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Published byAriel McDowell Modified over 9 years ago
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Campaign Finance Reform
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Federal Election Campaign Act (1974) FEC created Contributions disclosed to FEC Limit on campaign contributions Public financing of presidential campaign Campaign spending limited
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Buckley v. Valeo Challenged Fed. Election Campaign Act (1974) SC – requirement that candidates report all contributions is OK “advocacy ad” by a PAC was considered a contribution limit amount that candidates can spend on their own campaigns is a violation of free speech “Money is speech!”
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Hard vs. Soft Money Hard $ -- contributed directly to campaigns; subject to limits Soft $ (pre-2002) – contributed to party for “party building activities”; no limits
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Changes to the Law In 2002, Congress passes Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (McCain- Feingold) Before the law, soft $ was unlimited and hard $ contributions limited to $1000. BCRA increased max. contribution to $2000. Outlawed soft $ donations Outlawed donations from corporations and unions
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Pre-2002 $1000 max. contribution to individuals Soft money donations were unlimited
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BCRA Increased max. contribution to $2000 Outlawed soft $ donations Outlawed donations from corporations and unions
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New Loopholes 527 organizations and Super PACs Ex: Swift Boat Vets in 2004Swift Boat Vets in 2004 Public funding for President
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What are the arguments for and against campaign finance reform?
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