As if America's corporatist politicians weren't already bought and sold the United States Supreme Court may be about to open the doors to total and absolute political corruption in American politics. The top court is being asked to strike down caps on individual donations to U.S. politicians. Team Koch - line up over here.
This latest case
threatens to demolish even the modest control that government has over
direct contributions. In McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission,
Shaun McCutcheon, a political activist in Alabama, contributed to 16
different candidates in federal races in 2011-12. He also contributed to
the Republican National Committee, the National Republican Senatorial
Committee, the National Republican Congressional Committee, a committee
called the Senate Conservatives Fund and the federal committee of the
Alabama Republican Party.
But he had wanted to donate to 12 other candidates and to contribute up
to $25,000 to each of the Republican organizations. Doing so would have
violated the overall caps in a two-year cycle — $46,200 on contributions
to candidates and their committees and $70,800 on contributions to
other political committees. Mr. McCutcheon and his allies are not
challenging the limits on contributions to individuals, like $2,500 per
election to any candidate. Instead, they contend that aggregate limits
are too low and that the caps in general are simply unconstitutional.
The 2010 Citizens United
decision and other rulings since have allowed unlimited independent
spending by corporations and unions and individual contributions to
political action committees to flow into political campaigns. But, in
Citizens United, the court chose not to review limits on contributions.
This case is the first since that ruling for the court to address the
constitutionality of caps on donations. It can either recognize the
difference between independent spending and contributions or blow up a
central piece of what remains of campaign finance regulation.
In reviewing this case, the Supreme Court justices should heed the
central message of the Buckley v. Valeo decision. “Congress was surely
entitled to conclude,” the court wisely said, that overall limits on
contribution are needed “to deal with the reality or appearance of
corruption inherent in a system permitting unlimited financial
contributions, even when the identities of the contributors and the
amounts of their contributions are fully disclosed.”
Oliver Stone described it out years ago.
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