said that he was only using his voice to ask people to vote for him.And that the Koch Brothers, other Billionaires and Corporations And the super pacs are doing the same but to a much higher degree. He wants to know why if it is illegal to use ones voice (money) to ask for or to influence the way someone votes, why they are not in prison with him.

Jim Easton

February 12, 2012 6:46am

I want to ask the SCOTUS to consider the fairness of "Unlimited Anonymous News."
Imagine if we just had news media , like FOX, that had no basis in accountability. Noone would have to prove anything, no due diligence, no filtering at all. We say unrestricted lies about anyone until everyone believed it. Truely there would no point in challenging any point of view at all.
The "Citizens United" ruling does exactly that for the money determining the shape of our government. Notice that the slanderous ads the candidates post are very effective in misinforming, and go largely unchallenged, met more with vengeance than with truth. The truth will not be known.
What troubles me is that someone knows who gives the money. That information can be brought to bear against a free-thinking officer at any time. There no such thing as true anonymity.
Maybe we could take a lesson from some spiders. Let's let the SPAC leave their seed and then the campaign staff eat them.

BozoAdult

February 12, 2012 5:42am

Federal elections should be publicly financed, 100%.

Jim Easton

February 12, 2012 6:51am

ALL!

Alan Margulies

February 11, 2012 9:08pm

"If corporations are people my friend", why are they not subject to people tax rates?If corporations were people they would be subject to people laws, both civil and criminal
The founding fathers provided for no taxation without representation, not representation without taxation. Corporations provide protection against liabilities for people, my friend. By these standards, guns are people too, my friend, Who owns them? whose pockets do they go in?

Curtis Welborne

February 11, 2012 6:53pm

a RETURN TO THE FAIRNESS DOCTRINE MIGHT DULL FOX'S FANGS A TAD, FORCING THEM TO OCCASIONALLY SHOW THE OTHER SIDE OF THEIR WHOLESALE DISTORTIONS. aLTHOUGH SOME OF THEIR FICTION IS REBUTTED IN OTHER MEDIA, THE LEMMINGS GLUED TO FOX NEVER HEAR IT. PERHAPS IF THEY COULD, A FEW OF THEM AT LEAST MIGHT WAKE UP TO THE FACT THAT THEY ARE BEING MANIPULATED BY BIG $

gz40x4

February 11, 2012 6:30pm

Democracy is for sale and I can't afford it. The last time I agreed with Pat Buchanan is when he said, "Democracy is a fraud in this country."

We have one of the most self-absorbed societies in history, constantly looking at their hands and plucking away nonsense. They continue to vote for idiots that take money out of their back pocket while waving a flag and bible in their face and never talking about real issues.

Bett1950

February 11, 2012 4:34pm

WE don't have a voice because THEY do not want us to. That is why WE must band together & make sure Obama is re-elected. He may not be as popular as he once was but we cannot risk Romney, Gingrich, Paul & especially Creatinist believing, Opus Dei Santorum. And no 3rd party tickets to split the Dems.

Robert Hillstrom

February 11, 2012 4:28pm

Just as when George III oppressed the colonists, it will take guns, assasinations, explosives and mobs to get the U.S. back on course. Who will be our Washington, Nathan Hale, Ethan Allan? We already know our Benedict Arnolds.

Bird Turd

February 12, 2012 10:25am

My thoughts exactly. We have seen uprisings all over the world. We have seen the U.S., in Libya, aiding the rebels with bombs and weapons. We see Israel threatning Iran with an attack, We have seen our own government circling the world with stealth attacks and assassinations. Does this sound like non-violent confrontation? Does anyone believe the Oligarchs will give up power voluntarily, or will it have to be "pried fron their cold dead hands?" Our government knows that when it comes to gaining power, it must come, as Mao said, "Out of the barrel of a gun." We already received our answers from the power elite concerning the protests of the Occupy Movement - mass arrests, beating, tear gas and wholesale evictions. Does this sound like respect for our free speech rights? And if all of this isn't bad enough, they are still drafting draconian laws to further curb our rights and assure us of many more arrests. The writing is on the wall. The police state is coming to full fruition. The larger question is, will the opressors force the people into another armed revolution?

Norman Allen

February 11, 2012 4:14pm

The beginning of the end.... Citizen United is forcing direct confrontation with the masses of educated unemployed, the swindled, the victims of the elite greed and financial shenanigans. They are asking the destitute to just die as was evidenced in Newt's and Mitt's talk on TV. Mass anger is a horrible sight. I pray we don't resort to it.

AvengingAngel

February 11, 2012 3:25pm

It these charlatans told me it was raining out I would shove my umbrella up my butt.

David E.Sonner

February 11, 2012 3:04pm

Who can gainsay the following? Rick Santorum's Super-pac receives $ from Japanese gangster organizations, Serbian fascists, Opus Dei, and the National Rifle Assn. And Gingrich's Super-Pac scoops up big money from Robert Mugabe, Las Vegas gambling biggies, Israeli settlers, and Russian white-slavers; Romney from other very rich people with very bad haircuts; Ron Paul from The Flat Earth Society and Monty Python.

Ronni85

February 11, 2012 2:54pm

Why don't WE, the People have loud and obnoxious people speaking for WE the way the "conservatives" have for them? With all the lies being fostered - by now, many of them are "truths" they have been heard so much - WE the People don't stand a snowball's chance in Hell of overcoming these lies. WE don't have a major news network to back us up like the GOP has in their F0xy Unbelievable News.

Bird Turd

February 12, 2012 10:38am

It is not only FOX news that churns out propaganda. All the other news outlets do the same, only in a more subtle manner. The only voices we have are on the internet, and very soon they will be marginalizing those voices with ACTA. Contrary to what many progressive people believe, another term for Obama would be just the same as if Romney is elected. We always forget, our presidents are mere puppets, and if they think of stepping out of line...well, remember the Kennedys. They practically took out that entire family (including John).

Jim Easton

February 12, 2012 6:50am

The problem is that FOX news is not "unbelievable." It is just "truthy" enough to get people like one of our republican slate elected.

BozoAdult

February 12, 2012 4:03am

"We the people" don't have the money.

When the President goes on Fox News it only lends credence to their lies. Why does he do this? Come to think of it Obama seldom refutes any right wing argument. Strange that.

Richard Townsend

February 12, 2012 9:40am

. . . and so many Democrats continue to support this guy mainly because of the party label he wears. No attempt by any group within the Democrat party to Primary this guy. Even the Black majority within the Democrat party is walking away from this guy. Can we be surprised that our Democracy is going down the tubes when we ignore all the signs !