Note: Today, April 25,
2007, NRLC General
Counsel James Bopp Jr.,
argued before the U.S.
Supreme Court in
Wisconsin Right to Life
v. FEC. The case
challenges the
electioneering
communication provisions
of the Bipartisan
Campaign Reform Act.
Below is a piece written
by Mr. Bopp which
appeared at National
Review Online.
National
Review Online, April 24,
2007
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=YWMyODgyOTU2NjFlZmJlZDQ0MmVmZWFjMzZhNmMxZDY
Silencing
Criticism
The history of sham
arguments for
McCain-Feingold.
By James
Bopp Jr.
There
is a perennial impulse
among governing powers
to make political
dissent illegal. The
Framers of our
Constitution, well
acquainted with this
impulse, squarely
countered it by vesting
the powers of government
with the people. This
principle firmly
established that it was
perfectly within the
rights of the people to
criticize their
government. The American
government was to be an
act of self-government
by the people, and the
First Amendment was to
ensure the people’s
participation in their
own government by
protecting the “four
indispensable democratic
freedoms” of speech,
press, assembly, and
petitioning the
government. Thus, the
First Amendment was
intended to deprive the
government of the power
to silence criticism of
official actions.
But the temptation to
use government power to
silence opponents is a
powerful one, and the
Federalists, threatened
by the emerging
Republican party of
Thomas Jefferson, passed
the Sedition Act of
1798, which barred
publishing “any false,
scandalous and malicious
writing against the
government . . . with
the intent . . . to
bring them . . . into
contempt or disrepute.”
The effort failed as
Jefferson was elected
president, those
convicted under the act
were pardoned, and the
act itself was repealed
by the new Republican
Congress.
Throughout the next 200
years, federal and state
governments have made
sporadic attempts to
silence criticism of
public officials.
Congress adopted the
Sedition Act of 1918 to
counter the threat of
Communism. In 1941,
California found the
Los Angeles Times
in contempt of court for
criticizing a judge’s
handling of a pending
case. In 1964, Alabama
held the New York
Times guilty of
libel for publishing an
ad that criticized
southern resistance to
desegregation. In 1974,
Florida passed a law
requiring newspapers to
afford political
candidates a right to
reply to editorials
attacking the
candidate’s character.
In each case, the First
Amendment’s explicit
commands stood in the
way.
In 2002, Congress
adopted the
McCain-Feingold
campaign-finance law. As
part of this new law,
Congress prohibited
corporations and labor
unions from running
“electioneering
communications” — i.e.,
advertisements naming a
candidate, including
incumbent officeholders
seeking reelection,
broadcast to the
candidate’s constituents
— within 30 days of a
primary or 60 days of a
general election. Touted
as necessary to
eliminate “sham” issue
ads that were really
intended to elect or
defeat a candidate, it
is now apparent that the
story of McCain-Feingold
is itself replete with
shams. This so-called
“electioneering
communication”
prohibition is simply
the latest permutation
of the ancient and
persistent impulse of
government officials to
quash criticism of their
actions.
Faux
Grassroots and
Dissimulations
Grassroots
support for
McCain-Feingold turns
out to have been largely
a sham. Sean Treglia,
the former program
officer for
campaign-finance reform
at the Pew Charitable
Trusts, boasted that,
over the course of the
seven years, he had
directed $30 million,
with Pew “in the
background,” to “drive
public policy” by
“creat[ing] an
impression that a mass
movement was afoot,” “a
constituency that would
punish Congress if they
didn’t vote for reform.”
The calls to “stop the
wealthy” from
influencing government
policy were actually
generated by $140
million in grants from
wealthy foundations like
Pew: $123 million came
from just eight
foundations, and $104
million went to just 17
“campaign finance
reform” organizations.
Something was afoot, but
it was certainly no mass
movement; the
constituency for
McCain-Feingold was a
sham.
Throughout the
congressional debate
over McCain-Feingold and
the litigation that
followed, the proposal’s
proponents acknowledged
that there were “genuine
issue ads” — especially
grassroots lobbying —
that should be
protected. Senators
Snowe and Jeffords (who
introduced the Snowe-Jeffords
Amendment that became
the “electioneering
communication”
prohibition) adamantly
assured everyone that
the prohibition would
not affect grassroots
lobbying and other
public-policy advocacy.
Senator Snowe declared
that the prohibition
“will not affect the
ability of any
organization to urge
grassroots contacts with
lawmakers on upcoming
votes” and that the
prohibition wouldn’t
apply to “the genuine
issue ads.” Senator
Jeffords declared that
the proposed prohibition
“will not affect the
ability of any
organization to urge
grassroots contacts with
lawmakers on upcoming
votes,” calling views to
the contrary a
“distortion.”
Upon passage,
McCain-Feingold was
challenged in
McConnell v.
Federal Election
Commission. The
primary defense of the
law was that, because
the vast majority of
issue ads during the
blackout periods were
“shams,” the law should
be upheld on its face,
and genuine issue-ads
could be protected in
later as-applied
challenges. The FEC and
the McCain-Feingold
sponsors, who intervened
to defend the law,
relied heavily on two
studies, each funded by
Pew as part of their
effort “to create a
handful of academic
experts” who could
justify the law.
However, the studies
were themselves shams.
The 1998 “Buying Time”
study was pitched to Pew
by NYU’s Brennan Center
for Justice with the
explicit promise that
“the study would be
abandoned midstream if
the results being
obtained were not
helpful to the cause for
more stringent campaign
finance regulation.”
Funding for the Brennan
Center’s 2000 “Buying
Time” study was
solicited on the promise
that the study would be
“design[ed] and
execute[d]” to achieve
“reform.”
