2002 Ron Paul 7:1
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, the Enron bankruptcy and the subsequent
revelations
regarding Enrons political influence have once again brought campaign
finance
to the forefront of the congressional agenda. Ironically, many of the
strongest
proponents of campaign finance reform are among those who receive the
largest
donations from special interests seeking state favors. In fact, some
legislators
who where involved in the government-created savings and loan scandal
of the
late eighties and early nineties today pose as born again advocates of
"good government" via campaign finance reform!
2002 Ron Paul 7:2
Mr. Speaker, this so-called "reform" legislation is clearly
unconstitutional. Many have pointed out that the First amendment
unquestionably
grants individuals and businesses the free and unfettered right to
advertise,
lobby, and contribute to politicians as they choose. Campaign reform
legislation
blows a huge hole in these First amendment protections by criminalizing
criticism of elected officials. Thus, passage of this bill will import
into
American law the totalitarian concept that government officials should
be able
to use their power to silence their critics.
2002 Ron Paul 7:3
The case against this provision was best stated by Herb Titus, one
of
Americas leading constitutional scholars, in his paper Campaign-Finance
Reform: A Constitutional Analysis: "At the heart of the guarantee
of
the freedom of speech is the prohibition against any law designed to
protect the
reputation of the government to the end that the people have confidence
in their
current governors. As seditious libel laws protecting the reputation of
the
government unconstitutionally abridge the freedom of speech, so also do
campaign-finance reform laws."
2002 Ron Paul 7:4
The damage this bill does to the First amendment is certainly a
sufficient
reason to oppose it. However, as Professor Titus demonstrates in his
analysis of
the bill, the most important reason to oppose this bill is that the
Constitution
does not grant Congress the power to regulate campaigns. In fact,
article II
expressly authorizes the regulation of elections, so the omission of
campaigns
is glaring.
2002 Ron Paul 7:5
This legislation thus represents an attempt by Congress to fix a
problem
created by excessive government intervention in the economy with
another
infringement on the peoples constitutional liberties. The real problem
is not
that government lacks power to control campaign financing, but that the
federal
government has excessive power over our economy and lives.
2002 Ron Paul 7:6
It is the power of the welfare-regulatory state which creates a
tremendous
incentive to protect ones own interests by "investing" in
politicians. Since the problem is not a lack of federal laws, or rules
regulating campaign spending, more laws wont help. We hardly suffer
from too
much freedom. Any effort to solve the campaign finance problem with
more laws
will only make things worse by further undermining the principles of
liberty and
private property ownership.
2002 Ron Paul 7:7
Attempts to address the problems of special interest influence
through new
unconstitutional rules and regulations address only the symptoms while
ignoring
the root cause of the problem. Tough enforcement of spending rules will
merely
drive the influence underground, since the stakes are too high and much
is to be
gained by exerting influence over government- legally or not. The more
open and
legal campaign expenditures are, the easier it is for voters to know
whos
buying influence from whom.
2002 Ron Paul 7:8
There is a tremendous incentive for every special interest group to
influence
government. Every individual, bank, or corporation that does
business with
government invests plenty in influencing government. Lobbyists spend
over a
hundred million dollars per month trying to influence Congress.
Taxpayer dollars
are endlessly spent by bureaucrats in their effort to convince Congress
to
protect their own empires. Government has tremendous influence over the
economy
and financial markets through interest rate controls, contracts,
regulations,
loans, and grants. Corporations and others are "forced" to participate
in the process out of greed as well as self-defense- since thats the
way the
system works. Equalizing competition and balancing power- such as
between labor
and business- is a common practice. As long as this system remains in
place, the
incentive to buy influence will continue.
2002 Ron Paul 7:9
Many reformers recognize this, and either like the system or believe
that
its futile to bring about changes. They argue that curtailing
influence is the
only option left, even if it involves compromising freedom of political
speech
by regulating political money.
2002 Ron Paul 7:10
Its naive to believe stricter rules will make a difference. If
members of
Congress resisted the temptation to support unconstitutional
legislation to
benefit special interests, this whole discussion would be unnecessary.
Because
members do yield to the pressure, the reformers believe that more rules
regulating political speech will solve the problem.
