Category Archives: campaign finance
“Congress could hardwire dark money into our democracy”
“The Dark Money Subsidy? Tax Policy and Donations to 501(c)(4) Organizations”
Brian Galle has posted this draft on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This Article presents the first empirical examination of giving to § 501(c)(4) organizations, which have recently become central players in U.S. politics. Although donations to a 501(c)(4) are… Continue reading
Toobin Skeptical of Criminal Campaign Finance Charges Against Trump Campaign (But More Bullish on Obstruction Claims)
New Yorker’s Jeff Toobin:
Does any of this behavior rise to the level of criminality, and, if so, what laws might it have violated? Federal law prohibits political candidates and their advisers from seeking or obtaining contributions from foreign… Continue reading
“Internet Ad Rules Bring Together Strange Bedfellows”
Eliza Newlin Carney for TAP.
Unanimous En Banc DC Circuit Rejects Challenge to Separate Federal Campaign Contribution Limits in Primary and General Election Campaigns
This one always struck me as a weird challenge, and today, per Judge Srinivasan, the D.C. Circuit, sitting en banc, unanimously rejected the argument:
Congress’s choice of a per-election structure thus is not a “prophylaxis-upon-prophylaxis”—a second anti-corruption measure layered… Continue reading
“Amending the Johnson Amendment in the Age of Cheap Speech”
Ellen Aprill has posted this important draft on SSRN (forthcoming University of Illinois Law Review On-Line). Here is the abstract:
On November 2, 2017, the House Ways and Means Committee released its proposed tax reform legislation. It includes a provision… Continue reading
“Blowing Up Democracy and Charities in One Fell Swoop”
Eliza Newlin Carney:
By essentially repealing the so-called Johnson Amendment, a tax provision that bars charities from engaging in partisan politics, the House legislation frees up big donors to funnel even more unlimited, undisclosed money into campaigns, and, for the… Continue reading
“In Tax Debate, Gift to Religious Right Could Be Bargaining Chip”
NYT:
Among the changes in the tax bill that passed the House this month is a provision to roll back the 1954 ban, a move that is championed by the religious right, but opposed by thousands of religious and nonprofit… Continue reading
“Republicans Are Candid About the True Price of the Tax Bill”
Ciara Torres-Spelliscy:
Republican contributors were not amused by the Senate’s lack of accomplishment and withheld money for the 2018 campaign. Donations to Senate Republicans went from $7 million in March to only $2 million in July and August, “a… Continue reading
“Don’t Let Candidates Know Their Donors”
Jerry Goldfeder with an NYT letter to the editor.
“How did the DNC fall into a fundraising hole so deep as to need a life-line from the Clinton campaign to begin with?”
Dan Weiner on Donna Brazile and the DNC.
Much Russian Activity Meddling in 2016 Elections Likely Didn’t Violate Federal Law, Wouldn’t Be Covered by Proposed “Honest Ads Act,” and May Be Beyond (Conservative Justices’ Views of) Constitution to Limit
I’ve already hinted at some of these things in this Politico piece, but I’ve now fleshed it out in the latest draft of my forthcoming First Amendment Law Review article, Cheap Speech and What It Has Done (to American Democracy… Continue reading
“Bipartisan Harvard panel recommends hacking safeguards for elections”
Reuters:
A bipartisan Harvard University project aimed at protecting elections from hacking and propaganda will release its first set of recommendations today on how U.S. elections can be defended from hacking attacks.
The 27-page guidebook shown to Reuters ahead of… Continue reading