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Forum Post: Four Years After Citizens United: Is Campaign Cash Buying Justice in State Courts?

Posted 10 years ago on Jan. 22, 2014, 3:34 p.m. EST by LeoYo (5909)
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Four Years After Citizens United: Is Campaign Cash Buying Justice in State Courts?

Wednesday, 22 January 2014 09:05 By Mike Ludwig, Truthout | News Analysis

http://truth-out.org/news/item/21368-four-years-after-citizens-united-is-campaign-cash-buying-justice-in-state-courts

Four years ago this week, the Supreme Court ruled in Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission that the First Amendment prevents the government from restricting independent campaign spending by corporations. The ruling unleashed a deluge of campaign spending that made 2012 by far the most expensive election cycle in history, with nearly $1.3 billion spent independently from candidates' official campaigns.

We've all heard about the super-PACs and dark money nonprofit groups that have funneled millions from corporate and mega-rich donors into presidential and Congressional races, but now new research shows that outside spending has had a big impact on judicial races as well, raising concerns about state judges' ability to remain impartial in a political world where hefty chunks of campaign cash can make or break elections.

Thirty-eight states hold elections for seats on their supreme courts, including both direct elections and up-or-down votes to retain judges initially appointed by governors or other state officials. In the post-Citizens United election season of 2012, many state judicial races looked a lot like the brutal campaigns waged for Congressional and presidential candidates, with super-PACs paying for vicious attack ads and special interests raising millions of dollars of campaign funds.

Writing in dissent of the Citizens United ruling, former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens warned against the influence that outside spending could have on judicial campaigns. “At a time when concerns about the conduct of judicial elections have reached a fever pitch," Stevens wrote, "the Court today unleashes the floodgates of corporate and union general treasury spending in these races.”

Expensive efforts by special interest and business groups to campaign for friendly judges or win favors from prospective candidates with independent expenditures are nothing new. In 2006, pro-business groups were responsible for 90 percent of the television advertising in state judicial races, according to the American Constitution Society.

Television spending has only increased since the Citizens United ruling. Nationwide, the 2011 to 2012 cycle saw a record $33.7 million of spending on television ad spending on races for seats on state supreme courts, up from $26 million in the 2007 to 2008 cycle, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. Spending by independent special interest groups on television ads for or against high-court candidates accounted for 27 percent of total spending in these races, with business groups supporting many of these expenditures. In the 2004 election cycle, these groups accounted for only 16 percent of total spending.

More than 90 percent of judicial business in the United States is decided in state courts, and with business interests tangled up in much of the litigation, it's easy to understand why business groups are spending big on state judicial campaigns. Watchdog groups estimate that the pro-business US Chamber of Commerce spent $100 million between 2000 and 2003 on judicial campaigns, and from 2000 to 2004, 36 of the 40 justices the chamber supported were elected.

The campaign cash seems to be having an impact in the courtroom. Analysis by the American Constitution Society shows that the more money a state supreme court justice receives from business interests, the more likely they are to rule in favor of business litigants who show up in their courtroom. Further statistical analysis reveals that a justice who receives half of his or her contributions from business interests would be expected to rule in favor of business interests about two-thirds of the time.

Researchers also found that Democratic justices are more likely to be influenced by campaign contributions from pro-business groups than Republican justices, presumably because Republican justices are already ideologically predisposed to ruling in favor of business interests.

Such contributions are increasingly important to judges in a world where independent spenders toss millions of dollars into state judicial races, turning judicial elections into high stakes political theater. Unfortunately for voters, weak state laws often help keep special interests paying for television ads hidden from view. In Michigan, for example, the costs of the 2012 Supreme Court election were the highest in the country for the second election cycle in a row, but 75 percent of that spending - much of it on television ads - was not reported to state officials because of weak disclosure laws, according to the Michigan Campaign Finance Network.

Since 2010, 16 states and hundreds of local municipalities have called for a constitutional amendment to overturn the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision.

Copyright, Truthout.

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[-] 2 points by LeoYo (5909) 10 years ago

Citizens United Four Years Later

Wednesday, 22 January 2014 11:19 By Jaisal Noor, The Real News Network | Video Interview

http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/21386-citizens-united-four-years-later

TRANSCRIPT:

JAISAL NOOR, TRNN PRODUCER: This is The Real News, and I'm Jaisal Noor in Baltimore.

Tuesday marks the fourth anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision Citizens United. It was determined corporations and unions have the same free-speech rights as people, therefore removed restrictions on corporate and union spending on elections.

Now joining us to discuss the fourth anniversary of Citizens United is Richard Briffault. He's the Joseph P. Chamberlain Professor of Legislation at Columbia Law School. He's the author of many works, including Dollars and Democracy: A Blueprint for Campaign Finance Reform.

And just a note for our viewers: Richard is joining us on the phone due to technical difficulties.

Thank you so much for joining us, Richard.

RICHARD BRIFFAULT, PROFESSOR OF LEGISLATION, COLOMBIA LAW SCHOOL: Thank you for having me.

NOOR: So, Richard, four years after this historic, landmark Supreme Court decision, tell us exactly what has been the impact of this decision on elections in the United States.

BRIFFAULT: Okay. It's a little too hard to say that for everything. And often what happens with something like this is the impact is felt more dramatically sort of lower down in smaller elections in some jurisdictions. So, as you indicated, what Citizens United said was that corporations and unions now have the right to spend in unlimited amounts in elections. They still can't give to candidates, but they can spend on their own independently or, you know, with other groups.

