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Published byRosalind Davidson Modified over 9 years ago
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Financing Campaigns
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Running for office is very expensive; for example, presidential candidates spend about 1 billion dollars each in the 2012 election
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1970s- New Campaign Financing system was created based on ▫Public disclosure of spending ▫Public funding of presidential elections ▫Limiting or prohibiting the contributions of certain groups like corporations and unions
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In 1974, the Federal Election Commission (FEC) was created as an independent agency of the Executive Branch. ▫Administer election laws ▫Keep records of campaign contributions
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Majority of campaign funding comes from: Private sources -Individual citizens (limited to $2,600) -Party organizations -Corporations -Special-interest groups
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Political Action Committees (PACs): Established by interest groups to support candidates Limited to a $5,000 contribution per candidate
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Two Methods to get around campaign spending limits: ▫“Soft Money” Donations: donations to the political party for general purposes. ▫Issue advocacy ads: support an issue rather than a candidate.
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Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (McCain- Feingold) passed in 2002. ▫Banned soft money donations to national political parties ▫Prohibited corporations and unions from using their general funds for political ads ▫Prohibited issue advocacy ads aimed at candidates from running within 60 days of general election.
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Since 2004, tax-exempt 527 groups and 501c groups have become loopholes for big contributors. 527 groups have to reveal their donors 501c groups do not (“dark money”)
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Citizens United v. FEC ▫Overturned parts of BCRA in its 5-4 decision in 2010. ▫Ruled restricting “electioneering communications” within general elections violates the First Amendment.
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Rise of Super PACs: PACs that can raise unlimited sums from corporations, individuals, etc. to advocate a candidate. (Must report funds to the FEC on a quarterly or monthly basis)
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