Sunday, October 20, 2019
SpeechNow.org v. Federal Election Commission
SpeechNow.org v. Federal Election Commission The well known and widely scorned court case Citizens United has been credited with paving the way for the creation of super PACs, the hybrid political groupsà that are allowed to raise and spend unlimited amounts of money from corporations and unionsà to influence American elections. But there would be no super PACs without a lesser known, companion court challenge to Federal Election Commission fundraising laws,à SpeechNow.org v. Federal Election Commission. The nonprofit political group, organized under Internal Revenue Service Section 527, is just as instrumental in the creation of super PACs as Citizens United.à Summary of SpeechNow.org v. FEC SpeechNow.org sued the FEC in February 2008 claiming the $5,000à federal limità on how much individuals can give to a political committee such as its own, which therefore limited how much it could spend supporting candidates,à represented a violation of the Constitutions First Amendment guarantee to freedom of speech.à In May of 2010, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled in favor of SpeechNow.org, meaning the FEC could not longer enforce the contribution limits to independent groups.à Argument in Support of SpeechNow.org The Institute for Justice and the Center for Competitive Politics, which representedà SpeechNow.org, argued that the fundraising limits were a violation of free speech, but also that the FECs rules requiring it and similar groups toà organize, register, and report as a ââ¬Å"political committeeâ⬠in order to advocate for or against candidates was too burdensome. That means that while Bill Gates one his own could spend as much of his money as he wanted on political speech, he could contribute only $ 5,000 to a similar group effort.à But since the First Amendment guarantees individuals the right to speak without limit, it should be common sense that groups of individuals have the same rights.à It turns out that these limits and red tape made it virtually impossible for new independent citizen groups to raise start-up funding and effectively reach voters.à Argument Against SpeechNow.org The governments argument against SpeechNow.org was that allowing contributions of more than $5,000 from individualsà could ââ¬Å"lead to preferential access for donors and undue influence over officeholders.â⬠The government was taking the tack that its ruled are designed to prevent corruption. The court rejected that argument, though, in the wake of the January 2010 decision in Citizens United, writing:à ââ¬Å"Whatever the merits of those arguments beforeà Citizens United, they plainly have no merit afterà Citizens Unitedâ⬠¦.Contributions to groups that make only independent expenditures cannot corrupt or create the appearance of corruption.â⬠Difference Between SpeechNow.org and Citizens United Cases Though the two cases are similar and deal with independentà expenditure-only committees, the SpeechNow court challenge focus on federalà fundraising caps. Citizen United successfully challenged theà spending limit on corporations,à unions, andà associations. In other words, SpeechNow focused on raising money and Citizens United focused on spending money to influence elections. Impact ofà SpeechNow.org v. FEC Theà U.S. District Court for the District of Columbias ruling the case, combined with the U.S. Supreme Courts decision in Citizens United, together paved the way for the creation of super PACs. Writes Lyle Denniston on SCOTUSblog: While theà Citizens Unitedà decision dealt with the spending side of federal campaign finance, theSpeechNowà case was on the other side - raising funds. Thus, as a result of the two decisions put together, independent advocacy groups can raise as much and spend as much as they can and wish to do to support or oppose candidates for federal office.à What is SpeechNow.org? According to SCOTUSblog, SpeechNow was created specifically to spend money advocating for the election or defeat of federal political candidates. It wasà foundedà byà David Keating, who at the time headed the conservative, anti-taxà groupà Club for Growth.
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