Will There Be a John Edwards Verdict Monday?

Could be.

And if Edwards loses, the judge’s instructions may be grounds for an appeal. The snippet in the linked news report seems to focus on the specific intent of the donors, which may distract from the question of Edwards‘ intent:

The jurors will have to decide what prosecutors meant when they accused Edwards of secretly obtaining money “to influence the election.”

“The government does not have to prove that the sole or only purpose of the money was to influence the election,” Eagles’ instructions state. “People rarely act with a single purpose in mind. On the other hand, if the donor would have made the gift or payment notwithstanding the election, it does not become a contribution merely because the gift or payment might have some impact on the election. Nor does it become a contribution just because the donor knew it might have some influence on the election and found that acceptable, if the donor’s real purpose was personal or otherwise unrelated to the election.”

The government, according to Eagles’ instructions, did not have to prove that Mellon or Baron had specific knowledge about how the money would be spent or that it was spent on the campaign.

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“Barrett, Walker have one thing in common: Out-of-state donors”

Dan Bice explains.

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“Outside Spending Turns From Presidential Race to Congressional Contests”

NYT reports.

I’ve argued that this is where the greatest dangers from Super PACs emerge.

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“‘Super PACs’ Let Strategists Off the Leash”

NYT: “for a growing number of strategists and operatives in both parties, the very nature of what it means to work in politics has shifted. Once wedded to the careers and aims of individual candidates, they are now driven by the agendas of the big donors who finance outside spending.”

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“Obama super PAC slump continues”

Politico reports.

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“Wanted: Lobbyists who can raise cash”

Politico: “Policy experts, leadership aides and committee staff used to be the kings of K Street, collecting a premium from top lobby shops for their expertise on how business is done on Capitol Hill. But there’s a new player in the world of influence being snapped up for a different reason: fundraising experience.”

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“Orie charges may help end some judicial elections”

Philly.com: “An Allegheny County grand jury’s indictment Friday of state Supreme Court Justice Joan Orie Melvin represents a new low for Pennsylvania’s highest court, but it could prove to be a valuable driving force for reforming the state’s discredited system of electing its appellate judges.” (via How Appealing).

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“Appeals court upholds key provision of Voting Rights Act. Supreme Court could loom”

The CS Monitor reports.

UPDATE: Howard has more.

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“Conservative groups outspending liberal counterparts 4 to 1 on congressional races”

Important WaPo report.

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“White House visitor logs provide window into lobbying industry”

WaPo: “More than any president before him, Obama pledged to change the political culture that has fueled the influence of lobbyists. He barred recent lobbyists from joining his administration and banned them from advisory boards throughout the executive branch. The president went so far as to forbid what had been staples of political interaction — federal employees could no longer accept free admission to receptions and conferences sponsored by lobbying groups….The White House visitor records make it clear that Obama’s senior officials are granting that access to some of K Street’s most influential representatives. In many cases, those lobbyists have long-standing connections to the president or his aides. Republican lobbyists coming to visit are rare, while Democratic lobbyists are common, whether they are representing corporate clients or liberal causes.”

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“Supreme Court faces pressure to reconsider Citizens United ruling”

WaPo reports.

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“Six vying for third party run against indicted Rep. Smith”

The Chicago Sun-Times reports.

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“Political advocacy piques shareholders’ interest”

The Chicago Tribune reports.

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“Judges Voice Skepticism of Challenge To Law Banning Corporate Contribution”

Bloomberg BNA: “Attorneys for Virginia businessmen challenging the constitutionality of the century-old ban on corporate contributions in federal election campaigns faced skepticism from a federal appeals court panel May 18 (U.S. v. Danielczyk, 4th Cir., No. 11-4667, oral argument 5/18/12)….During the May 18 argument, questioning by Traxler and the two other judges on the appellate panel hinted that they were considering overturning the district court ruling because of concerns that the corporate contribution ban was upheld by the Supreme Court in a 2003 case, known as Beaumont v. Federal Election Commission. Discussion about the Beaumont case dominated the oral argument.”

