The Excesses of Giving and of Argument
January 17, 2014
The Center for Responsive Politics and the Sunlight Foundation have teamed up to preview the consequences if the Supreme Court in McCutcheon eliminates the biennial aggregate limit. Their work is the latest of a number of analyses predicting trouble without the limit. It is also the most recent of its kind to exhibit the flaws in these predictions—and to suggest that the real concern with McCutcheon may lie elsewhere.
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The IRS and (c)(4) Political Activity: Choices and Explanations
December 10, 2013
The IRS is now receiving comments on its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on (c)(4) activity, and certain of the views so far underscore the choice that the agency faces and does not make in its first set of proposed rules. It is the choice of line, and the “brightness” of that line, distinguishing “candidate-related” from social welfare activity.
Category: Outside Groups
“Accentuating the Positive” in Campaign Finance Reform
November 26, 2013
The Supreme Court has boxed the debate over campaign finance into a corner, forcing the focus entirely on "corruption." Because corruption is the whole game, it is played with vigor, and we have seen in recent years how the term has been pulled this way or that, depending on the commenter’s policy preference.
More on “Independence”—Expert Reader Responses
November 22, 2013
As noted here Wednesday, the Minnesota Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board is stymied by the question of whether an independent committee can have contact with a candidate and remain “independent” and able to make unlimited expenditures on the candidate’s behalf. The anonymous candidate seeking an opinion from the Board would like to raise money for a committee that intends to help him or her, later, on an “independent” basis. Under federal law, and subject to conditions, this is possible if the candidate has no say in how the money is spent. Reform critics think this result is indefensible. Their view of independence is that it requires complete separation of the candidate from the committee.
Category: Coordination
Minnesota and the Frustrations of Judging “Independence”
November 20, 2013
Minnesota campaign finance officials are "vexed" by a request for an advisory opinion from an unnamed candidate. She (or he) would like to raise money for an independent expenditure committee that intends to support her—with independent expenditures. Minn. campaign board vexed by candidate's question regarding fundraising by outside groups, Star Tribune, Nov. 5, 2013, http://www.startribune.com/politics/national/230680961.html. Does this fundraising support make the committee any less independent and unable to spend unlimited sums on her behalf?