2002 Ron Paul 7:11
The reformers argue that its only the fault of those trying to
influence
government and not the fault of the members of Congress who yield to
the
pressure, or the system that generates the abuse. This allows members
to avoid
assuming responsibility for their own acts, and instead places the
blame on
those who exert pressure on Congress through the political process-
which is a
basic right bestowed on all Americans. The reformers argument is "Stop
us
before we succumb to the special interest groups."
2002 Ron Paul 7:12
Politicians unable to accept this responsibility clamor for a system
that
diminishes the need for them to persuade individuals and groups to
donate money
to their campaigns. Instead of persuasion, they endorse coercing
taxpayers to
finance campaigns.
2002 Ron Paul 7:13
This only changes the special interest groups that control
government policy.
Instead of voluntary groups making their own decisions with their own
money,
politicians and bureaucrats dictate how political campaigns will be
financed.
Not only will politicians and bureaucrats gain influence over
elections, other
nondeserving people will benefit. Clearly, incumbents will greatly
benefit by
more controls over campaign spending- a benefit to which the reformers
will
never admit.
2002 Ron Paul 7:14
Mr. Speaker, the freedoms of the American people should not be
restricted
because some politicians cannot control themselves. We need to get
money out of
government. Only then will money not be important in politics. Campaign
finance
laws, such as those before us today, will not make politicians more
ethical, but
they will make it harder for average Americans to influence Washington.
2002 Ron Paul 7:15
The case against this bill was eloquently made by Herb Titus in the
paper
referenced above:
ACampaign-finance
reform is truly a wolf in sheeps clothing. Promising reform, it hides
incumbent
perquisites. Promising competition, it favors monopoly. Promising
integrity, it
fosters corruption. Real campaign-finance reform calls for a return to
Americas
original constitutional principles of limited and decentralized
governmental
power, thereby preserving the power of the people."
2002 Ron Paul 7:16
I urge my colleagues to listen to Professor Titus and reject this
unconstitutional proposal. Instead, I hope my colleagues will work to
reduce
special interest influence in Washington and restore integrity to
politics by
reducing the federal government to its constitutional limits. I
would like
to take this opportunity to introduce the excellent article by Mr.
Titus into
the record:
2002 Ron Paul 7:17
Campaign-Finance Reform
A Constitutional Analysis
by Herbert W. Titus
2002 Ron Paul 7:25
I. Introduction
To date, the legislative debate over campaign-finance reform has
focused upon the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech, as
interpreted and applied by the courts. The constitutional issues,
however, are not limited to the First Amendment, neither are they
resolved by citation to Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976)
nor by the latest Supreme Court opinion, including the one handed down
on June 25, 2001 in FEC v. Colorado Republican Federal
Campaign Committee. To the contrary, pursuant to their oaths of
office, members of Congress have an independent duty to determine the
constitutionality of legislation before them and to decide, before ever
reaching the First Amendment, whether they have been vested by the
Constitution with any authority, at all, to regulate federal
election campaigns.
2002 Ron Paul 7:26
The original Constitution did not contain the Bill of Rights,
including the First Amendment. Writing in Federalist No. 84, Alexander
Hamilton defended this omission, claiming that a bill of rights was not
needed in a republic with a written constitution expressly enumerating
the powers of government. Indeed, Hamilton observed a bill of rights
attached to such a constitution might well prove dangerous because
placing express limits upon the exercise of a power might give rise to
the assumption that such a power had been previously granted.
2002 Ron Paul 7:27
Hamilton’s warning has proved prophetic in the case of
campaign-finance reform. As the debate swirls around the impact of such
reform measures on the freedom of speech and association, the question
whether Congress has the constitutional authority to regulate federal
election campaigns is being ignored. Yet, that question would have been
hotly debated and quickly answered in America’s founding era in light
of the constitutional text carefully circumscribing Congress’s
authority in relation to federal elections. (See Article I, Section 4,
Clause 1 and Article II, Section 1, Clause 4; Federalist No. 60 and
Federalist No. 68, I Story’s Commentaries on the
Constitution,Sections 814-826 and II Story’s
Commentaries, Sections 1453-75, 5th ed. 1891.)