We didn't see that much corporate money in the presidential election or in the congressional elections the last two times, in fact, and when we did see corporate money, it was often, you know, family businesses, closely held businesses, not big corporations. Very few Fortune 500 companies. There may be more of those involved at the state and local level, but that data, it hasn't been gathered as much.

In some odd ways, the corporations that are most active are actually nonprofit corporations, which have been able to serve as vehicles for the spending by very wealthy individuals, who could have spent before but would have been spending in a very open way. Now, by setting up super PACs, by setting up a 501(c)(4) nonprofit so-called groups for civic betterment, social welfare organizations, they can kind of mingle their money with other people's money under a group with a name like's Americans for Good Government and without being effectively disclosed. So the real upsurge has been less big business money, although there's some of that, and more actually in wealthy individuals, who legally could have done this before, but maybe now feel more comfortable doing it because they can run their money through nonprofit corporations.

NOOR: Now, Stephen Colbert had a hilarious range of skits about these super PACs.

~~~

NOOR: Right. Exactly.

BRIFFAULT: That's exactly the kind of name that these organizations use and that don't tell you anything about what they're about.

NOOR: And so what kind of scale of spending are we talking about here?

BRIFFAULT: Well, at the federal elections last time, we were talking in the, I don't know, $200-300 million range, which sounds like a lot, but it's actually still only a small percentage of the total amount of money in elections. So it's hard to say, because it's not all effectively reported. Probably--and even if it's more than that, it's probably not more than 10 or 15 percent of what was spent in the presidential congressional elections last time. There's still a huge amount of other money that's in the system.

NOOR: So a doomsday scenario, as some had predicted, would you agree hasn't quite materialized, at least yet?

BRIFFAULT: It hasn't materialized. I think most big companies, even though they clearly have the wealth, most what are called publicly held companies, companies that have shareholders and are traded on the stock exchange or stock exchanges are kind of nervous about being out there in a very public way. I don't know if you saw the incident involving the Target Corporation in Minnesota. They gave some money to an organization which in turn was using that money to support a candidate for governor. Their view was that he was good for them on business issues. But he also had a very kind of an anti-gay rights, anti-marriage equality platform. And they prided themselves on being pro-equality, and they were very embarrassed by it. And I think the example of--and there was a boycott, there was a lot of attention to it. I think the example of what can happen with bad publicity may mean that many corporations are reluctant to get involved--not 100 percent, but you don't see very many big companies getting directly involved in at least federal elections.

NOOR: And I think it's important to, you know, bring up the point for those that did predict or do say that we're in this kind of--we're in a situation where we won't have democracy until this is repealed. What's your response to that? Because there's always been money in politics in America.

BRIFFAULT: Yeah. I think actually it's the wrong target to aim at. It's not the corporations. It's the money. And it's not only corporations that have a lot of money in our system. You know, in the last election, the biggest spenders, you know, the people who pumped $100 million of their own money into the election, were individuals. You know, a single wealthy couple put $100 million dollars in the election. That's a lot of money. And there are people in this country who have that much money. So all you need is a handful of extremely wealthy people. And if you only target corporations, you're also missing other very wealthy individuals.

NOOR: And we always like to talk about solutions on The Real News. Talk about what is being done around the country to challenge this and what can happen. Just what are the laws, as far as the laws that states can pass, to limit spending in local but also federal elections?

BRIFFAULT: Okay. Well, given the current Supreme Court, unless there's a constitutional amendment or unless there's a dramatic change in the Court, neither of which I expect in the near future--and it's very hard to get a constitutional amendment passed, and certainly the current Congress is not going to even take the first step. Leaving aside a dramatic change in constitutional law, you can't limit spending. So the two kinds of strategies that are being pursued at the state and local level--'cause, again, Congress is not going to do anything in the near-term--one is better disclosure of the money that's out there and trying to reach these secretive organizations, the dark-money organizations that tell you--the Americans for a Better Tomorrow, who say, okay, we just spent $10 million, but won't tell you where they're getting their money. And many states are moving to improve disclosure of those people.

Second is public funding, which doesn't limit the amount of money the rich or that corporations can spend, but to some extent can dilute its impact by giving other candidates money that's--taking small donations and matching it, often multiple match, a 4-to-1 or a 5-to-1 match, in a way that empowers relatively small people, people with small resources, is the second thing.

And third, some states are doing a lot of work on what's called pay-to-play, lowering the ability of people who do business with the government--government contractors and others--to give money in connection with elections. It's not clear whether they can extend that to this independent spending, but that would be something that could be tried.

So those would be the three things--better disclosure of these independent groups, more public funding, which, again, doesn't stop anybody from putting money in but, hopefully, dilutes the impact, and some kind of targeted restrictions, particularly on people who have direct stakes in government action 'cause they do business with government.

NOOR: And there's also a move to amend this Supreme Court decision.

BRIFFAULT: There's a move to amend the Constitution. That's a long-term strategy, which is--nothing wrong with that, but I think you've got to be prepared to spend a very long time on that. To amend the Constitution, you've got to get it through--get two-thirds majorities in both houses of Congress. You know, the current constitution, you're not going to get it for sure through one of the houses of Congress [incompr.] Congress. Now, that Congress can change. And then you've got to get it passed, ratified by three-quarters of the states. So this is definitely a long-term strategy and not something that's going to happen any time soon. But it's--you know, I'm not saying people shouldn't try it. I'm just saying it's a long-term strategy.

NOOR: Well, thank you so much for joining us.

BRIFFAULT: Okay. Glad to be helpful.

NOOR: You can follow us @therealnews on Twitter. Tweet me questions and comments @jaisalnoor.

Thank you so much for joining us.

This piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license.