CFI will become part of the National Institute on Money in Politics

Big and exciting news in the election law biz, combining two very important organizations collecting and analyzing campaign finance data:

The National Institute on Money in State Politics (National Institute) and the Campaign Finance Institute (CFI) jointly announced today that they have reached an agreement that will strengthen our democracy’s infrastructure.

CFI will go out of business as a separate organization in early July and reemerge as a division within the National Institute.1 The National Institute will drop the word “State” from its name to become known as the “National Institute on Money in Politics” (NIMP). Edwin Bender will remain NIMP’s executive director. Michael J. Malbin, currently the executive director of CFI, will be director of the CFI division within NIMP.

“Years ago, we recognized CFI as a unique leader in producing high-quality analyses of our campaign-finance systems. They excel at using data to ground the reform debates in reality,” Bender said. “CFI’s Citizens Policy Analyst tool was visionary in how it lets everyday citizens see how small-dollar donor policies can shift the incentives to encourage more candidate-to-voter interactions. We’re excited and humbled that CFI is joining us as we work to increase transparency in our elections and public policy processes, and to build a strong data-focused foundation for the healthy evolution of our democracy.”

Malbin, who is also a professor of political science at the University at Albany (SUNY), added: “CFI has been collaborating with NIMP for years, starting with CFI’s groundbreaking research on small donors, which was often built up from NIMP’s data. During that time we both realized how much more we could do if we integrated our data, experience, knowledge, and skills. The synergies are obvious to those of us who have worked together. CFI’s becoming part of NIMP offers huge opportunities for advancing the field – well beyond anything we at CFI could have imagined if we continued trying to do it all on our own.”

NIMP has been promoting an accountable democracy for nearly two decades by compiling and standardizing comprehensive campaign-donor, lobbyist, and other information from all fifty states and the federal government. CFI has also been at work for nearly two decades, earning a reputation as the nation’s preeminent think tank on money in politics.

Nesting CFI within NIMP raises this collaboration to a new level. Each organization has done valuable work separately by using the differences among states to help understand the effects of federal, state, and local campaign laws. The expanded NIMP will have the resources and skills not only to continue, but to look at more jurisdictions and more programs more deeply. It will bring new data and new research to produce new insights. The results will continue to inform scholars and journalists. It will also guide agencies, lawmakers, activists, and others to develop more effective policies. Our democracy will be the better for it.

1 NOTE: CFI will maintain its separate website (www.cfinst.org) through 2018.

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“ACLU seeks $51K for fight with Kobach that led to contempt finding”

Topeka Capital Journal:

The American Civil Liberties Union is asking for more than $50,000 in compensation for hours spent fighting Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach over issues that led to his contempt of court finding.

U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson ordered Kobach’s office to pay for attorney fees and expenses when she ruled last month that Kobach ignored her orders after she blocked enforcement of the state’s voter registration law. Kobach has filed a notice with the court saying he intends to appeal her decision.

Kobach failed to follow through on a promise to Robinson that counties would send postcards notifying people they could vote, even if they failed to show proof of citizenship when they registered. He continued to fight the notion that postcards were necessary until the day of his contempt hearing, which followed a trial in which he struggled to prove claims of widespread voter fraud.

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“Republicans Make Moves To Crush Gerrymandering Reform”

TPM:

With anti-gerrymandering efforts gaining steam, Republicans in some states are mobilizing to protect their ability to continue rigging election maps.

In late April, a Republican group backed by the Michigan Chamber of Commerce sued to keep a popular redistricting reform measure off the state’s November ballot. Arizona’s GOP-controlled legislature last week narrowly failed to pass a bill that would have given the party much more control over the map-drawing process. And Pennsylvania Republicans, who recently mulled impeaching a group of state judges who struck down their gerrymander, this week gutted reform legislation.

Following the 2010 Census, the GOP used its control of key redistricting battlegrounds to draw district lines that have given it a major advantage in elections this decade. In response, voters frustrated by recent elections’ skewed outcomes have launched grassroots movements to fix the process before the next round of legislative and congressional map-drawing gets underway in 2021.

The biggest battle, of course, is at the Supreme Court, which since last fall has heard two different challenges to partisan gerrymandering and could issue a major ruling on the issue in the coming months. And the GOP has joined the fight there, too: Among the groups that submitted briefs to the court arguing in favor of protecting lawmakers’ right to gerrymander are the Republican National Committee, the National Republican Congressional Committee, and the Republican State Leadership Committee.

But it’s the state-level efforts that lately have taken center stage.

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“Rosie O’Donnell’s campaign donations to Dems went over legal limit”

NY Post:

Rosie O’Donnell made illegally over-sized campaign donations to at least five Democratic federal candidates, according to a Post analysis of campaign filings.

The liberal comedian has regularly broken Federal Election Commission rules limiting the total any one person can give to an individual candidate at $2,700 per election. The limit applies separately to primaries, runoffs and general elections.

