Caroline Fredrickson is director of the Washington
legislative office of the American Civil Liberties Union.
Douglas Johnson is legislative director of the National
Right to Life Committee.
Do ordinary citizens need to be protected from groups that
may urge them to contact their elected Representatives in
Congress about some pending bill?
That’s the underlying premise of a proposal introduced May 1
by Reps. Marty Meehan (D-Mass.) and Christopher Shays (R-Conn.),
which the House Judiciary Committee is likely to vote on next
week.
The proposal, which will be offered as an amendment to
broader “lobbying reform” legislation, would institute an
unprecedented system of regulation of efforts to motivate
citizens to contact their elected Representatives, or executive
branch officials (including the president), about pending
legislation.
The target of the Meehan-Shays proposal is sometimes referred
to as “grass-roots lobbying.” A similar proposal, voted down in
the Senate on Jan. 18, contained this definition: “Grassroots
lobbying means the voluntary efforts of members of the general
public to communicate their own views on an issue to Federal
officials or to encourage other members of the general public to
do the same.” The Meehan-Shays proposal simply refers to
“campaigns to influence the general public to lobby Congress.”
But when constituents contact their elected Representatives,
it is not really “lobbying.” It is representative democracy in
action. Is this now a suspect activity, demanding scrutiny and
regulation by government agencies?
The purported “problem” at which the proposed new law is
aimed was summarized in a recent report in National Journal:
“Advocates [of the proposal] ... argue that wealthy individuals,
companies, and interest groups ... anonymously pour millions of
dollars into fake Grass-roots campaigns — called ‘Astroturf’
lobbying — to create the appearance of popular support for their
political agendas.”
In the first place, the First Amendment protects the right of
even the wealthy and for-profit corporations to attempt to
persuade.
Secondly, the proposed law would not apply only to campaigns
mounted by for-profit interests. If this proposal is enacted as
part of the broader lobbying reform bill, individual activists
and groups on any side of an issue such as global warming,
abortion or the Iraq War could face devastating fines, and even
prison time, merely for spending money on modest efforts to
motivate citizens to communicate with lawmakers — unless they
register with the government and file quarterly reports
detailing such activity. It would cover groups that spend as
little as $100,000 in a three-month period on grass-roots
campaigns — an amount that could easily be exceeded by a couple
of full-page newspaper ads, or in any small campaign aimed at
stirring up public awareness in even a handful of districts in
anticipation of a vote in Congress.
We represent two organizations that take diametrically
opposed positions on nearly all of the legal issues surrounding
abortion and assisted suicide. But we agree on this much:
Grass-roots citizens do not need any “protection” from those who
urge them to contact their elected Representatives.
Moreover, it is actively dangerous to democracy to allow
incumbent officeholders to assert regulatory authority over such
activity. Once that line is crossed, regardless of the specific
scope of the original regulation, it will lead to endless
interference by politicians and government agencies with the
exercise of core rights protected by the First Amendment — the
right to free speech and the right to petition government
officials.
Attempts to motivate citizens to adopt and act on a viewpoint
on a public policy issue enjoy the highest degree of protection
under the First Amendment’s protections of freedom of speech and
the freedom to petition government officials. It is the
individual citizen who finally decides whether to respond to
what she sees and hears and the officeholder who then decides
how much weight to give the communication from the citizen. If
someone is persuading citizens of a viewpoint with which you
disagree, the American way is to attempt to reach the public
with effective counterarguments, not to stifle your opponent in
a web of regulation.
Do some grass-roots-motivating campaigns contain misleading
information? Sure. Hypothetically, perhaps National Right to
Life Committee sometimes considers American Civil Liberties
Union communications about abortion-related legislation to be
incomplete or distorted, and perhaps sometimes the ACLU
considers NRLC communications about abortion-related legislation
to be incomplete or distorted. But free speech is not a product
that can be subjected to “deceptive advertising” regulations
without offending the First Amendment.
Groups pushing for regulation of grass-roots lobbying say
they would not “restrict” such activity but merely require
“disclosure.” Bradley Smith, the former chairman of the Federal
Election Commission, recently testified against such regulation,
noting, “Clearly, disclosure is regulation, and often the most
intrusive regulation.”
Requiring disclosure of the identities of everyone who
supports an organization’s public communications will have a
chilling effect and reduce the expressions of some points of
view — the very result that some of the advocates of such
restrictions are clearly seeking. The impact will fall most
heavily on groups that are engaged in debate on certain highly
controversial issues — issues on which their grass-roots
campaigns may offend powerful legislators or other officials,
who may use their positions to exact political retribution.
As Stephen Hoersting of the Center for Competitive Politics
wrote in National Review in January, “There is no doubt that the
danger of retribution by politicians is real. It is not hard to
imagine, for example, why one Jim Crow state might have wanted
to know the names of all NAACP members in 1950s Alabama, and why
the Supreme Court said in response to Alabama’s desire to learn
those names that ‘[i]t is hardly a novel perception that
compelled disclosure of affiliation with groups engaged in
advocacy may constitute as effective a restraint on freedom of
association as [other] forms of governmental action.’”
Furthermore, “mere disclosure” reports, as we can testify
based on personal experience, require command of legal
technicalities and other intricacies that sometimes baffle even
full-time Washington professionals. In the United States, you
should not have to hire a lawyer before you attempt to motivate
your fellow citizens to petition their elected representatives.
The Supreme Court has rejected past Congressional attempts to
regulate grass-roots lobbying. For example, in the 1953 case
United States v. Rumely, the Supreme Court affirmed a court of
appeals ruling that included this statement: “It is said that
indirect lobbying by the pressure of public opinion on the
Congress is an evil and a danger. That is not an evil; it is a
good, the healthy essence of the democratic process.”
By voting down the Meehan-Shays amendment, the House would
join the Senate in wisely protecting that healthy essence.
Copyright 2007
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