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“Representatives Brady, Van Hollen, Gonzalez, and Lofgren File Brief in Support of Montana Supreme Court Decision Against Corporate Contributions”

Press release: “Representatives Robert Brady (D-PA), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Charles Gonzalez (D-TX), and Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court supporting the Montana State Supreme Court’s decision to uphold a century of precedent and keep unlimited corporate contributions out of their elections.”

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“Walter Dellinger to Supreme Court: Don’t Summarily Reverse Montana Supreme Court’s Application of Citizens United”

Press release: “The United States Supreme Court should not summarily reverse the decision of the Montana Supreme Court upholding a state law restricting corporate spending in Montana elections, argue former acting Solicitor General Walter Dellinger and Professor James Sample of Hofstra Law School in an amicus brief filed today and authored by Arnold & Porter LLP and Demos>>> Read the brief >>>”

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“Abigail Thernstrom: The Good News About Race in America: The 1965 Voting Rights Act has been a huge success. So why are black activists keen to press the discrimination button on issues like voter ID?”

The WSJ weekend interview with Abby Thernstrom.

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“22 states join campaign finance fight”

AP: “Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia are backing Montana in its fight to prevent the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision from being used to strike down state laws restricting corporate campaign spending. The states led by New York are asking the high court to preserve Montana’s state-level regulations on corporate political expenditures, according to a copy of a brief written by New York’s attorney general’s office and obtained by The Associated Press. The brief will be publicly released Monday.”

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“Longest election in county history finally decided”

Newsfrom Ohio: “Tracie Hunter is a week or so away from becoming Hamilton County’s newest juvenile court judge after a recount Thursday confirmed she won the 2010 election. The final count put Hunter, a Democrat, 74 votes ahead of Republican John Williams in an election that is believed to be the longest in county history….The Board of Elections certified the results Thursday, but Republicans vowed to continue to challenge Dlott’s ruling in court. Their appeal could take months or years to resolve.”

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“Demos Applauds Goals Of Voter Empowerment Act of 2012, Urges Expansion Of Americans’ Freedom To Vote”

See this press release.

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“Money Talks: Even when the donors are secret”

Michigan Radio: “It appears a superPAC and other political groups are coordinating their purchases of TV ads running in Michigan.  This means a more efficient use of secret money to influence voters.”

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“Toronto riding’s election result tossed by judge”

CBC reports.

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“Supreme Court Urged to Let Stand Lower Court Decision Upholding Montana’s Corporate Expenditure Restriction”

“Today, the Campaign Legal Center, joined by more than a dozen other organizations, urged the U.S. Supreme Court to let stand a lower court ruling upholding Montana’s restrictions on corporate expenditures in elections.  The groups filed an amici brief in support of Montana urging the U.S. Supreme Court to deny certiorari, or if it grants certiorari, to reconsider its holding in Citizens United that independent expenditures do not result in corruption or the appearance of corruption.”

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“Joe Ricketts Has Been a Financial Force in Prior Elections”

U.S. News: “The group entered the political landscape in October 2010, forming a month before the midterm elections. By mid-October, it had nearly $1.2 million in the bank, all from Ricketts. Then, just as quickly as it appeared, the money was gone. By October 22, all but $10,000 was spent opposing incumbent Democrats in four Congressional races across the country. Three of them fell in the election two weeks later.”

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McCain, Whitehouse File Brief Asking Supreme Court to Reconsider Citizens United Holding

Press release from Sen. Whitehouse:

 

Whitehouse and McCain File Supreme Court Brief Critical of Citizens United, Super PACs

Brief Details Explosion of Anonymous Political Spending Since the Citizens United Decision

 

Washington, DC – U.S. Senators Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and John McCain (R-AZ) today filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court that details the explosion of anonymous political spending since the Citizens United decision.  The brief was filed in a case regarding a Montana law that bars corporations from funding election ads.  The case presents the opportunity for the Court to clarify the authority of Congress and state legislatures to address the threat of corruption posed by this spending.

 

“We are deeply concerned about the rise of unlimited, anonymous money now flooding our elections,” Whitehouse and McCain said in a joint statement.  “This unregulated and unaccountable spending invites corruption into our political process, and undermines our democracy.  We urge the Supreme Court to make clear that legislatures can take appropriate actions against corrupting influences in campaigns.”