“Nothing nefarious,” the outspoken star and Donald Trump arch-nemesis wrote in an email to the Post. “I was not choosing to over donate.

“If 2700 is the cut off — [candidates] should refund the money,” she wrote. “I don’t look to see who I can donate most to … I just donate assuming they do not accept what is over the limit.”

O’Donnell said she donates often, and uses the online liberal fundraising platform ActBlue. “My anxiety is quelled by donating to those opposing trump [and] his agenda — especially at night — when most of these were placed.”

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If NY AG Schneiderman Resigns, Because of Physical Abuse Allegations, What Happens Next Politically?

Given the horrific report coming out of Jane Mayer and Ronan Farrow’s New Yorker reporting on NY AG Eric Schneiderman, a number of people have asked me what happens next politically.

I’ve just taken an initial glance, and welcome corrections to the following:

To begin with, if Schneiderman resigns, the NY Constitution Article V provides that the state legislature fills the vacancy until the next gubernatorial election. It looks like Article VI, section 24 allows for impeachment of any officers, but I’d have to do more research to confirm this is correct.

The AG office is up for election this November. It appears that the deadline for nominating petitions for the party primary is July 12, though it appears those officially nominated by the Democratic party state committee may not need petitions.

Update: Schneiderman resigns.

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“Connecticut lawmakers vote to join popular vote pact”

AP:

Connecticut’s General Assembly has voted to join a group of states that want to pool their Electoral College votes for the presidential candidate who wins the popular vote.

The Senate on Saturday voted 21-14 to enter the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. The bill already cleared the House of Representatives and now moves to Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, who supports the concept.

Connecticut would be the 12th jurisdiction — a combination of 11 states and the District of Columbia — to join the pact.

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“CFI Launches 2018 Web Tool For Independent Spending in Primaries”

Release:

Independent expenditures (IEs) will be playing a significant role again in select House and Senate primaries leading up to the midterm election. And the Campaign Finance Institute will once again be tracking that spending through a primary tracking tool on its website. The tool shows candidate receipts and independent spending together for each race, including the aggregate amount each group is spending for and against the candidates. The IEs are updated almost daily. It is also possible to track each group’s expenditures in detail by clicking the group’s name.

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“Donald Trump, John Edwards, and the Mistress Loophole; Maybe Rudy Giuliani knows what he’s doing after all.”

Stephen Weissman for the American Interest:

One can imagine how Lowell’s argument would be grasped by counsel defending Cohen and Trump. So would other statements about the Edwards case by former FEC Commissioners. Before the trial, Thomas and another Democratic Commissioner retained by the defense were shown the government indictment charging that Edwards orchestrated the payments for electoral purposes. Nevertheless, they wrote, the payments “would not be considered campaign contributions or expenditures under the law” and the FEC would agree “if asked.” At the same time, Republican Commissioner (and current White House counsel) Don McGahn agreed the donations were “not reportable.” Concerning the Daniels payment, President Trump has stated, “There were no campaign funds going into this.” This is the Edwards defense: “third party” financial arrangements over an alleged affair outside the formal campaign are never contributions.

Prosecutors attempted to surmount this legal argument by showering the jury with facts and inferences indicating that one purpose of the payments was to influence the election. But they lacked “smoking guns”: strongly corroborated witnesses, thoroughly incriminating recorded conversations and documents, self-damning testimony from the principals (Neither donor appeared—one had died and the other, a 101-year-old, was excused—and Edwards declined to testify). The defense cast “reasonable doubt” on the donations’ having anything to do with elections. It challenged the truthfulness of eyewitness testimony by Edwards’ close aide. Most important, it offered evidence of donors’ strong personal friendships with Edwards, suggesting that they might have helped him regardless of the campaign and asserted that Edwards’ only purpose was to hide the affair from his wife.

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“Trump Undercuts Giuliani About Payments to Stormy Daniels”

President Trump undercut his attorney, Rudolph W. Giuliani, on Friday, and said the former New York mayor will eventually get the facts right regarding a payment to a pornographic actress who said she had an affair with Mr. Trump.

Everything “has been said incorrectly,” Mr. Trump said, blaming the media coverage and Mr. Giuliani’s short time on the job.

“It’s actually very simple,” the president said, without elaboration.

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Florida: “Police use saliva to arrest Casselberry man on voter-fraud charges”

Orlando Sentinel:

State and local investigators said they used fingerprints and DNA from saliva found on five mail-in ballots to track down a Casselberry man and charge him with voter fraud.

Bret Warren, 36, was arrested Wednesday and booked into the Seminole County Jail on several other charges, including possession of oxycodone.

“It’s really an interesting case in how we were able to find him,” said Evelyn Estevez, a public information officer for the Altamonte Springs Police Department.

In October 2016, days before the general election, several residents of the Spring Valley neighborhood in Altamonte Springs reported to the Seminole County Supervisor of Elections Office that they had not received their absentee ballots.

