By Philip Klein on 2.26.08 @ 12:40AM
Can he escape the tangled web of campaign finance regulation?
It is highly ironic that the father of campaign finance reform
would emerge as the presumptive Republican nominee only to find
himself embroiled in a controversy over whether he violated the
kind of strict regulations he long championed. But that is exactly
where John McCain finds himself.
The details of the controversy may be enough to make election
lawyers swoon and most normal people nod off, but they are worth
wading through because they provide yet another reminder of why the
over-regulated campaign finance system is absurd and needs to be
scrapped.
Last year, when McCain was struggling to remain a viable
candidate, he applied to be part of the public financing system,
which offers cash-strapped candidates the opportunity to use
taxpayer money to fund their campaigns (among other benefits), but
has the drawback of crippling spending restrictions.
As McCain racked up victories in early primaries, he no longer
had use for public financing. The day after he all but clinched the
nomination on Super Tuesday, his campaign sent a letter to the
Federal Election Commission in an attempt to withdraw from the
system.
The Democratic National Committee on Monday filed a lawsuit
challenging McCain's right to leave the system, arguing that even
though he never received federal money, he still derived benefits
from his special status.
If McCain is locked into the system, he will be limited to
spending a total of $54 million until he formally receives the
nomination at September's Republican National Convention. Since he
already has spent roughly $50 million, he would effectively be
handcuffed for six months.
So conservatives who enjoy seeing McCain suffer a campaign
finance-induced headache are in the unenviable position of siding
with DNC chairman Howard Dean.
THE McCAIN TEAM argues that because candidates including John
Kerry, Richard Gephardt, and Dean himself were allowed to withdraw
from the system, McCain has the right to do the same. But there are
several issues complicating whether McCain is legally out of the
public financing system.
While the FEC does allow a candidate who initially applied to be
part of the public financing system to withdraw if the candidate
hasn't received any money from the U.S. Treasury, one of the
conditions is that the candidate cannot use the potential to
collect funds as collateral for a loan.
In December, when the McCain campaign was still in financial
trouble, it took out a $1 million loan, and the loan agreement
included a pledge that if he did poorly in the New Hampshire
primary, he would reapply for federal funds.
According to several lawyers consulted by TAS, the
pledge he made in the agreement could be seen as "constructively"
using the prospect of federal funds as collateral, thus locking him
into the system, but the McCain campaign has insisted that it is on
solid legal ground because it didn't actually use as
collateral the matching fund certificates.
The next issue, of somewhat lesser significance, pertains to the
fact that McCain used his public financing certification to get on
the ballot in Ohio. When TAS asked McCain about this on a
Friday conference call with bloggers, he laughed, and said, "I'm
confident we could have gotten on the ballot under any
circumstances, so I don't know about whether we had to use that
vehicle or not."
But in actuality, getting on the ballot in Ohio is a monumental
task, requiring signatures in each Congressional District. The
campaigns of Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney, and Fred Thompson all
spent a lot of time and money to get on the ballot in the state,
but McCain was able to use his certification to coast through the
process back when his campaign was short of staff and cash.
Brad Smith, a former FEC commissioner who teaches at Capital
University Law School in Columbus, Ohio, argued that while ballot
access is a less pertinent issue than the issue of collateral, it
could still be used to build a larger case that McCain was "using
funds to gain an advantage."
THE OTHER COMPLICATION for McCain is that there are four vacancies
on the 6-member FEC, so the body cannot reach a quorum to rule on
the matter one way or another.
The McCain campaign insists that it has a constitutional right
to withdraw from the system, and that it doesn't need the FEC's
rubber stamp. But another legal view is that applying to be in the
public financing system is the equivalent of entering into a
contract in which terminating the agreement requires the consent of
both parties.
Adding to the irony is that part of the reason there aren't
enough FEC commissioners is that Barack Obama put a hold on one of
the Republican nominees last year.
Smith, who has been a fierce critic of burdensome campaign
finance regulations, said that the McCain campaign probably has the
better of the argument, but because this area of law is so new, the
issues raised remain open questions and McCain's case is not a
"slam dunk."
Clearly, McCain intends to ignore the spending restrictions and
operate as if he has legally withdrawn from the system. Smith
predicted that either the FEC will never be able to reach a quorum
during the election, at which point the case becomes moot, they
will convene and vindicate him, or in the worst case scenario,
McCain will be fined a maximum of $25,000 way down the road.
If anything, the issue will become a public relations problem
for him, Smith said. Even if he is cleared legally, it opens McCain
up to criticism that he hired clever lawyers to game the system,
which is exactly the type of practice that he has been railing
against for years.
But the bottom line to Smith is that it highlights how ludicrous
the current system is, which he said is wasting $200 million in
taxpayers' money every four years.
"The whole reason for taxpayer financing is that it's supposed
to make campaigns cleaner and alleviate these concerns about
corruption," Smith said. "But what did it do here? It's actually
creating concerns about corruption... It's kind of ridiculous. It's
counterproductive. It's supposed to free up candidates from
fundraising so they can talk about issues. But what are we talking
about? We're talking about compliance with arcane elements of
campaign law."
Earlier this month, it was Barack Obama who was taking heat from McCain for backing off a pledge
to enter the public financing system if his Republican opponent
agreed to do the same.
"The law has less to do with preventing corruption, and simply
is a tool, a weapon, that the candidates have that they can try to
beat each other up with if it's to their advantage," Smith
said.
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Constitution, Law, Oil