Corporations Sue Minnesota For
Violating First Amendment Right To
Make Contributions, Produce Political Ads
Editor's note. The following is
from the law firm of Bopp, Coleson & Bostrom.
Minnesota Citizens Concerned for
Life, Inc., The Taxpayers League of Minnesota, and Coastal
Travel Enterprises, LLC want to be able to make contributions to
political parties and/or candidates, and also produce political
ads supporting the candidates they like. The First Amendment
says they have the right to do these things. But Minnesota law
forbids it.
Minnesota says that corporations
may only make political ads if they pay for them from what the
State calls a "political fund." These political funds have lots
of burdensome registration, record-keeping, and reporting
requirements. But the Supreme Court recently ruled in a case
called Citizens United that corporations have a First Amendment
right to make political ads from their own money, without having
to submit to burdensome registration, record-keeping, and
reporting requirements. So Minnesota requires the very thing the
Supreme Court said is unconstitutional.
Minnesota also bans political
contributions from corporations, unless they are made through a
"conduit fund" that has these same type of burdensome
requirements. Even then, corporations do not get to decide which
candidate the money in their conduit fund should be contributed
to. Instead, whoever donates to the fund gets to decide. But
every other type of association-- including unincorporated labor
unions--get to decide which candidates the money in their funds
should be contributed to. This treats corporations differently
than everybody else, and prevents them from making contributions
they want to make.
As a result, MCCL, Taxpayers
League and Coastal Travel filed suit in federal court yesterday,
asking the Judge to strike these unconstitutional laws.
James Bopp, Jr., lead counsel for
the Corporations, stated, "The Supreme Court was clear when it
said in Citizens United that corporations have free-speech
rights. Minnesota's attempt to subvert the Supreme Court is
blatantly unconstitutional. And, the reasoning of Citizens means
that corporations should also be able to make their own
contributions, without having to use a special "fund."
Regardless, the Constitution forbids government treating similar
groups differently, as Minnesota does to corporations and every
other type of association."
The case is before the Honorable
Donovan Frank, District Judge in the United States District
Court for the District of Minnesota, in Minneapolis. The case
number is 10-CV-2938 DWF/JSM, and is known as MCCL v. Swanson.
The complaint may be viewed at
www.jamesmadisoncenter.org/. |