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“After Garland Defeat, New Group Hopes to Draw Democrats to Judicial Battlefield”

NYT on an important new effort:

Democrats learned the hard way in 2016 that the right is much more animated by judicial fights after Republicans’ refusal to consider the Supreme Court nomination of Merrick B. Garland helped rally conservative voters behind Donald J. Trump so he could fill a vacancy held open for nearly a year.

Now a new group is emerging on the left in an aggressive effort to counter that imbalance. Demand Justice, a nonprofit being formed by veterans of Capitol Hill, the White House and the Clinton and Obama campaigns, hopes to become a permanent fixture motivating progressive voters on issues related to the federal judiciary while influencing the Senate on judicial nominees.

The organization, which expects to raise $10 million in its first year, is not planning to devote its energy to changing the views of Republicans. It instead wants to instill the same kind of zeal in progressives when it comes to the courts, to make the argument that in the current political environment, it is the federal courts that are the final authority on issues important to progressives such as immigration, abortion, gay rights, social policy, the environment and corporate power, to name a few.

The group will be led by Brian Fallon, the former spokesman for Hillary Clinton who had previously worked at the Justice Department and on Capitol Hill for Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader. He said he is giving up a role as a television analyst to concentrate on the new push.

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“Google sets new rules for U.S. election ads”

Axios:

The gritty details: Under Google’s new rules, people or groups who want to advertise in elections will have to go through a process that includes producing a “government-issued ID” as well as other information, like a Federal Election Commission identification number and an IRS Employer Identification Number. Google says it aims to confirm that buyers are who they say they are and can legally participate in American elections.

  • Advertisers can go through the verification process starting at the end of May, and Google will start enforcing the new rules on July 10, the company said.
  • The new requirements will apply to ads featuring candidates for federal office or current officeholders in the United States.
  • Google will also start requiring these ads to carry a disclosure that says who paid for them.

Yes, but: The new policy will not cover ads that relate to politically contentious issues rather than a candidate, which was the case for many of the online ads placed by Russian operatives trying to interfere in the 2016 election. The company says it is looking at following Facebook in tightening restrictions on those ads as well.

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“Tennessee Officials Are Trying To Get To The Bottom Of An Election Night Cyberattack”

Sam Levine for HuffPo:

Officials in Knox County, Tennessee, are trying to gather more information about a cyberattack that crashed a government website that displayed election results to the public during its primary election for local offices on Tuesday.

Dick Moran, the county’s top IT official, believes Knox County was the target of a denial-of-service attack in which actors with both domestic and foreign IP addresses deliberately flooded the county’s servers with traffic to try and crash them. The county website displaying election results went down for about an hour as polls closed on Tuesday. The crash meant that people who went to check election results between 8 and 9 p.m. on election night received an error message, according to the Knoxville News Sentinel. While the website was down, election officials printed out hard copies of the election results and gave them to reporters, WBIR, a local NBC affiliate, reported.

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“House: Democrats Risk Disaster in California’s Top Two Primaries”

David Wasserman for the Cook Political Report:

Republicans badly need a few lucky breaks to hold their House majority in November. So far in 2018, it’s been the opposite story — from an unfriendly new Pennsylvania map to Speaker Paul Ryan’s retirement and bleak special election results. But with five weeks to go before California’s June 5 primary, Democrats are at risk of squandering several seats that would otherwise appear to be golden pickup opportunities.

Democrats’ path to a majority depends on California more than any other state: they have excellent chances in seven GOP seats that Hillary Clinton carried in 2016, and a few more could be long shots in a wave. But in at least four districts, Democratic over-enthusiasm has produced crowded fields that could lock Democrats out of the fall race altogether.

Under California’s unorthodox “top two” primary system — first implemented in 2012 — all candidates appear on the same June primary ballot and the top two finishers, regardless of party, advance to a November runoff. In 2012, catastrophe struck Democrats when their top candidate in the new 31st CD, Pete Aguilar, took third place in the primary behind two Republicans, locking them out of a highly winnable race (Aguilar won the seat in 2014).

The same fate could befall other Democrats in 2018. In the 39th, 48th and 49th districts — all Orange County GOP seats that voted for Clinton — the “blue wave” has generated throngs of viable Democratic candidates in districts where GOP voters traditionally make up a majority of the primary vote. And while Democrats have struggled to break out of their packs, there are at least two viable Republican candidates on the ballot in each of those races.

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Stormy Watch

In addition to my Slate piece from last night, here are some notable contributions:

USA Today: Trump could face more legal trouble after confirming he repaid Michael Cohen, watchdogs say

WSJ: Trump’s Payment to Stormy Daniels Raises Campaign-Finance Questions

The Atlantic: Giuliani’s Defense Only Intensifies the Legal Risks for Trump

CPI, Donald Trump, Michael Cohen and the Stormy Daniels payment: a Q&A

Politifact: The $130,000 Stormy Daniels payoff: Was it a campaign expenditure?