2002 Ron Paul 7:28
Additionally, the issue of constitutional authority would have
been examined, in the first instance, by Congress and the president
without their being bound by previous court opinions. It had already
been well established that each representative, each senator, and the
president and his cabinet had a constitutional duty, independent of the
judiciary, to determine the constitutionality of legislation before
them. As President Andrew Jackson observed, in his 1832 veto message
rejecting a bill extending the charter of the Bank of the United States:
2002 Ron Paul 7:29
It is maintained by the advocates of the bank that its
constitutionality in all its features ought to be considered as settled
by precedent and by the decision of the Supreme Court. To this
conclusion I cannot assent. Mere precedent is a dangerous source of
authority...[and] the opinion of the Supreme Court...ought not to
control the coordinate authorities of this Government. The Congress,
the Executive, and the Court must each for itself be guided by its own
opinion of the Constitution. Each public officer who takes an oath to
support the Constitution swears that he will support it as he
understands it, and not as it is understood by others. It is as much
the duty of the House of Representatives, of the Senate, and of the
President to decide upon the constitutionality of any bill...presented
to them for passage...as it is of the supreme judges when it may be
brought before them for judicial decision.
2002 Ron Paul 7:30
It is in light of these principles, then, that the issue of
constitutional authority to enact any campaign-finance reform bill is
addressed in sections II and III below, before reaching the First
Amendment issues raised by particular campaign-finance measures in
sections IV and V.Furthermore, those issues are examined in
light of the constitutional duty of Congress to decide for itself
whether it has the constitutional authority to enact campaign-finance
reform legislation and whether any such legislation violates the First
Amendment, regardless of the opinion of the United States Supreme Court
in Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976) and its progeny,
including the high court’s most recent pronouncement on June 25, 2001.
2002 Ron Paul 7:31
II.Congress Has No Constitutional Authority to Pass Any
Campaign-Finance Reform Legislation
According to Article I, Section 1 of the United States
Constitution, Congress is a legislature of enumerated powers, having
only those "powers herein granted." As a legislature of enumerated
powers, Congress may enact laws only for constitutionally authorized
purposes. (McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S., 4 Wheat. 316, 1819)
("Let the end be legitimate, and all means which are appropriate, which
are plainly adapted to that end which are not prohibited, are
constitutional.") The stated purpose of all campaign-finance reform
legislation, like the Federal Election Campaign Act that it amends, is
to "reform the financing of campaigns for election to Federal office,"
thereby preventing the "corruption and the appearance of corruption" in
government and "equaliz[ing] the relative ability of all citizens to
affect the outcomes of elections." (Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S.
1, 25-26, 1976) Congress has been granted no such power.
2002 Ron Paul 7:32
The threshold question concerning any campaign-finance reform bill
is whether the Constitution has conferred upon Congress any authority
to regulate federal election campaigns. Such authority is not
found among any enumerated power conferred upon Congress. Therefore,
Congress may not justify any campaign-finance reform measure on the
grounds that its purpose is to reform the financing of campaigns for
federal office. Thus, campaign-finance reform laws may be
constitutionally justified only if enacted as a means to achieve some
other purpose that is constitutionally authorized. (McCulloch v.
Maryland, 17 U.S., 4 Wheat. 316, 1819)
2002 Ron Paul 7:33
The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, as amended in 1974,
presumed that the Constitution authorized Congress to regulate federal
election campaigns for the purposes of "the prevention of corruption
and the appearance of corruption" in government and of the equalization
of "the relative ability of all citizens to affect the outcome of
elections." (Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 25-26, 1976)
According to the proponents of campaign-finance reform, both then and
now, Congress has power to regulate federal election campaigns because
it has the general power "to regulate federal elections...."(Id.,
424 U.S. at 13-14) A careful examination of the Constitution, as
it is written, uncovers no such broad power, but only a carefully
circumscribed one.
2002 Ron Paul 7:34
As for congressional elections, Article I, Section 4 limits
Congress to the making of regulations prescribing the "times, places
and manner of holding elections for senators and representatives." As
for the election of the president and vice president Article II,
Section 1 limits Congress only to "determin[ing] the time of
choosing the [presidential] electors, and the day on which they shall
give their votes; which day shall be the same throughout the
United States." (Emphasis added.) As for the place and manner of the
selection of the presidential electors, and hence the president and
vice president of the United States, the Twelfth Amendment to the
Constitution determines the place and, according to Article II,
Section 1, the state legislatures choose the manner by which
the electors are chosen. (Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. --, 148 L.Ed.2d
388, 2000)
2002 Ron Paul 7:35
Given these express restrictions upon congressional power over
federal elections, it was not until the 1930s that Congress, with court
approval, began to assume broad powers over federal elections,
including the regulation of campaigns for the office of the president. (Burroughs
v. United States, 290 U.S. 534, 1934) At the time of America’s
founding, and extending for a period of nearly 135 years, such was not
the case.
