By Stacy Cline on 9.11.09 @ 6:07AM
Efforts to keep corporations and the wealthy from influencing
politics will fail as long as the government hands out so many
goodies.
Government can give, and it can also take away. With $3.55
trillion in annual federal spending, $2.5 trillion in regulatory
compliance costs, and federal tax burdens of more than $2.9
trillion, every corporation has something to gain or lose in
modern elections. After the Citizens United argument
Wednesday, the Supreme Court seems poised to overturn campaign
finance prohibitions on direct corporate advocacy in elections.
Regardless of the outcome in this case, corporations will
continue to rent-seek in exactly the same ways they do now.
Citizens United started as a case about arcane campaign finance
laws prohibiting the video-on-demand distribution of a 90-minute,
anti-Hillary documentary paid for by an ideological, non-profit
corporation. In oral argument before the Supreme Court last
spring, the case suddenly became a lot more interesting: The
government conceded that Congress could ban the publication of a
book funded with corporate money, if the book included a call to
"vote for X."
The prospect of book banning obviously did not sit well with the
justices. The Supreme Court ordered re-argument to consider
whether it should overrule two of its previous cases --
Austin, which upheld a ban on corporate electoral
advocacy, and McConnell, which upheld McCain-Feingold's
ban on broadcast communications that mention candidates within so
many days of an election.
The essential issue in the case is now the scope of First
Amendment protection afforded to corporate speech. Political
speech is the core of the First Amendment, but do corporations
have a right to engage in such speech directly, rather than
through their political action committees? For example, do
corporations not only have a right to publish political advocacy
in books, but also to make "independent expenditures" on
television ads that support or oppose candidates.
The prevention of corruption and the appearance of corruption
have justified decades of campaign finance restrictions. But even
this rationale has proven insufficient to justify a ban on direct
expenditures by individuals. Wealthy individuals like George
Soros can spend millions in campaign advertisements, because
restricting these expenditures would strike a deathblow to the
First Amendment's core -- the right to speak your opinion and
persuade others about who should hold public office.
The conservative organization Citizens United argued that
corporations have political interests as well, and a right to
advocate on behalf of them. Trillions of dollars are at stake in
every election. Just as individuals vote on issues that affect
them -- taxes, environmental and energy policy, federal spending
-- so do corporations have a desire to elect candidates who are
knowledgeable about and have good records on issues that matter
to them. Congress and the President establish the regulatory and
legal environment in which corporations do business, setting the
tax and regulatory code, handing out government contracts to
some, creating new markets for some, and handing out subsidies to
others. A corporation's ability to survive could depend on who is
in office enacting what laws.
At the same time, corporations have an immense potential to
influence elections, and to use this influence to distort the
market in which they do business. Government operates as a sword
as well as a shield, and there are many ways in which large
corporations can use the government to procure favorable laws and
regulations to drive away competition, or to ensure their
survival where they might otherwise fail. This year's experience
with the auto-industry and financial services industry bailouts
should be enough to prove that. U.S. corporations' total net
worth was $23.5 trillion in 2005, and total spending in the 2008
election cycle was estimated at $5.3 billion. This leaves quite a
lot to be spent electing candidates who will advocate a
corporation's preferred positions on policy issues.
It seems clear that the Supreme Court will rule in favor of
Citizens United. It's just a matter of whether the Court will
rule narrowly (by exempting ideological, non-profit corporations
from the prohibition on independent expenditures, for example),
or whether it will rule broadly, prohibiting bans on corporate
independent expenditures. The Court has the necessary votes for
either option.
If the Court should opt for the latter, we are unlikely to see
any sweeping decay of our democracy. Corporations can already
spend (and do spend) mass amounts of funds on "issue
advertising." As long as advertisements don't use certain words
like "election" or "candidate" that trigger campaign finance
prohibitions, corporations can already spend limitless amounts of
money to thank candidates for their votes on S-CHIP or to urge
them to vote against health care reform. Moreover, corporate and
union PACs spent $840 million in the last election cycle, and the
institutional media, large corporate conglomerates all of them,
are exempt from the corporate spending prohibitions.
The government has proven itself a poor protector of the
"integrity" of the political process. Where there is gain to be
had, people will find a way to gain it; hence, every new campaign
finance law spawns its own set of loopholes. There is simply no
way to protect the political process from special interests when
seemingly all the government does is hand out benefits and
burdens in favor of one special interest and at the expense of
another. If Congress wants to protect the integrity of our
democracy, there is a clear solution: shrink the behemoth. The
less money there is to gain from political advocacy, the less
money will be spent.
topics:
Supreme Court, Citizens United, McCain-Feingold