 

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“Regulating Campaign Finance through Legislative Recusal Rules”

Gene Mazo has posted this draft on SSRN (forthcoming, Timothy K. Kuhner and Eugene D. Mazo (eds.), Democracy by the People: Reforming Campaign Finance in America). Here is the abstract:

Each time reformers have sought to regulate campaign finance by statute, they have witnessed their efforts unravel before the Supreme Court. Given the Court’s hostility toward campaign finance restrictions, some scholars have come to view the legislative path as littered with pitfalls and have begun advocating for campaign finance solutions that are not legislative in nature. Congress does not need to pass a statue to address the problems of our campaign finance system. Instead, it can simply turn to its internal procedural rules. Such procedural rules are easier to pass, and they can be designed to have many of the same regulatory effects as more traditional statutory reforms. Moreover, Congress’s legislative procedural rules are much harder to subject to judicial review. As such. using legislative procedural rules to regulate money in politics may provide a path for Congress to get around some of the recent problems that its statutory reforms have faced.

One particular innovation that Congress could use to regulate campaign finance is legislative recusal. Legislative recusal rules, enacted separately in the House and Senate, would preclude members of each chamber from voting on any legislation that presents a member of Congress with a significant conflict of interest. For example, if a Super PAC spends a large sum of money to run ads on behalf of a candidate and its funders happen to have a strong interest in a specific piece of legislation, that congressional candidate, once elected to office, would be deemed to have a conflict and would be precluded from voting on such legislation.

In the early days of our republic, the very first House of Representatives adopted a legislative recusal rule. Today, legislative recusal rules exist in many state legislatures. Recusal rules are also common for judges and found throughout the judiciary, both at the state and at the federal level. The Senate and House have very different procedural rules, and legislative recusal rules that address campaign finance would have to be adopted separately in each house. A model for what these rules might look like could be borrowed from the judiciary. Importantly, because such recusal rules, in regulating the vote of a member of Congress, would only control legislative “outputs,” they would not interfere with the ability of donors or spenders to do what they wish with their money. As such, they would not impinge on anyone’s First Amendment rights. This is one of the most important reasons why campaign finance reformers should champion this path.

There has recently been a growing literature on how private ordering and private action can be used to make independent expenditure spending prohibitively expensive. For example, Ganesh Sitaraman has written about how private contracting between political candidates can be used to influence outside independent expenditure spending. Similarly, Nick Warshaw has explained how “super PAC insurance” can be used to threaten outside expenditure groups, whose spending activity would trigger an insurance premium payout to a candidate and thus provide the insured candidate with greater spending in response. These and other private ordering innovations seek to make it more expensive for independent expenditure groups to influence the outcome of an electoral campaign. Private ordering schemes are designed to ratchet up the cost of independent expenditures and make it more painful for entities like Super PACs to function.

Legislative recusal rules have similar goals. Such rules seek to diminish the influence that any particular political spender has. They do so by separating independent campaign spending from the ability of the officeholder to vote in favor of the spender’s legislative goals. If politicians are not able to vote for the financial interests of those who support them, we would have to worry less about donors and spenders trying to influence politicians nefariously, for the legislative votes of those who are the recipients of a donor’s or spender’s largesse would be taken away.

In 2000, John Copeland Nagle wrote about how legislative recusal rules could be used to combat the possible corruption that comes from large campaign contributions. Nagle proposed a solution whereby contributors should be allowed to give whatever they wish to political candidates, but successful candidates would then have to recuse themselves from voting on any legislation that directly affects those interests. More recently, Justin Levitt has suggested that legislative recusal rules might be used to combat independent expenditure spending as well, by making a winning candidate ineligible to take legislative action unusually benefiting the sponsor of the expenditure in question. Despite the efforts of these able scholars, however, our theory and knowledge of how legislative recusal rules should work in practice remains largely underdeveloped.

This article discusses how legislative recusal rules should be implemented in each house of Congress, how these rules should be structured to regulate campaign finance, and what advantages such rules have over statutory reforms. Part I discusses the source of Congress’s internal procedural rules and how controversies concerning legislative procedure have been handled by the courts. Part II looks at the judicial recusal rules used by the judiciary, as well as at some of the criticisms levied against current judicial recusal mechanisms. Part III proposes a system of regulating campaign finance through the adoption of legislative recusal rules in Congress. It addresses questions concerning when such recusal rules should take effect, what activities would trigger them, and who would make the decision of whether a legislator must recuse himself in a particular instance. Finally, Part IV discusses the procedures that would need to be followed in each house of Congress for the rules proposed here to be adopted.

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“Rudy Giuliani May Have Just Implicated President Trump In Serious Campaign Finance Violations”

I have written this piece for Slate. It begins:

Donald Trump’s new lawyer Rudy Giuliani took to Sean Hannity’s Fox News program Wednesday night to defend the president from the ongoing Mueller investigation and to calm the waters for the Trump faithful.

But it looks like he’s gotten the president into potentially greater legal jeopardy by admittingthat Trump repaid his fixer Michael Cohen for the $130,000 payment to adult film performer Stormy Daniels to keep her quiet, seemingly contradicting the president and potentially implicating Trump and his campaign in some serious campaign finance violations.