 

The Senators’ brief, filed in American Tradition Partnership v. Bullock, asks the Court to deny a petition to review a Montana Supreme Court decision which held that the Montana legislature’s ban on corporate election spending was still constitutional following Citizens United.  Failing that, the brief asks the Court to give the Montana case a full review in light of the flood of anonymous money that has entered political campaigns since Citizens United.

 

The brief urges the court to “revisit Citizens United’s finding that vast independent expenditures do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption,” arguing that rules requiring donor disclosure and prohibiting outside groups from coordinating with campaigns have been evaded and manipulated by politically-active groups and individuals.  The brief chronicles the extensive coordination that takes place between campaigns and super PACs, and the means of “identity-laundering” that allow secret donors to hide their activity.  The legislators conclude that “the campaign finance system assumed by Citizens United is no longer a reality, if it ever was.”

 

The Senators have both been leading advocates on campaign finance issues.  McCain was a co-author of the landmark Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, or “McCain-Feingold,” which limited corporate expenditures on political ads, and which was partially struck down by Citizens United.  Whitehouse has introduced legislation this year that would require enhanced disclosure of spending on political ads.

 

The full amicus brief is available here.

 

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“Heads wins coin toss for Texas city council seat”

The Houston Chronicle reports.

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“Ameritrade founder Ricketts’ Nebraska contribution worries watchdogs’

iWatch reports.

 

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“The Lesson of the Ricketts Fiasco: Politics Is Business”

Bloomberg View.

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“699 Comments ‘Birther’ controversy: Arizona election official says it’s ‘possible’ Obama might not make ballot “

Unbelievable.

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Voter ID Law Signed by Virginia Governor

Virginian Pilot: “In tandem with his decision to let controversial voter identification legislation become law, Gov. Bob McDonnell is ordering state election officials to send every registered Virginia voter a new voter ID card….Issuing an executive order alongside those bills might also help Virginia’s law pass muster with the U.S. Justice Department. The federal agency has already blocked enforcement of more stringent photo ID statutes in South Carolina and Texas, southern states also covered by the U.S. Voting Rights Act, over concerns they could disenfranchise certain voters.”

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At Least One 4th Circuit Judge Reluctant to Strike Down Corporate Contribution Ban in Danielczyk

See this AP report.

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Breaking News: Divided D.C. Circuit Panel Upholds Constitutionality of Voting Rights Act, Teeing Up Issue for Supreme Court

The Shelby County opinion is here.  Judge Williams dissented. The court also issued a unanimous opinion in the related LaRoque case, finding the issue mooted by DOJ’s belated preclearance of the law in question.

From Judge Tatel’s majority opinion in Shelby County:

The point at which section 5’s strong medicine becomes unnecessary and therefore no longer congruent and proportional turns on several critical considerations, including the pervasiveness of serious racial discrimination in voting in covered jurisdictions; the continued need for section 5’s deterrent and blocking effect; and the adequacy of section 2 litigation. These are quintessentially legislative judgments, and Congress, after assembling and analyzing an extensive record, made its decision: section 5’s work is not yet done. Insofar as Congress’s conclusions rest on predictive judgments, we must, contrary to the dissent’s approach, apply a standard of review even “more deferential than we accord to judgments of an administrative agency.” Turner Broad., 520 U.S. at 195. Given that we may not “displace [an agency’s] choice between two fairly conflicting views, even though the court would justifiably have made a different choice had the matter been before it de novo,” Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U.S. 474, 488 (1951), we certainly cannot do so here. Of course, given the heavy federalism costs that section5 imposes, our job is to ensure that Congress’s judgment is reasonable and rests on substantial probative evidence. See Turner Broad., 520 U.S. at 195 (“In reviewing the constitutionality of a statute . . . [o]ur sole obligation is to assure that, in formulating its judgments, Congress has drawn reasonable inferences based on substantial evidence.”
(internal quotation marks omitted)). After thoroughly scrutinizing the record and given that overt racial discrimination persists in covered jurisdictions notwithstanding decades of section 5 preclearance, we, like the district court, are satisfied that Congress’s judgment deserves judicial deference.