The studies purported to
determine the exact
percentage of “sham”
versus “genuine” issue
ads broadcast before the
1998 and 2000 elections.
This was to be
established
by asking
college students to look
at the text of ads run
during the blackout
periods and to code them
based on this question:
“In your opinion, is
the purpose of this ad
to provide information
about or urge action on
a bill or issue, or is
it to generate support
or opposition for a
particular candidate?”
The results kept
shifting, as Pew-paid
experts used different
data-sets, changed the
codes assigned by
student evaluators, and
employed different
formulas. This yielded
widely disparate
results, ranging from 7
percent to 64 percent of
the ads being identified
as “genuine.” The 7
percent figure, which
was supplied to Congress
in 2000, was
characterized as “flat
out false” by the
then-executive director
of the Brennan Center,
with the correct number
being set at 40 percent.
In the end, the
McConnell
defendants argued in the
Supreme Court that up to
6 percent of all
prohibited ads were
“genuine issue ads.”
This figure was a sham.
Then the McCain-Feingold
sponsors planted the
seed of another sham.
They argued that
“awaiting as-applied
challenges, arising in
specific factual
contexts, is by far the
wiser course” than
facial invalidation.
The Silencing Begins
In
December 2003, the
Supreme Court bought the
argument in a 5-4
decision. Conceding that
“[t]he precise
percentage of [genuine]
issue ads” swept in by
the prohibition was “a
matter of dispute,” the
Court found that “the
vast majority of ads”
were the “functional
equivalent of express
advocacy” and ruled that
the number of affected
genuine issue-ads was
not “substantial” enough
for facial invalidation.
“[A]ssum[ing] that the
interests that justify
the regulation of
campaign speech might
not apply to the
regulation of genuine
issue ads,” the Court
relegated the protection
of genuine issue-ads to
the future as-applied
challenges that the
sponsors advocated.
In July 2004, Wisconsin
Right to Life began
broadcasting radio and
television ads urging
listeners to contact
Senators Feingold and
Kohl and to ask them to
end the filibuster of
federal judicial
nominees. These ads were
to be run until the
expected climax of the
judicial filibuster
debate in the fall of
2004. On August 15,
however, the ads became
prohibited
“electioneering
communications” because
Senator Feingold was a
candidate unopposed in
the September primary.
Rather than risk
criminal prosecution,
and believing that these
filibuster ads were
genuine grassroots
lobbying that the
McCain-Feingold sponsors
said would not be
prohibited, WRTL filed
an as-applied suit,
seeking a preliminary
injunction to permit
continued running of its
ads.
The FEC, however,
opposed WRTL’s request,
now claiming that the
Supreme Court in
McConnell had
foreclosed all
as-applied challenges.
The district court
dismissed the case and
WRTL appealed. In the
January 2006 oral
argument in the Supreme
Court, Chief Justice
Roberts noted that the
FEC had argued in
McConnell
that there could be
future as-applied
challenges but now was
claiming that there
could be none. He called
this a “classic bait and
switch.” Just six days
after oral argument, the
Supreme Court
unanimously held that
McConnell
did not preclude WRTL’s
claim that the ads were
genuine issue-ads and
remanded the case to the
district court for a
decision on the merits.
More Changing Stories
The FEC and
the McCain-Feingold
sponsors then argued
that there were actually
no genuine issue-ads at
all, revealing that
their McConnell
argument was a sham.
They based this new
position on the
testimony of two experts
who viewed all ads
during the blackout
period as potentially
affecting elections,
whether they named a
candidate or not. These
experts claimed that
WRTL’s real intent was
to defeat Feingold, and
thus the ads should be
barred.
However, when the FEC
and McCain-Feingold
sponsors were before the
Supreme Court in the
first WRTL
appeal, they had
rejected both arguments.
When asked by Justice
Scalia, do “you think
Congress has the power
to prohibit any . . .
conduct that might have
an impact on the
election”? the FEC’s
attorney responded “no,
Justice Scalia, it’s
not.” And in their
briefing, the FEC
rejected “a
constitutional standard
that turned on the
subjective sincerity of
a speaker’s message,”
since it would be
“incapable of workable
application” and would
“invite costly,
fact-dependent
litigation.”
In December 2006, the
district court rejected
these new arguments and
found WRTL’s grassroots
lobbying ads to be
“genuine” because there
was no “link between the
words and images used in
the ad and the fitness,
or lack thereof, of the
candidate for public
office.”
Back to the Top
The Supreme
Court has taken up the
WRTL case again and the
real agenda of
McCain-Feingold has been
exposed. Senator McCain
and the other
congressional sponsors
argue in their Supreme
Court brief that
broadcast ads would be
“sham,” not “genuine,”
if they “took a
critical stance
regarding a candidate’s
position on an issue.”
Thus they admitted that
stifling criticism of
public officials is at
the “core” of the
“electioneering
communication”
prohibition.
It is now apparent that
the “electioneering
communication”
prohibition was
misrepresented from the
outset, that the
arguments to justify it
were shams, and that its
real purpose is to
silence criticism of
public officials. This
is irreconcilable with
the First Amendment and
with our form of
government created by
the Constitution.
But what will the
Supreme Court do? Oral
argument in
Wisconsin Right to Life,
Inc. v. FEC is
scheduled for this
Wednesday, April 25, and
a decision is expected
by the end of the
Court’s term in June.
— James
Bopp, Jr. is lead
counsel for Wisconsin
Right to Life. He is the
principle attorney at
Bopp, Coleson & Bostrom
in Terre Haute, Indiana,
and serves as general
counsel for the James
Madison Center for Free
Speech.