2002 Ron Paul 7:36
As for congressional elections, Alexander Hamilton observed, in Federalist
No. 60, that congressional authority was "expressly restricted
to the regulation of the times, the places, the manner
of elections," and did not, for example, extend to the qualifications
of voters. Likewise, Joseph Story noted that congressional authority
over federal elections was explicitly confined to regulations
concerning the mechanics and integrity of the election process itself,
and did not extend to the integrity of government generally or the
relative power of voters. (I Story’s Commentaries on the Constitution,
Section 826, 5th ed., 1891)
2002 Ron Paul 7:37
As for presidential elections, Hamilton noted that the detailed
plan set forth in the original constitution was deliberately designed
to ensure that the president would not be elected according to rules
promulgated by Congress, lest the president be too dependent upon that
body. (Federalist No. 68) Likewise, Justice Story asserted that
both the original Constitution and the Twelfth Amendment immunized the
"mode of election of the President and Vice-President" from
congressional regulation, limiting congressional authority only to
setting the "time" of the election. (II Story’sCommentaries,
Sections 1453-75, 5th ed., 1891)
2002 Ron Paul 7:38
In 1892, a unanimous Supreme Court rehearsed the history and text
governing the election of the president and vice president, concluding
that the manner of selection of presidential electors was
"placed absolutely and wholly with the legislatures of the several
states" and that this "power and jurisdiction of the State" was "so
framed that congressional and Federal influence might be excluded." (McPherson
v. Blacker, 146 U.S. 1, 34-36, 1892) (See also Bush v. Gore,
supra.) Because the Constitution grants to Congress no authority to
regulate the "manner" of the election of the president and vice
president, it follows that Congress has no authority over presidential
and vice presidential election campaigns.
2002 Ron Paul 7:39
As for congressional regulation of the campaigns of candidates for
the United States House of Representatives and United States Senate,
four justices of the United States Supreme Court, in 1921, struck down
a federal law limiting contributions and expenditures in congressional
elections, observing:
2002 Ron Paul 7:40 We find no support in reason or authority for the argument that
because the offices were created by the Constitution, Congress has some
indefinite, undefined power over elections for Senators and
Representatives not derived from [Article I] Section 4. (Newberry
v. United States, 256 U.S. 232, 249, 1921)
2002 Ron Paul 7:41
From this constitutional premise, these justices ruled that the
"authority to regulate the manner of holding... [elections] gives no
right to control" things that are "prerequisites to elections or [that]
may affect their outcomes - voters, education, means of transportation,
health, public discussion, immigration, private animosities,
even the face and figure of the candidate...." (Id., 256 U.S.
at 257 [emphasis added])Therefore, they concluded that
Congress had authority only to regulate congressional elections to
protect voters from fraud {Ex parte Siebold, 100 U.S. 371,
382-88 (1880)}, from intimidation {Ex Parte Yarbrough, 110 U.S.
660-62 (1884)} and from other acts designed to protect the integrity of
the election process, as such. (Newberry v. United States, supra, 256
U.S. at 255)
2002 Ron Paul 7:42
This was the original understanding, as set forth in the
constitutional text and as stated by Hamilton and Story. Congressional
regulation of political campaigns, beginning in the 1930s, disregards
the founding principle of limited federal authority. Instead, such
regulation is based upon the assumption that Congress is a legislature
of plenary power, rather than enumerated powers as stated in Article I,
Section 1.
2002 Ron Paul 7:43
(See Burroughs v. United States, supra, 290 U.S. at 545.)
Such precedents as these should be rejected, lest Congress overstep the
limited authority granted to it by the sovereign people of the United
States.
2002 Ron Paul 7:44
III. Campaign-Finance Reform Violates Separation of Powers and
Federalism
Under the Constitution, Congress has no role in the manner by
which the president and vice president are selected. In order to ensure
the independence of the president from Congress, the electors of the
president and vice president are state officers, governed exclusively
by the Constitution and by state law. (See Bush v. Gore,
supra.) All current campaign-finance measures, such as the Federal
Campaign Act of 1971, as amended in 1974, subvert these separation of
powers and federalism principles by imposing a national uniform rule
governing the conduct of election campaigns for president and
vice-president. They also undermine the federalism principle
underpinning the limited role of Congress in the governance of
elections of representatives and senators.
