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Monday, June 25, 2007
Sandy  Froman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Dismantling Campaign Finance Reform: Restoring Your Free Speech
by Sandy Froman
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On the last day of its term, the Supreme Court began dismantling the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA). Anyone who cares about the First Amendment should be cheering.

Wisconsin Right to Life (WRTL) wanted to air ads in 2004, to tell voters that Senator Russ Feingold was filibustering President Bush’s judicial nominees and call on voters to encourage the senator to change course. BCRA creates “blackout” periods during which organizations cannot run ads that might impact the election or defeat of a candidate for office. During these blackout periods (30 days before a primary or 60 days before a general election) only the media can talk about the candidates. Because Feingold was on the ballot in 2004 and these ads fell within the blackout period created by BCRA, the Federal Election Commission (FEC) barred the ads from going on the air, saying they were equivalent to the election ads prohibited during the blackouts.

In the case of FEC v. Wisconsin Right to Life, the Supreme Court correctly sided with WRTL and upheld the First Amendment right to speak out on issues even when a candidate’s name is mentioned.

In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court struck down the ban on issue ads, saying that BCRA is unconstitutional as applied to ads that inform voters on important issues. Chief Justice Roberts, writing the principal opinion and joined by Justice Alito, stated, “When it comes to defining what speech [is constitutionally protected], we give the benefit of the doubt to speech, not censorship. The First Amendment [demands] at least that.”

What is interesting about this case is that Justice Kennedy—so often a moderate voice on the Court—took a more conservative position than Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito. Justice Scalia, joined by Justices Thomas and Kennedy, wrote separately to say that they would go much further, that they would overturn part of an earlier case and strike down altogether the BCRA provision creating blackout periods. That way, these Justices reasoned, we do not need to worry about issue ads, because all ads would be protected speech.

What’s encouraging about this case is that it shows this new Court is not unwilling to revisit recent decisions when the opportunity presents. Chief Justice Roberts, who is very careful to avoid issues not before the Court, clearly stated that he was not ruling on election ads because such ads were not at issue in this case. Justice Alito, on the other hand, wrote separately to clarify that he would be willing to consider an election-ad case. Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Kennedy made it clear they would vote to strike down all bans on any ads.

Justices Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg and Breyer vigorously dissented but a 4-vote energetic minority is still a minority.

The Supreme Court upheld BCRA in the 2003 case of McConnell v. FEC, but this recent decision starts to dismantle that precedent.

Our new Supreme Court is to be commended for bringing our country a step closer to what the Founding Fathers intended. The Framers understood that the most important reason for free speech is to hold our government accountable by getting information out to the voters. There is never a constitutional justification for preventing ordinary people from discussing the social and political issues of the day.

This ruling restores your right as a citizen to speak out on issues of concern. Whether the topic is guns (my favorite issue), judges, federal spending, abortion, immigration, or any other hot-button issue, you again have the right to join your fellow Americans, take to the air waves and demand that your elected leaders respond.

This goes to the heart of our American system. A democratic republic only exists when the people can speak loudly enough that those in power cannot help but hear. It doesn’t guarantee a particular result, but it does guarantee the satisfaction of a fair fight.

Of course, the way to really get a politician’s attention is to be able to take out an ad either for or against their reelection when their name is on the ballot. Such ads are called election ads, and today’s opinion does not go far enough to restore that part of free speech.

But several justices made it clear today that they will take up that issue when it’s properly brought before the Court. The upcoming presidential elections may provide the opportunity for exactly that.

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About The Author

Sandy Froman is the immediate past president of the National Rifle Association of America, only the second woman and the first Jewish American to hold that office in the 136-year history of the NRA. The views expressed are her own and not that of any organization.

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Justice Ginsburg
Imagine that Justice Ginsburg not defending free speech. I thought she is a card carrying member of the aclu

Right, I remember now, aclu stands for Anarchists Communists Losers and the Unemployable.LOL

Hillary_chavez will stop FREE SPEECH
HILLARY HUGO CHAVEZ Clinton a communist
seeking to RUIN the USA

WANTS to take away free speech on RADIO

Wants to confiscate all OIL PROFITS taking away the profits from WE THE INVESTORS< AS IN WE THE PEOPLE who are shareholders:

THE DEMS have already banned
Sledding in IOWA
Trans Fats
Boy scouts
"letting a Losing team lose"
Smoking
etc.

I Have Another Take . . .
Sandy, Sandy, Sandy: this is another one of those programmatic essays where the writer wants to fire on the enemy, but instead take the gun, sticks it in her ear, and pulls the trigger. The Democrats and their associates (George Soros and his friends) raise a LOT more money than the Republicans. If you don't have money -- and check with the RNC to see how little is coming in -- you still have free speech. However, you don't have enough money to get a bullhorn (let alone buy TV ads). I believe this essay is wrong in nearly ever particular, but my points -- based on mere dollars and cents -- cannot overcome the commitment to ideological purity.