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“Josh Kaul criticizes Attorney General Brad Schimel over voter ID comments and handling of rape kits”

Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel:

Democratic candidate for attorney general Josh Kaul criticized Wisconsin’s top cop Wednesday, saying he had made ludicrous comments about voter ID, had failed to test rape kits and hadn’t taken action to keep the internet moving at the same speed for everyone.

Attorney General Brad Schimel last month suggested President Donald Trump would not have won Wisconsin without the state’s voter ID law.

With those comments, Schimel had admitted the law was designed to prevent people from voting, Kaul maintained in his first news conference of his campaign.

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Breaking: Ninth Circuit Denies Rehearing En Banc in Montana Campaign Contributions Case, Teeing Up Issue for Possible Supreme Court Review

Back in October, I wrote the following:

In Major Victory in Case with National Significance, Ninth Circuit on 2-1 Vote Upholds Montana Contribution Limits; Judge Bea Would Appear to Hold *All* Limits Unconstitutional

In Lair v. Motl, a case I have been closely watching, the Ninth Circuit on a 2-1 vote reversed a district court decision and upheld Montana’s contribution limits.

The case is of course important to Montana, but it has national ramifications because the theory accepted by the trial court (and in part by a 9th Circuit motions panel) would have required very specific evidence of bribery-like corruption to sustain virtually any contribution limit. It would have had the effect of bringing down those limits wherever the precedent was applied.  In today’s opinion by Judge Fisher, the court reaffirms the much laxer standard of review that has applied to contribution limits in the past, including in cases like Shrink Missouri, and even the later Randall case.

Judge Bea in dissent believes that the Supreme Court’s decisions in Citizens United and McCutcheon change everything, and that virtually all contribution limits now fail strict scrutiny (this, despite the fact that Citizens United expressly said it had nothing to say about contribution limits).  From Judge Bea:

In footnote 5, the majority opinion notes that “[u]nder the dissent’s logic…Montana’s evidence is inadequate to justify any contribution limit whatsoever, no matter how high.” This is quite correct. Absent a showing of the existence or appearance of quid pro quo corruption based on objective evidence, the presence of a subjective sense that there is a risk of such corruption or its appearance does not justify a limit on campaign contributions. Restrictions on speech must be based on fact, not conjecture.

Whether the Supreme Court would go so far as Judge Bea is uncertain. But because any review would come up to the Supreme Court on a discretionary cert. petition, it may be hard to get the Court to bite on taking a case which would have such major ramifications for campaign financing in this country (particularly because many cases come up to the Court on non-discretionary appeals).

Today the 9th Circuit denied rehearing en banc. Judge Ikuta, for five judges wrote a dissent, to which Judges Fisher and Murguia responded. Judge Ikuta did not go as far as Judge Bea did in the panel decision. Instead she says that the Supreme Court’s opinions in Citizens United and McCutcheon have changed the Court’s approach to considering evidence of corruption to sustain a campaign contribution law.

Judge Ikuta’s dissent hits on an unresolved question. There are a number of campaign contribution cases, such as Shrink Missouri, decided when the Court was much more deferential to campaign finance regulations and much more willing to let states and localities support contribution limits with a little bit of evidence. No doubt these cases are in tension with McCutcheon, but McCutcheon did not overrrule these cases. And so judges like today divide on what to do.

The Supreme Court could well grant cert. in this case to resolve the ambiguity. The result, under the current Court, would almost certainly be to call into question all campaign contribution limits (as indicated in the Judge Fisher/Judge Murguia response). For that reason, the Court could decide to take a pass, as it has to the multiple challenges to the soft money provisions of the McCain-Feingold law which Jim Bopp has brought to the Court (he’s behind this one too).

In other words: if the Court decides this case following the jurisprudence it has been adopting in the campaign finance cases, it is hard to see how it will conclude many campaign contribution limits will stand. For this reason, the Court may not want to go down that road, given how disruptive and crazy such a ruling would be.

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“Corruption Is Bad; A new proposal would actually do something about it.”

HuffPo:

This paucity of serious work is not an accident. Think tanks themselves are meant to influence the political process, and think tanks have to get their funding somewhere. Some of the worst Washington corruption scandals in recent years have involved think tanks leveraging their reputations to help corporate donors.

So the latest policy proposal from the liberal-leaning Roosevelt Institute deserves special attention. Authored by incoming federal trade commissioner Rohit Chopra as he awaited Senate confirmation for his new post, the paper marks the first comprehensive attempt to rethink federal anti-corruption policy in years ― maybe since the Watergate era. Instead of focusing on campaign contributions and elections, Chopra takes a look at the way special interests exercise undue influence over the federal bureaucracy and the broader policy debate in Washington.

“We can’t just address money in politics,” Chopra told HuffPost. “We have to address money in government.”