2002 Ron Paul 7:45
According to Article II, Section 1, the state legislatures, not
Congress, determine the "manner" of the election of presidential
electors who, in turn, are governed by the Twelfth Amendment as to the
"manner" of the election of the president and vice president of the
United States. The only constitutionally prescribed role for the Senate
in that election process is to serve as an objective observer of the
final count of votes cast by the presidential electors. The House also
is limited to the role of an objective observer, unless on final count
of the electors’ votes, no person achieves a majority of votes for
president. Then, and only then, may the House intervene in the manner
of electing a president, casting one vote per state until a candidate
achieves a majority. As for the vice president, both houses of Congress
are limited to serving as objective observers of the final tally of
votes, except that the Senate plays the same role as the House if no
candidate for vice president receives a majority.
2002 Ron Paul 7:46
This detailed scheme limiting the role of Congress in the manner
of electing the president and the vice president of the United States
was deliberately chosen by America’s founders to insulate the federal
executive branch from the legislative branch in order to ensure
independence of the former from the latter. As Alexander Hamilton put
it in Federalist No. 68, the Constitution entrusts the
selection of the president and vice president not to "any
preestablished body, but to men chosen by the people for the special
purpose...." The electoral college was designed, therefore, as a buffer
between the people and Congress to guard against the risk of corruption
of the presidency by congressional participation in the election
process.
2002 Ron Paul 7:47
Thus, the electoral college system was designed to prevent
corruption and the appearance of corruption of the offices of the
president and the vice president. That system was set up in such a way
as to deny to Congress any authority over the manner of selecting those
two officers, leaving the selection process to be exclusively and
absolutely determined by the legislatures of the several states. This
delegation to the several state legislatures necessarily precludes
Congress from imposing any uniform rule governing the election of the
president and the vice president. (See McPherson v. Blacker, 146
U.S. 1, 1892.) By continuing the regulation of presidential election
campaigns as provided for in the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971,
as amended in 1974, and by adding new regulations that extend to
candidates for the presidency and vice presidency, all current
campaign-finance reform measures subvert the constitutionally
prescribed decentralized manner by which the president and vice
president of the United States are selected.
2002 Ron Paul 7:48
By design and effect, such measures perpetuate the current
regulations governing the selection of presidential and vice
presidential electors who are, according to the Constitution, state
officers, and not federal ones. (In re Green, 134 U.S. 377,
1890) ("Although the electors are appointed and act under and pursuant
to the Constitution of the United States, they are no more officers or
agents of the United States than are... the people of the States when
acting as electors of representatives in Congress."); Ray v. Blair,
343 U.S. 214, 224-25 (1952) ("The presidential electors exercise
a federal function in balloting for President and Vice-President but
they are not federal officers or agents any more than the state elector
who votes for congressmen.") Thus, all current campaign-finance reform
bills violate the principles of separation of powers and federalism
protecting the independence of the federal executive branch.
2002 Ron Paul 7:49
Additionally, campaign-finance regulations applied to the election
of members of Congress also intrude upon the power of their electors
who, like presidential electors, are state officers. According to
Article I, Section 2 and the Seventeenth Amendment, the qualifications
of the electors of United States representatives and senators are set
by state law, not by federal law. (In re Green, supra, 134 U.S.
379; Ray v. Blair, supra, 343 U.S. at 224-25) The Constitution
did not grant to Congress any power to determine the eligibility of
their electors, and thus insulated those electors from having their
power reduced, or otherwise affected, by their representatives in
Congress.
2002 Ron Paul 7:50
Although no current campaign-finance reform bill sets the
qualifications of electors for Congress, each one does, like its
predecessors, impose a uniform system of campaign rules designed to
govern the power to be exercised by citizens at the voting booth. Some
of the measures, like the McCain-Feingold bill passed in the Senate and
Shays-Meehan bill pending before the House, extend that uniform system,
exercising power over the state, district and local committees of
political parties as well as the national committees of those parties.
While such laws do not change state laws governing voter eligibility,
as such, they do change the power exercised by those eligible voters.
Indeed, one of the stated purposes of campaign reform legislation is to
"equalize" the power of citizens "to affect the outcome of elections." (Buckley
v. Valeo, supra, 424 U.S. at 25-26) Such a purpose, however, is
illegitimate. It imposes a national uniform standard limiting the power
of voters to the detriment of a constitutionally prescribed system of
state diversity.