Right now, in the House the Democrats have 180 safe seats. Howard Jefferson (Howard Jefferson!) won re-election easily. Check and see how much money Murtha ($3.5 million in last election), Pelosi, Rangel, Hoyer, and on and on have in the bank. These people will NEVER have real electoral competition. Are these points debatable?

Perhaps John McCain is the wisest man in the Republican Party -- not a hard position to occupy these days. He may just perceive that we're in for another 50 years where the Democrats control the Congress and we take whatever is left over.

There are serious problems with campaign finance. The current system turns into an Incumbents' Re-election Fund. The Republican "fat cats" of yesteryear are now giving their money to the Democrats. And Republicans have nothing even roughly similar in effectiveness to Moveon.org and other 527 hate groups.

My fellow Republicans, in the supposed era of global warming, prepare for the longest political winter in recorded history.

Steve

Lawlessness on the court…


‘There is never a constitutional justification for preventing ordinary people from discussing the social and political issues of the day.’ –Sandy Froman


So are you saying that the dissenters are not subject to the Constitution?

It is a harsh reality that 4 of the justices sitting on the highest court in the land think in a way opposed to the fundamental American ideal of an educated and informed public being the best safeguard against lawlessness and tyranny.

Thanks for naming the dissenters, Justices Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg and Breyer, so all can see who it is that would restrict the right of the people to free speech and information. These folks and those who defend them and their bankrupt ideology have forsaken the ways of liberty and become the friend of tyranny. They are enemies of the rule of law and of the people.

These are not honest disagreements over the meaning of the text. They are radical departures from the plain meaning by men who refuse to apply the Constitution as written. These are dangerous men because they have become what the Founders feared: unaccountable and deceived elites that think they are above the law and therefore have become lawless.

In the next election think about who nominates and approves judges.


Well, it's a step in the
right direction. McCain-Feingold's a horrible travesty, but maybe it will ultimately end up in the trash can where it belongs.


Money
Two things; "Our new Supreme Court is to be commended for bringing our country a step closer to what the Founding Fathers intended. The Framers understood that the most important reason for free speech is to hold our government accountable by getting information out to the voters.

And; "A democratic republic only exists when the people can speak loudly enough that those in power cannot help but hear. It doesn’t guarantee a particular result, but it does guarantee the satisfaction of a fair fight."

The founding fathers wanted the public at large to be protected from the "monied interests" which at that time was the shipping and transport companies getting rich off the goods traded overseas, and how these rich people affect the law making process. Today it is petro, drug,immigration lawyers, aarp, goerge soros and moveon. Which in my opinion are NOT people as individuals-unless it is OK for unions to use dues counter to my wishes.

In the second instance how can an individual possibly be heard when Soros can spend millions and I only 2,000 bucks if I have that. Where is the equal protection under the law? the fact that I am able to contribute.

If 70% of the tax money is collected from the rich I would bet a higher percentage of political money from this group (which is influence not just by tv ads) is spent on campaigns.

One MAN = one contribution = one vote! I say no organizations should be allowed to contribute mony to politicians only the individual members of an organization. Not moveon, NRA, Lawyers assn's sierra club etc...

11h

Sorry 11h:
It's that pesky freedom of association thing that's interfering with your grand scheme to level the playing field between you and those who choose to organize.

McCain/Feingold
The main reason that voting for McCain is out of the question completely is the McCain/Feingold thing. Pure communism. If (or when) the Dumbocrats try to kill talk radio, its the same thing. Just how far from communism are the dumbocrats anyway.

The fallacy is that talk radio
shapes opinion. It doesn't.

It *reflects* the opinion of a large segment of the electorate that has been muzzled in frustration until this era of media communications. THAT is the basis of its popularity.

It's also why traditional MSM is losing its viewers/readers. As people come to depend more and more on talk radio for its information, they also stop using the other (liberal) sources.

It and the internet are the truly populist forums, precisely the kind of "town square" discussions envisioned by the Founders, and any government incursion on them should be fought tooth and nail.

11h (c)?
11h,

Are you saying the Government should take all the money and distribute it evenly among the people?

Where has that been done before? Let me think...oh....Russia? no what was the name of that country oh yeah The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

Shure we should try that.

Just if you are wondering the "(c)" is for communist.

Encouraging sign
I had begun to think that the only thing that would stem the tide of Marxist-based American Leftism would be another Civil War. Maybe there's hope for us yet.

Hillary delenda est.