The majority also relied upon section 2 evidence, especially Ellen Katz’s study, to make the point that the covered jurisdictions remain at greater risk of intentional discrimination in voting on the basis of race to justify different treatment under the law.  It also relied heavily on the increasing number of jurisdictions “bailing out” from section 5 coverage—this increased bailout activity seems to have been orchestrated directly to allow courts to make this determination.  The majority concludes by noting that it is deferring, although the “legislative record is by no means unambiguous.”

Judge Williams’ dissent dives into the data too, and finds little basis to find a problem with minority voter turnout, the number of minority voter officials, or the extent of unconstitutional state racial discrimination in voting to justify the burden of preclearance in covered jurisdictions of all of these voting changes. He disagrees strongly with the relevance and importance of the section 2 data.

In one portion of the dissent with contemporary relevance, Judge Williams writes:

Why should voter ID laws from South Carolina and Texas be judged by different criteria (at a minimum, a different burden of persuasion, which is often critical in cases involving competing predictions of effect) from those governing Indiana? A glimpse at the charts shows that Indiana ranks “worse” than South Carolina and Texas in registration and voting rates, as well as in black elected officials (Figures I, II and III). As to federal observers, Indiana appears clearly “better”—it received none (Figure IV). As to successful § 2 suits South Carolina and Texas are “worse” than Indiana, but all three are below the top ten offenders, which include five uncovered states (Figure V). This distinction in evaluating the different states’ policies is rational?Despite a congressional record of over 15,000 pages and 22 hearings, Shelby County, 811 F. Supp. 2d at 496, there is little to suggest that § 4(b)’s coverage formula continues to capture jurisdictions with especially high levels of voter discrimination. To the extent that the answer is, as the district court suggested, that Congress wished to “continue to focus on those jurisdictions with the worst historical records of voting discrimination,” id. at 506, such an overwhelming focus on historical practices appears foreclosed by Northwest Austin’s requirement that current burdens be justified by current needs.
It goes without saying that racism persists, as evidenced by the odious examples offered by the majority, see Maj. Op. at 27-29. But without more evidence distinguishing current conditions in the covered jurisdictions from those in the uncovered ones, § 4(b)’s coverage formula appears to be as obsolete in practice as one would expect, in a dynamic society, for markers 34-to-59 years old. Accordingly, I dissent.

Judge Williams held that only the coverage formula was unconstitutional and did not fully reach the constitutionality of section 5 as a whole.  But if the Supreme Court agreed with him, the result would be the same: section 5 would be unconstitutional to apply (though in theory Congress could try to reenact it with a new coverage formula).

And this may be the most significant aspect of things. Judge Williams has provided a way for the conservatives on the Supreme Court to end Section 5 without having to declare that it would necessarily be unconstitutional if Congress tweaked it. And of course in this Congress there would not be a revised section 5.

I expect Shelby County to seek cert., and for the Court to agree to hear this case next term, with a decision likely by June 2013.  It is also possible that another one of these cases, such as the Texas or South Carolina section 5 challenges related to their voter i.d. laws, could leapfrog over these cases and be heard first by the Court.

As to what the Court will do, my money is on the Court holding—one way or another–that section 5 can no longer be enforced against the covered states.

 

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Joe Ricketts, the Sheldon Adelson of the 2012 Election?

NYT: Billionaire, Seeking to Be Campaign Player, Finds Peril.

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“Romney Raises $40.1 Million in April, Nearly Matching Obama”

NYT reports.  More from TPM.

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“A Profile: Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan Popular two-term secretary decides not to seek re-election”

That’s the lead story in this week’s Electionline Weekly.

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“American Tradition Partnership wins First Amendment challenges to campaign finance laws”

The following press release arrived from Sean Parnell of Impact Policy Management via email:

 May 16, 2012 – The American Tradition Partnership (ATP), a nonprofit 501(c)4 grassroots lobbying organization, won a critical victory for First Amendment freedoms today in Montana. U.S. District Court Judge Charles Lovell today ruled in favor of ATP in a motion for summary judgment on several claims, finding that the state could not prohibit corporate contributions to groups engaging in independent political speech, require ATP to include certain disclaimers and citations on their communications, or prohibit political speech about candidate voting records the state judged ‘false.’