2002 Ron Paul 7:51
In his Commentaries on the Constitution, Justice Story
observed that the framers deliberately chose not to impose a standard
of "equality" among the voters of the several states, but rather to
accommodate a "mixed system, embracing and representing and combining
distinct interests, classes and opinions." (I Story, Commentaries
on the Constitution Sections 583-84, 5th ed., 1891) More recently,
in a column published in the September 5, 1999, issue of The
Washington Post, columnist George Will reminded his fellow
Americans that the Constitution does not authorize one federal
election, but many. All current campaign-finance reform measures
disregard this decentralized federal structure governing elections to
Congress and to the presidency and, for that reason, are
unconstitutional.
2002 Ron Paul 7:52
IV. Campaign-Finance Reform Abridges the Freedom of Speech and the
Press
At the heart of campaign-finance reform legislation, is the desire
of
Congress to eliminate even the "appearance of corruption" to the end
that the people have confidence in the current system of representative
government. (Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 27, 1976) At the
heart of the
guarantee of the freedom of speech is the prohibition against any law
designed
to protect the reputation of the government to the end that the people
have
confidence in their current governors. As seditious libel laws
protecting the
reputation of the government unconstitutionally abridge the freedom of
speech so
also do campaign-finance reform laws.
2002 Ron Paul 7:53
In Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 27-28 (1976), the
Supreme Court
recognized that the contribution and other limitations imposed by the
Federal
Election Campaign Act of 1971 could not be justified on the
grounds that
they prevented only "the most blatant and specific attempts of those
with
money to influence governmental action." Rather, the court found, that
such
limitations served a much broader purpose, namely, the prevention of
"the
appearance of corruption" to the end that "confidence in the system of
representative government is not to be eroded...." (Id., 424
U.S. at
27)
2002 Ron Paul 7:54
Since Buckley, the proponents of ever more stringent
limits upon
campaign contributions have emphasized that such laws are needed not
to
prevent actual government corruption, but to eliminate all appearances
of such
corruption. Indeed, these proponents have contended that the
elimination of the
appearance of corruption is compelling because, if the appearance is
allowed to
remain, people will lose faith in our current system of government and
their
confidence in their elected leaders, such faith and confidence lying at
the
heart of a healthy democracy.
2002 Ron Paul 7:55
This same theme has been struck by leading proponents of reform in
the House
of Representatives. Four years ago, House Minority Leader Richard
Gephardt urged
the adoption of more restrictive measures "for healthy campaigns in a
healthy democracy" even at the expense of the freedom of speech.
(Gibbs,
"The Wake-Up Call," Time, p. 25, Feb. 3, 1997) Representative
Gephardt has not changed his mind, continuing his adamant support of
the
speech-restrictive Shays-Meehan bill to this day. (Mitchell, "2
Election
Bills Go to the House Floor," The New York Times , June 29, 2001)
Indeed,
Senator John McCain has not changed his mind either. Having urged in
1997 the
enactment of a law placing limits on public policy organizations’
political
advertising in the waning days of an election campaign, and thus
calling off the
political "attack dogs" (NBC News, Meet the Press, Feb. 3, 1997),
Senator McCain is waging an all-out war to make sure that his version
of
campaign-finance reform passes the House. (Shenon, "House Critics Call
McCain a Bully on Campaign Bill," The New York Times, July 9, 2001) As
McCain’s Democrat colleague, Russell Feingold, put it upon the
introduction of
Shays-Meehan in the Senate in 1999: "The prevalence – no – the
dominance of money in our system of elections and our legislature
will…cause
them to crumble." (Cong. Rec. S422, 423, daily ed., Jan. 19, 1999)
2002 Ron Paul 7:56
What these advocates of campaign-finance reform really want is to
protect
incumbent office holders from the people. Under the guise of preserving
the
present governmental structure, they support campaign-finance reform
measures
that are nothing more than "incumbent-protection" legislation that
would make entrenched politicians even less responsive to the people.
(See e.g.,
James C. Miller, Monopoly Politics 88-101, Hoover Inst. 1999.)
2002 Ron Paul 7:57
Such contentions and consequences as these undermine the
foundation of
America’s constitutional republic. Our nation’s continued existence -
its
sovereignty - is not embodied in its current system of government or in
its
current elected and appointed leaders. Instead, the civil sovereignty
of the
nation resides in the people. To preserve popular sovereignty, the
First
Amendment secures to the people the freedom of speech, which, in turn,
protects
the people from any legislation the purpose of which is to preserve the
current
government and its leaders.