Additional Thoughts on NRA
In regard to Sandy Froman's article, which I commented on earlier, I wrote the following today: I support the Second Amendment. However, I don't find that incompatible with taking common sense steps to reduce the orgy of gun violence that prevails in the U.S. -- and in no other developed country. The far Right's "politics-of-just-say-no-to-everything" is disgusting good people and driving them away from the Party.

I don't support the NRA's paranoid style, where it exists in a perpetual panic that Teddy Kennedy is going to show up at the door and take away their Glocks. I resent the NRA's unwillingness to work with decent people who want to keep guns out of the hands of "Mr. Cho" and others like him. The NRA doesn't care enough about guns getting into the hands of children, criminals, mental defectives, and people at high risk of committing crimes (such as those with restraining orders).

Yes, I believe the NRA has blood on its hands, but that doesn't seem to both it much. I'm aware that Sandy Froman believes the new campaign finance situation will allow the orgnaization to use its massive war chest to influence our (mostly) cowed politicians. But I'd make a modest proposal: that the NRA use a good chunk of that war chest to help pay funeral expenses for all those who have died as as result of its narcissistic policies. That would be a good step on the NRA's road to recovery.

Steve

Doesn't matter, KoolAid Drinker
The FACT is the First Amendment protects free expression of opinion, whether or not you like that opinion.

If an ad is found to be libelous or slanderous, then the offended party can seek redress in court. Otherwise, expression of ideas, popular or not and accurate or not, is protected.

Steve, you can now join
Check Schumer, John Kerry, John Edwards, Sarah Brady, Ted Kennedy, Dianne Feinstein, and a host of other "supporters" of the 2nd Amendment who have expressed exactly the same words and sentiments.

With "supporters" like YOU, the Second Amendment is doomed.

Political gag rules
It is appalling that this thing ever got enacted into law in the 1st place. Everyone who voted for it, & Pres. Bush who could have vetoed it, whizzed on their oath of office. The "BCRA" undertook to prohibit the very sort of speech & publication the 1st Amendment and the petition clause were intended to protect. There is no way around that simple fact.

There is no clause in the 1st Amendment that voids its protection just because a dollar changes hands somewhere in the process. That's the unspoken premise behind such "reform" & it's ludicrous as it sounds. Most of the Founding Fathers were "moneyed interests" themselves, & I doubt the thought of restricting expenditures on publishing messages to the public at election time ever entered their minds, except to the extent it was an option the 1st Amendment was supposed to foreclose.

Furthermore "news organizations" get a blanket exemption, but what is the magical bright-line that defines and distinguishes "news organizations?" Can an outfit such as the NRA form a "news organization" exempt from the BCRA? If not, why not? Because such a "news organization" would have a bias or represent a 'speciual interest?" And you're saying the NYT & 3 networks don't? Will there be, hee hee, some sort of test of "objectivity" imposed as a condition, & will any entity be able to pass muster?

It is also appalling that SCOTUS required two cases to even put a dent in this thing, by a 5-4 split decision no less. "BCRA"'s very existence, the prospect that someone might get severely penalized for not crossing the right t's and dotting the right i's by publishing a message in an election campaign, ipso facto abridges the right of free speech and the press. However, I kind-of agree with their original decision not to overturn the thing when it was challenged in the abstract. The spineless wonders that are the Congressional GOP voted for the putrid piece of dung in hopes SCOTUS would strike it down, allowing them to have their cake & eat it too. I could see SCOTUS rebuking Congress and quite correctly pointing out it isn't their job to cover Congress' political posteriors!

IN any event, "campaign finance reform" has always been a game where the entrenched political powers, e.g. the ruling party and the incumbents in general, attempt to cut upstarts off from their sources of support and squelch their messages. It is corrupt & unworthy a free people.

Dismantling Campaign Reform
I congratulate the majority of the Supreme Court for their vote to uphold the intent of America's founding fathers Constitutional intent relative to free speech. It's absurd to squelch public comment 30 days prior to an election. That is when ideas and comment is most important to voters about to make important decisions. The "fairness doctrine" as adopted is more like censorship than "fairness". I did not see this decision reported in any major newspaper. Surprise, surprise. Simultaneously, liberal Democratic elected officials are looking for a way to censure talk radio. Why? Conservative talk radio for the most part has been a success. Liberal based talk radio with Al Franken was not a success. What's next from Schumer, Reid, Kennedy, Clinton, Feinstein, a mandate that we take those of us who have legitimate social security numbers, assign us to radio stations that we are legally allowed to listen to further make it fair that the ideas presented are equal in content and ideology to both sides? Personally, I would rather join General George Washington, bear my long rifle, cross the Potomac River to fight enemies of our Constitutional rights, and die rather than have my Constitutional rights impaired any further by the elected representatives of the electorate.
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