“This is a victory for the free speech rights of all Americans, and a loss for Montana politicians trying to squelch the voices of grassroots citizens challenging their power,” said Donald Ferguson, Executive Director of ATP. “The court today recognized that burdening ATP and other citizen groups with unnecessary, intrusive, and unwarranted regulations on speech is an affront to the First Amendment.”

ATP filed the lawsuit to prevent the State of Montana from enforcing unconstitutional restrictions on its speech. The judge ruled that ATP’s challenge to Montana’s excessively low contribution limits ($160 to a candidate for state legislature, $630 to a candidate for Governor) will proceed to trial, and ruled in the State’s favor that the ban on direct contributions from corporations to candidates was constitutional.

The case is Lair et al v. Murray et al, case number 6:12-cv-00012-CCL.

American Tradition Partnership is a 501(c)(4) grassroots lobbying organization dedicated to fighting environmental extremism and promoting responsible development and management of land, water, and natural resources in the Rocky Mountain West and across the United States.

 

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Book Announcement: Parliamentary Elections, Representation and the Law

NOW PUBLISHED

Parliamentary Elections, Representation and the Law

Caroline Morris

Parliamentary elections are the foundation of the democratic State, providing legitimacy to government and an opportunity for citizens to participate in the democratic process. But despite the crucial role of elections in government and society, the law governing them is fragmented, both conceptually and in terms of the legal framework.

This book examines each stage of the electoral process from the perspective of the candidate seeking to become an MP: eligibility and qualification, the candidate selection process, nominations, disputed elections and then, lastly, disqualification or exit from the House of Commons. Each stage of the process is considered in light of developments in political practice and human rights jurisprudence, and an argument is made for the rethinking and reform of the law of parliamentary candidacy and membership.

The book takes into account the reforms ushered in by the parliamentary expenses scandal of 2009, and also looks to the new electoral era that may eventuate under the Liberal Democrat-Conservative Coalition Government.

Summary of Contents

1 Parliamentary Comings and Goings

2 Mapping out Representation Theory and the Law

3 Candidate Eligibility Laws

4 Controverted Elections

5 Challenging Candidate Selection in the Courts

6 Removal from Parliament

7 Reconceptualising and Reforming Electoral Law

 

Link to full table of contents: http://www.hartpub.co.uk/pdf/9781849461474.pdf

Caroline Morris is a Lecturer in Law at Queen Mary, University of London.

May 2012     196pp     Hbk     9781849461474     £40  /  US$80

20% discount for readers of the Election Law Blog: £32 / US$64

To receive the 20% discount please mention reference ‘ELB’ when placing your order. If you are ordering through the Hart Publishing website please quote the reference in the special instructions field. Please note that the discount will be applied when your order is processed (it will not appear on your order confirmation). To order please click on the relevant link below:

UK, EU and ROW Orders: http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781849461474

USA Orders: http://www.hartpublishingusa.com/books/details.asp?isbn=9781849461474

If you have any queries please contact the publisher Hart Publishing:

Hart Publishing Ltd, 16C Worcester Place, Oxford, OX1 2JW, UK
Telephone Number: 01865 517530; Fax Number: 01865 510710; Website: www.hartpub.co.uk; E-mail: mail@hartpub.co.uk

Hart Publishing Ltd. is registered in England No. 3307205

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“Colorado groups urge veto of limits on voted-ballot inspections”

The Denver Post reports.

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“House Bill Includes Voter Registration Modernization, A Brennan Center Proposal”

Brennan Center press release:

The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law released the following statement on the Voter Empowerment Act, a bill introduced by House Democratic leaders today to help ensure all eligible Americans have the opportunity to vote. For the first time in a federal bill, the Voter Empowerment Act includes steps to modernize voter registration, a proposal first introduced by the Brennan Center in 2008.

“Our nation’s ramshackle voter registration system does not work for 21st century America,” said Wendy Weiser, Democracy Program Director. “No matter your political party, we can all agree that every eligible American should have the opportunity to vote. Modernizing voter registration is something everyone can get behind. It is an innovative reform that could add more than 50 million eligible citizens to the rolls, permanently. We are pleased that House members included this vital proposal in their new voting bill.”