2002 Ron Paul 7:58
Twice in America’s history, the sovereignty of the people came
under direct
attack from Congress. Both times the attack came in the form of laws
prohibiting
"seditious libel" (writing or speaking in such a way as to bring the
government into ridicule or disrepute), and thereby threatening the
current
system of government and its leaders. Finally, in 1964, the United
States
Supreme Court put an end to seditious libel, ruling that the freedom of
speech
guarantees a nation in which "debate on the public issues should be
uninhibited, robust and wide-open, and that it may well include
vehement,
caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and
public
officials." (New York Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270,
1964)
2002 Ron Paul 7:59
Had the court applied the same standard to the Campaign Reform Act
of 1971,
that law, too, would have been cast into the dustbin of history. For,
campaign-finance reform laws - like seditious libel laws - exist solely
to
protect the present government and her leaders from the people. While
this goal
may be permissible in England where the Parliament embodies the
sovereignty of
the nation, it has no place in America where, as James Madison put it
in the
1800 Virginia Resolutions in opposition to the Alien and Sedition Act
of 1798,
the "people, not the government, possess absolute sovereignty."
2002 Ron Paul 7:60
Campaign-finance reform also constitutes a direct attack on the
First
Amendment freedom of the press. By giving politicians and their
appointed
bureaucrats the right to decide what the people can say about them in
the heat
of an election campaign, as McCain-Feingold and Shays-Meehan do with
respect to
issue advertising in the closing weeks of a campaign, these so-called
reformers
reject the very idea of a republican form of government, granting to
the
government "censorial power over the people," instead of preserving
the censorial power of the people over their government. (See New York
Times v.
Sullivan, supra, 376 U.S. at 275.)
2002 Ron Paul 7:61
Such intrusions into the campaign process put the government into
the role of
editor of campaign literature, a role that is absolutely forbidden to
the
government by the freedom of the press. (Miami Herald Tribune v.
Tornillo, 418
U.S. 241, 258, 1974) Indeed, if the Supreme Court would apply the same
principle
to election-campaign literature that it has applied to election
editorials and
stories carried by newspapers, all campaign-finance reform legislation
would be
clearly unconstitutional. Not only do all campaign-finance reform
measures
transfer editorial control over an election campaign from the people to
the
government, but they also continue the unconstitutional licensing
system of the
Federal Election Commission established by the Federal Election
Campaign Act of
1971. In order to engage in a campaign for federal office, a candidate
must
register and report to the commission. Anyone who does not meet the
commission’s
registration and reporting rules is denied the right to participate and
is
subject not only to civil and criminal penalties, but to an injunction.
Such a
regulatory scheme strikes at the very heart of the freedom of the press
which,
as Sir William Blackstone wrote in 1769:
2002 Ron Paul 7:62 The liberty of the press...consists of laying...no previous
restraints on publications.... Every freeman has the undoubted
right to lay what sentiments he pleases before the public: to forbid
this is to destroy the freedom of the press. (IV W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England151-52,1769 [emphasis added])
2002 Ron Paul 7:63
Campaign-finance reform, then, is not progressive, but reactive,
turning the clock back to the days of the English Star Chamber that enforced the
King’s rules governing the conduct of elections for the ostensible purpose of
keeping his realm free of moral and political corruption. (Sources of Our
Liberties 130, 242, Perry, ed., American Bar Found., 1978) A free nation may only be
preserved when the people have the liberty of the press to censor their own
speech about the government and about candidates for governmental office, not when
the government has censorship power of the people, as campaign-finance
reform inevitably dictates.
2002 Ron Paul 7:64
V. Campaign-Finance Reform Abridges the Right of the People to
Assemble
The right of the people to assemble is the right of the people to
associate freely together to consult for the common good, subject only to the
requirement that their association be "peaceable." Any law that is not designed to
keep the physical peace of the community is, therefore,
unconstitutional. No campaign-finance reform measure has ever been designed to keep the
"physical peace"; rather, each is designed to keep the "political
peace;" a constitutionally impermissible goal abridging the right of
the people to assemble.
