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P3ter_Griffin
06-25-2012, 01:48 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/supreme-court-strikes-down-montana-limits-on-corporate-campaign-spending/2012/06/25/gJQApu6i1V_story.html
Supreme Court strikes down Montana limits on corporate campaign spending


The Supreme Court on Monday turned away a plea to revisit its 2-year-old campaign finance decision in the Citizens United case and instead struck down a Montana law limiting corporate campaign spending.

The same five conservative justices in the Citizens United majority that freed corporations and labor unions to spend unlimited amounts in federal elections joined Monday to reverse a Montana court ruling upholding the state’s century-old law. The four liberal justices dissented.

“The question presented in this case is whether the holding of Citizens United applies to the Montana state law. There can be no serious doubt that it does,” the court said in an unsigned opinion.

The Citizens United decision paved the way for unlimited spending by corporations and labor unions in elections for Congress and the president, as long as the dollars are independent of the campaigns they are intended to help. The decision, grounded in the freedom of speech, appeared to apply equally to state contests.

But Montana aggressively defended its 1912 law against a challenge from corporations seeking to be free of spending limits, and the state Supreme Court sided with the state. The state court said a history of corruption showed the need for the limits, even as Justice Anthony Kennedy declared in his Citizens United opinion that independent expenditures by corporations “do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.”

In a brief dissent Monday, Justice Stephen Breyer said campaign spending since 2010 “casts grave doubt on the court’s supposition that independent expenditures do not corrupt or appear to do so.”

State leaders in Montana swiftly condemned the decision.

Montana Attorney General Steve Bullock called the nation’s high court just “another political body,” while Gov. Brian Schweitzer says the Supreme Court is now endorsing “dirty, secret, corporate, foreign money.”

Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia, as well as Sen. John McCain and other congressional champions of stricter regulations on campaign money, joined with Montana.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said Monday’s “decision gives short shrift to states’ vital interests in protecting their democratic processes and institutions from the threats posed by unlimited corporate spending in campaigns.”

James Bopp, the lawyer who challenged the Montana law, said,” This closes the door on the argument that unique facts in a certain state can be employed to overturn Citizens United.”

In February, Breyer and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, both dissenters in Citizens United, challenged Kennedy’s view that the independent campaign spending could not be corrupting by virtue of the absence of links to a campaign.

When the court blocked the Montana ruling in February, Ginsburg issued a brief statement for herself and Breyer saying that campaign spending since the decision makes “it exceedingly difficult to maintain that independent expenditures by corporations ‘do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.’”

Ginsburg appeared to be referring to the rise of unregulated super PACs that have injected millions of dollars into the presidential and other campaigns. She said the case “will give the court an opportunity to consider whether, in light of the huge sums currently deployed to buy candidates’ allegiance, Citizens United should continue to hold sway.”

The corporations that sued over the law said it could not remain on the books after the Citizens United decision.

Montana urged the high court to reject the appeal, or hold arguments. The state would have preferred either of those outcomes to what the court did Monday — that is, issue what the court calls a summary reversal without holding new oral arguments. The prevailing side in the lower court almost always strives to avoid high court review. But Montana and its supporters hoped a thorough debate over the Citizens United decision would lead to its reconsideration or at least limits on its reach.

The case is American Tradition Partnership v. Bullock, 11-1179.

phill4paul
06-25-2012, 01:57 PM
Enforce it. Prosecute for it. Let the Fed take the next step.

Brett85
06-25-2012, 07:18 PM
This was the correct decision. State governments don't have the right to violate the 1st amendment.

Zatch
06-25-2012, 10:46 PM
This was the correct decision. State governments don't have the right to violate the 1st amendment.

What's Ron Paul's position on this? Wouldn't he say this was a state issue?

nobody's_hero
06-26-2012, 06:55 AM
I'm never happy when Federal Courts throw out State Court decisions.

Brett85
06-26-2012, 11:02 AM
What's Ron Paul's position on this? Wouldn't he say this was a state issue?

No, he would say that a state government doesn't have the right to infringe on freedom of speech.

TCE
06-26-2012, 12:00 PM
What's Ron Paul's position on this? Wouldn't he say this was a state issue?

Natural rights issue. The states have rights to do certain things, like regulate commerce within their borders, but they cannot violate natural rights. Freedom of speech is such a right.

Uncle Emanuel Watkins
06-26-2012, 12:37 PM
This was the correct decision. State governments don't have the right to violate the 1st amendment.

The states do have the right to violate any judgement decided by the Supreme Court. A state has national power. In contrast, the Federal Supreme Court is a part of the federal government. In turn, it is part of a Democratic Republic which is only a relationship it has with the fifty sovereign nation states.
There are certain terms which need to be clarified. One such example would be the "National Hurricane Center." Well, the national cooperative should actually read "Federal Hurricane Center."
Part of this problem arises because the region of the northeastern part of the United States utilizes Washington DC, the federal Supreme Court included, as their own personal local government doing so with the agenda of cheating the rest of the nation, economically speaking.

Uncle Emanuel Watkins
06-26-2012, 12:48 PM
Natural rights issue. The states have rights to do certain things, like regulate commerce within their borders, but they cannot violate natural rights. Freedom of speech is such a right.

A natural right doesn't need any of the false powers of manipulation to back them up. Think about it this way. A natural right resides within the Almighty. And what does the Almighty need to do or say? Well, nothing. It is only a deception of the mind that a natural right is ever broken. This is what our Founders were proclaiming. They declared a self evident and unalienable natural law true even beyond what a person's use of their direct five senses might conclude.
A natural right was a John Locke thing. A civil right came later as a Rousseau thing.
We have become a government of humpers. As such, they've never really had to think. Let me ask you? Which would you rather do, hump or think?

Uncle Emanuel Watkins
06-26-2012, 12:52 PM
No, he would say that a state government doesn't have the right to infringe on freedom of speech.

Does the state of China have the right to infringe on freedom of speech? Why, they certainly do. Living within the Democratic Republic of fifty nations, if you don't like how Texas is treating you, then move to Louisiana.
This is the best solution.

Uncle Emanuel Watkins
06-26-2012, 12:58 PM
I'm never happy when Federal Courts throw out State Court decisions.

Actually, it would be more accurate to say "Federal Courts throw out national court decisions."
We have fifty national levels in the Democratic Republic we live in. To say state and national level is an inaccurate statement. One should say "state and federal." People always accept that the federal level should always supersede every national state level. But this is only true regarding the extremely limited responsibility the federal government is supposed to be having within a Democratic Republic and the limited relationship it is supposed to be having with the fifty individual nation states.