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“Secret Donors Lose Round as Court Expedites FEC Disclosure Case”

Bloomberg BNA:

The federal appeals court in Washington will quickly review whether to keep secret the identity of “John Doe” plaintiffs trying to prevent the Federal Election Commission from revealing their role in campaign spending.
Briefing in the case, known as John Doe v. FEC, is set to be completed by July 2, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ordered. The order followed a motion for expedited consideration from FEC lawyers, who said “the commission and the public have an unusual interest in expedited review” of the disclosure issues involved in the case.
One of the secret plaintiffs, known as John Doe 2, “was the undisputed source of the contribution at issue,” according to the FEC’s motion to speed up the case. The plaintiffs funneled $1.7 million to a super-political action committee through a well-known nonprofit, the American Conservative Union, which was falsely reported as the source of the contribution.
The super-PAC, called Now or Never PAC, spent more than $8 million, mostly on TV ads, opposing Democrats in the 2012 and 2014 elections.
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ACS Phone Briefing Today: Judicial Gerrymandering? The Voting Rights Act, Judicial Elections, and Redistricting

Details:

Judicial Gerrymandering? The Voting Rights Act, Judicial Elections, and Redistricting

May 2, 2018
01:00 PM – 02:00 PM
 
Event Location:
ACS Webinar
,
  

Details:

In recent weeks, the North Carolina General Assembly has proposed redrawing the map of the state’s District and Superior courts. Analysis of one proposed new map found it to be a racial and partisan gerrymander, with significant population deviations. The changes would “double-bunk” incumbent judges, reducing the number of judges of color in the state.   

With that context in mind, this call will provide an overview of Voting Rights Act jurisprudence as it relates to judicial elections. It will also cover the status of recent litigation challenging judicial districts under the VRA, such as Terrebonne Parish NAACP v. Jindal, and Alabama NAACP v. Alabama. Finally, the call will discuss the importance of a diverse judiciary and independent state courts, and how judicial redistricting can promote or undermine those aims. 

Speakers:
Leah Aden, Senior Counsel, NAACP-LDF
Kareem Crayton, Executive Director, Southern Coalition for Social Justice
Ezra Rosenberg, Co-Director, Voting Rights Project, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law

RSVP here

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“Open-seat House hopefuls spend millions”

Open Secrets reports:

The growing number of departures by House incumbents this cycle is leaving a Wild West of open-seat races, some of which feature deep-pocketed candidates elbowing for a two-year stint in Congress.

The top self-funded candidates so far include familiar faces from elections’ past, such as Trone and Flinn, both of whom spent millions in failed House bids two years ago. And new ones, such as former California Mega Millions Lottery winner Gil Cisneros, a Democrat who appears to be the party’s pick in a congested primary race.

The 400-plus House candidates running for open seats this year have spent more than $32 million on their campaigns. Fourteen have spent at least $500,000.

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“Kobach can pay contempt costs with state money, after lawmakers drop ban”

KC Star:

Kansas lawmakers have abandoned an effort to force Secretary of State Kris Kobach to pay out of his own pocket the costs of being held in contempt of court.

The decision ended a looming showdown between Kobach and the Legislature over who is on the hook financially. Kobach was dressed down by a federal judge during a civil trial over voter rights and ordered to pay attorney fees for the plaintiffs in the case.

The Legislature’s decision to drop the effort means Kobach will be able to use state money to pay any fines stemming from being found in contempt.

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“U.S. District Court Puts Congressman Doug Lamborn on Colorado Republican Primary Ballot”

BAN:

On May 1, U.S. District Court Judge Philip Brimmer issued a 25-page order in Goodall v Williams, 1:18cv-980. The order enjoins the Secretary of State of Colorado from enforcing the state’s ban on out-of-state circulators for candidate petitions. It also puts Congressman Doug Lamborn, a Republican who is running for re-election, back on the Republican primary ballot. The Colorado Supreme Court had removed him last week because it had found that he used petitioners who were not Colorado residents. But the Colorado Supreme Court had said nothing about the constitutionality of the ban on out-of-state petitioners.

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“New Report on Impact of Seattle’s Democracy Voucher Program on Candidates’ Ability to Rely on Constituents for Fundraising”

Release:

Today, Free Speech For People released a new issue report on The Impact of Seattle’s Democracy Voucher Program on Candidates’ Ability to Rely on Constituents for Fundraising.

In 2015, Seattle voters enacted a novel democracy voucher program for public campaign financing. The objective of this analysis was to examine whether the democracy voucher program, first used in the 2017 election, led to candidates relying more on constituents, as opposed to non-constituent donors from other parts of the state or country, for their campaign funding. As we have explained, when political candidates rely on non-constituent donors for a significant portion of their campaign funding, democratic self-government may be affected because the policies and preferences of non-constituent donors often differ from those of constituents.