2002 Ron Paul 7:65
Since Watergate, Congress has been scrambling to "purify" the
political process in order to restore public confidence in the federal
government. Campaign-finance reform has been one of the centerpieces of
this purification effort. Two central goals have dominated this reform
effort: (1) to limit the amounts that any one person or entity may contribute to an
election campaign; (2) to force disclosure of the identity of those
contributors. Both of these aims violate the First Amendment right of the people to assemble.
2002 Ron Paul 7:66
At the heart of the right of the people to assemble is the right
of the people to choose how they are going to associate with one another "for
the ‘common advancement of political beliefs.’" (Democratic Party v.
Wisconsin, 450 U.S. 107, 121-22, 1981) This right extends to
associations of people for the purpose of electing persons to federal office who share
those political beliefs. (Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 57, 1976)
Indeed, as Justice Clarence Thomas recently observed: "Political associations
allow citizens to pool their resources and make their advocacy more effective
and such efforts are fully protected by the First Amendment." (Colo. Rep.
Fed. Camp. Comm. v. FEC, 518 U.S. 604, 135 Led2d 795, 818, 1996,
Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment and dissenting)
2002 Ron Paul 7:67
Had the Supreme Court applied this principle consistently in its
review of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, it would have held that the
individual contribution limits of that act violated the
constitutionally guaranteed freedom of association. As Justice Thomas has pointed out:
"If an individual is limited in the amount of resources he can contribute
to...a pool, he is certainly limited in his ability to associate for the
purposes of effective advocacy." (Id., 135 L.Ed.2d at 819) Instead, the
court has attempted to distinguish between "issue advocacy" - where the
right of the people to associate must remain unfettered - and "express
advocacy" for or against individual candidates - where the right of the
people to associate may be limited.
2002 Ron Paul 7:68
Both McCain-Feingold and Shays-Meehan exploit this distinction in
their attempt to muzzle political advertisements in the final weeks of an
election campaign, claiming that issue advocacy becomes express candidate
advocacy when conducted during the crucial weeks before election day. In so doing,
both bills seriously undermine the people’s right to choose for themselves how
they will associate to advance or defeat certain measures or to promote specific
principles of public policy. Constraining the people who speak out on
the issues in conjunction with an election campaign may make for a more "orderly"
political process, but people are not horses or mules to be hooked up
to the political bandwagons of government-subsidized incumbent politicians.
Additionally, limits on so-called "soft money" to political parties
are really designed to place incumbent office holders in control of the
political parties whose name they sport. By placing controls on how
political parties may raise and spend money, "independent" politicians like John
McCain seek to transmute America’s political parties into political
eunuchs, impotent to affect the outcome of any election.
2002 Ron Paul 7:69
Compounding these intrusions upon the people’s right to choose how
and with whom they will associate to advance their political agenda, all
campaign-finance reform measures depend upon forced disclosure of the names and
addresses of even the smallest contributor to an election campaign. Such required public
disclosure hearkens back to the days when the English monarchy required
the publication of the names and addresses of all printers of all
publications circulated throughout the realm. Requiring disclosure of the names of
contributors to federal election campaigns departs from an American
tradition and practice that dates back to the founding of the nation and from a
long line of cases affording constitutional protection of anonymity in
associative relationships. (McIntyre v. Ohio, 514 U.S. 334, 1995; NAACP
v. Alabama, 357 U.S. 449, 1958)Forced divulgence of the
names of contributors to federal election campaigns exposes people not only to
retaliation by employers and union leaders, whose political choices are
not the same as their employees and their members, but it also exposes people
who support challengers to the inevitable cold shoulder of a re-elected
incumbent. (Buckley v. Valeo, supra, 424 U.S. at 237,Burger, C.J., dissenting)
2002 Ron Paul 7:70
Keeping the political peace, as campaign-finance reform is
designed to do, exacts a high price, costing the people their precious liberty of
choosing how much energy and resources they wish to devote to politics. While full
freedom of association, including anonymity, risks corruption of the political
process, nothing is more corrosive of that process than placing election
campaigns in the discretionary hands of unelected bureaucrats. (Miller, Monopoly
Politics 95-100, 1999)
2002 Ron Paul 7:71
VI. Conclusion
Campaign-finance reform is truly a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
Promising
reform, it hides incumbent perquisites. Promising competition, it
favors
monopoly. Promising integrity, it fosters corruption. Real
campaign-finance
reform calls for a return to America’s original constitutional
principles of
limited and decentralized governmental power, thereby preserving the
power of
the people.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2002/cr021302.htm