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 Presidential Primaries  Part private, part public money Federal matching funds for all individuals’ donations of $250 or less (incentive to raise money.

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Presentation on theme: " Presidential Primaries  Part private, part public money Federal matching funds for all individuals’ donations of $250 or less (incentive to raise money."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Presidential Primaries  Part private, part public money Federal matching funds for all individuals’ donations of $250 or less (incentive to raise money from small donors) Governmental lump-sum grants to parties to help pay convention costs

3  Presidential General Elections  All public money (usually) Nominee eligible for up to $74.4 million + the cost of living adjustment, and can spend $50,000 of his/her own personal funds Barack Obama the first major candidate to drop out of the modern campaign financing system since its creation in 1976 (essentially had no spending limits)

4  Congressional Elections  Mostly private money $2000 maximum for individual donors $5000 limits for PACs Oooo….Pretty! PACs tend to view funds as a way to get access to candidates. (have access, but don’t “own them” because of small donation amounts) -give bulk of $ to incumbents or candidates with no opposition. -give $ to democrats and republicans in Congress since no way to predict who will have majority next

5  Watergate brought about the 1973 federal campaign reform law and the creation of the Federal Election Commission (FEC)

6 Soft Money  unregulated contributions to national political parties  funds spent by independent organizations that do not specifically advocate the election or defeat of candidates  funds which are not contributed directly to candidate campaigns. Hard Money  contributed directly to a candidate of a political party  regulated by law in both source and amount  monitored by the Federal Election Commission.

7  Limit individual donations to $1000 per candidate per elections  Reaffirmed ban on corporate and union donations in place since 1925  Allowed for creation of PACs to raise money for corporations, unions, etc.  Need at least 50 voluntary members  Have to give to at least 5 federal candidates  Limited to giving $5000 per election per candidate, or no more than $15,000 per year to any political party  Created public funding for presidential campaigns

8  Challenged in the Supreme Court as a First Amendment violation, but mostly upheld in Buckley v. Valeo  Independent expenditures  An organization or PAC can spend as much as it wishes on advertising, so long as it is not coordinated with a candidate’s campaign.  Soft money  Unlimited amounts of $ may be given to a political party, so long as a candidate is not named; this $ can then be spent to help candidate with voting drives, etc.

9  Did the limits placed on electoral expenditures by the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 and related provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, violate the First Amendment’s freedom of speech and association clauses?  NO: limits on contributions to campaigns and candidates guards against corruption; doesn’t violate 1 st amendment.  YES: limits on a candidate’s spending from personal accounts does violate 1 st amendment; practice doesn’t prevent corruption and doesn’t serve a great enough government interest to curtail free speech.

10  Following 2000 election, there was a desire to reform the finance law  2002 - Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act (McCain- Feingold Law)  Banned soft money contributions  Raised limit on individual donations to $2000 per candidate per election  Restricted independent expenditures  “Stand by your ad” provision Can’t use own $ to refer to a clearly identifiable candidate during 60 days before general election or 30 days before primary election (…but)

11  Challenged in court as restriction of free speech, but Supreme Court upheld almost the entire law (McConnell v. Federal Election Commission 2003)  527 Organizations (named after IRS code)  Can spend money on politics as long as they do not coordinate with a candidate or lobby directly for that person  Essentially the same effect as soft money

12  Partially overturned McConnell v. FEC  McCain-Feingold law can’t restrict issue ads in months preceding an election, BUT it still must be an issue ad  Ads can’t explicitly or expressly advocate the election or defeat of a candidate Ex. "Vote for Smith," "Elect Smith," "Vote Against Doe," or "Defeat Doe"), but they  Can use the names of candidates Ex. "Bill Smith is an honest man who stands up for the people; John Doe is a chronic liar who's taken money from special interests and advocated cutting Social Security. Call John Doe and tell him how you feel about this

13  Buckley v. Valeo (1976) limits on donations was constitutional (to keep out corruption), but expenditures made independently of a candidate's campaign could not be limited (free speech). If expenditures are made in "coordination" with a campaign, however, they may be regulated as contributions.  McConnell v. Federal Election Commission (2003)- upheld BCRA ban on soft money and limit of electioneering ads 30/60 days before an election. ( Partially overturned by case below)  FEC v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. (2007) organizations engaged in genuine discussion of issues were entitled to a broad, "as applied" exemption from the electioneering communications provisions of BCRA  Citizens United v. FEC (2010) corporations and labor unions can use funds from their general treasuries to run ads for candidates in national elections.

14  Individual limits:  $2500 to federal candidate  $30,800 to national party  $5000 to PAC  Total limits in 2010-11  $46,200 limit to all fed candidates  $70,800 to all PACs and parties  Shaun McCutcheon wanted to contribute more claiming 1 st amend. violation.  The Supreme Court agreed!!  Decision does not change individual limits, it just gets rid of the total limit.

15 1. Presidential candidates have similar funds because of federal funding 2. During peacetime, presidential elections are usually decided on the basis of: a. Political party affiliation b. The state of the economy -- “pocketbook voting” c. Character

16 3. Other factors whose influence on the presidential campaign is usually overstated: a. Vice presidential nominee b. Political reporting c. Religion of the candidate d. Abortion as a single issue 4. Congressional races – money has a decisive effect a. Challenger must spend to be recognized b. Big spending incumbents also do better and higher spending has become the norm 5. Advantages of incumbency in fundraising

17  Is there a better way to reform campaign finance?  Voting with Dollars  Matching Funds  Clean Money – Clean Elections  OCCUPIED amendment


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