The results indicate that candidates who chose to participate in the voucher program raised a notably higher percentage of their funds from constituents than the typical percentages raised in pre-voucher elections, or by non-voucher-funded 2017 candidates. Before the voucher program, recent candidates for Seattle city office generally raised 65-80% of their funds from in-city. In the first voucher election, the two citywide (at-large) city council positions up for election saw a dramatic increase in the percentage of contributions from Seattle residents, with 93% or more of contributions coming from in-city. The city attorney candidate who participated in the voucher program saw a similar increase into the 90% in-city range from 2009 to 2017. In contrast, candidates who did not use the voucher program—either because they chose not to participate in the program, or ran in the mayoral race, which was not eligible for vouchers—raised funds in-city consistent with pre-voucher levels.

The overall trend is clear. The democracy voucher program enables candidates to raise the vast majority of their funds from constituents, as opposed to out-of-city donors.

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Maryland Appellate Blog: “The Democracy Canon and the Oaks Ballot Dispute”

Steve Klepper:

The Maryland high court is about to hear, on emergency briefing, the appeal in Lamone v. Lewin. The administrator of the State Board of Elections is challenging the April 26 injunction requiring that former state senator Nathaniel Oaks’ name be removed from the June primary ballot.

The Court granted certiorari on Friday. The parties filed opening briefs on Monday and reply briefs on Tuesday, with arguments Wednesday. The briefs are available here.

The briefing is superb on both sides. Julia Doyle Bernhardt and Andrea Trento, with the Office of the Attorney General, and Mark Sitchel and Elizabeth Harlan, representing the challengers, did top-flight work on a frantic schedule. The quality of briefing should make the Court’s job easier, but the ultimate choice is a difficult one.Notwithstanding pending criminal charges against him, then-Senator Nat Oaks filed papers seeking the Democratic nomination for reelection to his Senate seat and for a seat on the Democratic State Central Committee on February 27, 2018. The statutory deadline for withdrawal was March 1. Four weeks later, Oaks pleaded guilty to wire fraud and resigned from the Maryland Senate. But Oaks was still a registered voter and was not in prison at the time, so he still remained technically eligible for the ballot, at least until his post-primary sentencing hearing. Three voters, including two candidates for central committee, filed suit on April 9, seeking to remove Oaks’ name from the ballot. The Anne Arundel County Circuit Court initially denied relief but granted reconsideration when Oaks voluntarily resigned his registration as a Maryland voter.

The Board of Elections’ argument is straightforward. The Election Law Article contains clear deadlines, with “shall” language; it is unworkable for the Board to exercise discretion under these rules; and it is too late from a logistical standpoint to remove Oaks’ name from the ballot. Much of its argument consists of pointing to slippery slopes. The Board asserts that in “this election cycle alone, ten candidates have asked to have their names removed from the ballot since the passing of the withdrawal deadline,” and that removing Oaks’ name would require the Board to accommodate those other requests.

These are weighty concerns, but the challengers ask the Court to follow other states’ lead and read the Election Law Article with an eye to what leading scholar Rick Hasen calls the “Democracy Canon….

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#HimToo: Second Secretary of State Quits Amid Sexual Harassment Allegations

First it was Wyoming, now Louisiana:

 With calls for his resignation increasing, Louisiana’s secretary of state announced Tuesday that he is leaving his position as state elections chief amid allegations he sexually harassed one of his employees.

Secretary of State Tom Schedler said in a letter to the governor that he will be stepping down May 8, becoming the highest-level public official in Louisiana to be felled by sexual misconduct accusations since the #MeToo movement began unseating people in positions of power in Hollywood, the media and government.

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Lawsuit Accusing Former NC Gov McCrory, Holtzman Vogel Law Firm of Defamation for Falsely Claiming Voters Committed Fraud Survives Motion to Dismiss

News and Observer:

Four North Carolina voters can pursue their libel lawsuit against allies of former Gov. Pat McCrory and a Virginia law firm that tried to help the Republican politician’s unsuccessful effort to disqualify votes and win re-election in 2016, attorneys learned Tuesday.

Superior Court Judge Allen Baddour notified attorneys he’s decided to allow the four plaintiffs to continue their claims against the Pat McCrory Committee Legal Defense Fund, the Holtzman Vogel Josefiak Torchinsky law firm and four of the Warrenton, Virginia-based firm’s attorneys. The McCrory allies helped mount a last-ditch effort to sway a close election for governor by accusing voters in 52 counties of double voting and other misdeeds.

The voters from Guilford and Brunswick counties sued after being falsely accused of felony voting crimes like casting ballots in multiple states.

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The Oddity of the Oral Argument in the Texas Redistricting Cases

As Adam Liptak and others have reported, much of the questioning at oral argument in this important case focused on whether it was premature for the Supreme Court to be hearing the case now.  More specifically, it was the “liberal wing” of the Court that focused so heavily on this issue.  Indeed, the questions Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan asked to  those defending Texas’ maps —  the state of Texas and the United States – were overwhelmingly about whether the Supreme Court appeal was premature.

