By Daniel I. Weiner May
13, 2014
http://news.yahoo.com/worst-ruling-since-citizens-united-094500798--politics.html
Whatever one thinks about
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and his policies, the decision last week by
federal judge Rudolph T. Randa to summarily halt an investigation into alleged
campaign finance violations by Walker’s campaign and supporters—and to order
prosecutors to destroy all the evidence they collected—was a striking instance
of judicial chutzpah. The accompanying opinion (PDF) is
laced with ideological rhetoric seeking to undermine many of the remaining
campaign finance laws on the books. Even following the Supreme Court’s
evisceration of campaign finance law in the Citizens United and McCutcheon decisions,
Randa’s ruling is a bridge too far. It should not stand.
2012’s Wisconsin recall
election was a $137 million affair. Groups claiming to act
independently of any candidate spent more than half of this total, roughly $70 million. Many of them drew their funding from out-of-state “dark money” organizations,
which can raise unlimited funds and keep their contributors secret. Under state
law, such spending could not be “coordinated” with Walker or another candidate.
Whether some of this spending was in fact coordinated—steered at the
candidate’s suggestion or with his cooperation—was the question at the heart of
the Wisconsin investigation.
Coordination, once the
obscure preserve of election lawyers, has become a hot topic.
In Citizens
United, a narrow majority of the Supreme Court took away from federal, state,
and local authorities the ability to place limits on how much corporations,
unions and other deep-pocketed interests can spend on elections, as long as
they don’t coordinate with candidates—based on the fanciful theory that such
“independent” spending cannot corrupt politicians. But the Citizens United majority
did reaffirm that it’s perfectly constitutional for the government to limit
non-independent spending.
Enter Judge Randa. According
to him, only spending on ads containing an unmistakable call to vote for or
against someone may be subject to restrictions on coordination. In other words,
an advertisement a few weeks before the election saying “Defeat Senator Jones
because he won’t stand with the troops,” cannot be coordinated with a
candidate. But one saying “Tell Senator Jones to stop hurting the troops,” can
be conceived, directed, and promoted by Senator Jones’s political opponent.
[...]
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