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Ed Whelan on Toobin, the Chief, and the “Secret” Souter Dissent

Part I, Part II, and a follow up discussing my Slate piece.

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“Latino, black political clout grows in Florida and North Carolina”

This item appears at “Facing South.”

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“Want to end partisan politics? Here’s what won’t work — and what will.”

Mann/Ornstein Part II in WaPo‘s Outlook section.

I discussed my skepticism about Mann and Ornstein’s solutions in this Slate piece, “Why Washington Can’t Be Fixed.”

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Read the Brennan Center’s Amicus Brief for Law Professors in Montana Case

Here. “A number of constitutional law professors signed on to the Brennan Center brief — Richard Briffault (Columbia Law School), Erwin Chemerinsky (University of California-Irvine School of Law), James A. Gardner (SUNY-Buffalo Law School), Frances R. Hill (University of Miami School of Law), Ellen D. Katz (University of Michigan Law School), Lawrence Lessig (Harvard Law School), Jamin B. Raskin (American University, Washington College of Law), Zephyr Teachout (Fordham University School of Law), and Ciara Torres-Spelliscy (Stetson University College of Law).”

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“Obama campaign to launch voting rights portal”

Politico’s Byron Tau: “The Obama campaign is poised to launch a new online voting rights portal called Gotta Vote that aims to help voters overcome new ID and polling place requirements across the country.”

Watch the campaign’s video here.

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“Ex-lawmakers on K Street avoid ‘Scarlet L,’ shy away from registering as lobbyists”

<i>The Hill</i> reports.

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4th Circuit Will Hear Arguments Tomorrow in Challenge to Federal Corporate Contribution Ban

Bloomberg BNA: “A federal appeals court is set to hear arguments May 18 in the Justice Department’s challenge to a lower court decision that held as unconstitutional the federal ban on corporate campaign contributions (U.S. v. Danielczyk, 4th Cir., No. 11-4667, amicus filed 1/10/12).”

Also: “The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit is considering a challenge to Minnesota’s campaign finance law regulating corporate money, which includes a corporate contribution ban in state campaigns (Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life Inc. (MCFL) v. Swanson, 8th Cir., No. 10-3126, rehearing en banc order 7/12/2011). The en banc appeals court heard arguments in the case, known as MCFL v. Swanson, last September, but has yet to issue a ruling nearly eight months later.”

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“Florida Steps Up Effort to Scrub Illegal Voters”

NYT: “In an attempt to clear the voter rolls of noncitizens, a move that had set off criticism and a threatened lawsuit, Florida election officials decided on Thursday to use information from a federal database to check a list of 182,000 voters who they suspect are not citizens, officials said.”

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“‘Americans Elect’ Ends Online Primary After No Candidates Qualify To Run”

ABC News reportsWaPo has the group’s statement, which at least some opponents of AE thinks leaves wiggle room for something.  After all, as Ken Vogel noted on Twitter, the group has a nice package of ballot access in a number of states. Richard Winger too notes the potential for the group’s ballot access use in the future.

Meanwhile Lessig responds to Lumea on neutrality and AE, something which seems pretty moot.

I expect Buddy Roemer will continue to try for the Reform Party nomination and he will continue to be a non-factor.  I’d keep an eye instead on Gary Johnson.

Why did AE fail?  First it is hard to build a movement around ballot access rather than a candidate.  Second, despite what partisans say on both sides, Obama and Romney are close enough to the center that there is not really room for a radically different candidate in the middle.

And then there was the bad press from the group’s democracy deficit, which was a self-inflicted wound.

Ballot access for third party candidates in this country is way too hard, and AE had a good idea to get around it.  But its execution did not work, especially how it tried to present itself as a publicly-driven force but a core group kept tight control of its rules and expected substantive outcomes.

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“John Edwards trial: What will verdict mean for campaign finance?”

The CS Monitor reports.  The jury gets the case Friday morning.

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“Fla. election chiefs skeptical of voter purge”

AP reports.

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