What’s odd about this, which I haven’t seen noticed elsewhere, is that this is a battle the liberal wing of the Court seems to have lost already.  On Sept. 12, 2017, the Court in a 5-4 vote granted a stay of “the order” of the three-judge court.  All the same arguments were made then that are being made now about whether it is legally premature for the Court to be able to act in this case at all at this stage.  But by issuing a stay, the Court majority would seem to have resolved that issue.  The Supreme Court decided that the lower court proceedings had reached a stage at which Supreme Court action was legally appropriate.

To put the technical legal issue in a nutshell, the argument back in September, and again now, is that the lower court at this stage has only ruled on liability:  all it has done is hold that certain Texas congressional and state districts violated either the Constitution or the VRA.  But the lower court has not yet issued any injunction against the defendants.  Nor has the lower court issued any kind of remedial orders concerning new maps.   Despite that, Texas has been arguing that “the practical effect” of the lower court’s actions is tantamount to the court having issued an injunction.

When the Supreme Court issued a stay, it seemingly accepted this position.  After all, the Court does not “stay” opinions.  It stays actions of a lower court, such as the issuance or denial of an injunction.  The language in the Court’s September order is that the Court was staying  “the order” of the lower court.  So the Supreme Court, 5-4, has already concluded, it would seem, that the lower court’s actions did include issuing “an order” that has the “practical effect” of making the actions below more than just a liability ruling – in other words, there was jurisdiction to issue the stay, which implies fairly directly that jurisdiction exists to review the substance of the actions that the Court has stayed.

Understandably enough, the first lawyer up to argue for the challengers seemed quite surprised that the Court – really, Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan – focused so much of their time on the jurisdictional issue.  Here’s how Mr. Hicks began:

HICKS: Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court:

I hadn’t anticipated doing this, but I’m going to start with the jurisdictional question, which, of course, is what you all start with.

Justice Breyer asked a key question, I think, of — of — of the other side in this.

He said, show me the language. Show me where they entered an injunction.

That’s the same question Justice Breyer presumably had in September, but he was on the losing side of the 5-4 vote then.

The question thus arises:  why did the liberal Justices spend so much time pursuing a battle it would seem has already been lost?

Moreover, winning this battle at this point — which means having at least one Justice who supported a stay turn around and conclude that the Court does not have jurisdiction over the case at this stage of the proceedings (and hence never had jurisdiction) — would be institutionally awkward.  When the Court issued the stay, it brought the entire judicial process below to a halt, which is where it has remained for eight months thus far.  The lower court has not been able to do anything about potential new maps.  For the Court now to say we don’t have jurisdiction after all is to say that the Court introduced a lengthy delay, for no legitimate reason, into creating valid election districts for Texas.

I’m not addressing whether the Court was right or wrong back in September to conclude that, in practical effect, the lower court had issued an “order” and hence the case was properly before the Court.  Given the stay, though, it does seem puzzling or at least curious that the liberal side of the Court continued to devote so much of its attention to re-fighting this battle.

We can speculate about why they might have done so, but I’m not looking to do that here.  My aim is simply to call attention to this odd aspect to the argument – one that meant there was much less discussion of the actual VRA and constitutional issues concerning the design of election districts in Texas.  And if the stay means that the Court has already decided it’s going to reach the merits of those issues, it’s all the more disappointing that comparatively little argument time was devoted to them.

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“A dubious anniversary for the Federal Election Commission”

CPI:

In separate interviews Thursday with the Center for Public Integrity, each of the four “holdover”  commissioners — who may continue to serve until President Donald Trump and the U.S. Senate replace them — confirmed that they have no immediate plans to step down.

They all know the FEC, in the midst of a critical midterm election campaign, is teetering on the brink of a de facto shutdown: If one commissioner retires, resigns or otherwise isn’t present, the agency that regulates and enforces campaign money laws loses its four-commissioner quorum and can’t conduct high-level business. No passing rules. No penalizing scofflaws. No providing official advice to political committees seeking it.

“If the commission loses a quorum … it obviously affects the public,” Hunter said.

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“Trump campaign has paid portions of Michael Cohen’s legal fees: Sources”

ABC News:

The Trump campaign has spent nearly $228,000 to cover some of the legal expenses for President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Michael Cohen, sources familiar with the payments tell ABC News, raising questions about whether the Trump campaign may have violated campaign finance laws.

Federal Election Commission records show three payments made from the Trump campaign to a firm representing Cohen. The “legal consulting” payments were made to McDermott Will and Emery — a law firm where Cohen’s attorney Stephen Ryan is a partner — between October 2017 and January 2018.

Cohen has said that he did not have a formal role in the Trump campaign, and it is illegal to spend campaign funds for personal use – defined by the FEC as payments for expenses “that would exist irrespective of the candidate’s campaign or responsibilities as a federal officeholder.”

“They’re on shaky legal ground,” said Stephen Spaulding, chief of strategy at the nonprofit watchdog group Common Cause. “It sounds like they are really pushing the envelope … If the campaign were to say they are campaign-related payments, then maybe it’s okay to use campaign funds. But he can’t have it both ways.”

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