收买选民:当前竞选资金格局的实证研究,以及最高法院不重审联合公民案是如何犯的错误

I. Nelson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文讨论了最高法院的错误之处,即草率地推翻了蒙大拿州最高法院在“西方传统伙伴关系诉AG”一案中的判决,而没有重审他们在“联合公民诉联邦选举委员会”一案中的判决。本文首先讨论了西方传统合伙案的判决,并分析了多数意见和反对意见。文章随后分析了蒙大拿州最高法院如何区分“联合公民”,法院特别关注蒙大拿州“独特”的政治历史,并发现蒙大拿州禁止企业独立政治支出的禁令服务于引人注目的州利益,并且是为该利益量身定制的。然后,文章转入对当前竞选资金格局的实证研究,具体着眼于:各州独特的腐败历史、企业政治支出缺乏透明度、公众对企业政治支出行为腐败的看法、超级政治行动委员会的独立性、政治黑钱和501(c)(4)组织被用来规避竞选财务法的影响,以及利用空壳公司规避竞选财务披露规则和联邦税法。文章最后列举了支持最高法院重审“联合公民”案的其他论据,包括:第一修正案的范围,公司是“国家的生物”的概念,政治行动委员会允许公司参与政治的能力,国家有权排除外国公司参与其民主政治制度的问题,股东保护,公共工会的待遇,以及最高法院在其对宪法原则的事实基础的理解不再准确时修改宪法原则的历史。
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Buying the Electorate: An Empirical Study of the Current Campaign Finance Landscape and How the Supreme Court Erred by Not Revisiting Citizens United
The article discusses how the Supreme Court erred by summarily reversing the Montana Supreme Court’s decision in Western Tradition Partnership v. AG and not revisiting their holding in Citizens United v. FEC. The article begins by discussing the holding in the Western Tradition Partnership case and analyzing both the majority and dissenting opinions. The article then analyzes how the Montana Supreme Court distinguished Citizens United, with the Court specifically looking at the “unique” political history in Montana and finding that Montana’s ban on corporate independent political spending served a compelling state interest and was narrowly tailored to that interest. The article then transitions into an empirical study of the current campaign finance landscape by specifically looking at: states’ unique histories of corruption, the lack of transparency with regard to corporate political expenditures, the public perception of corruption in corporate political spending practices, the independence of super PACs, the influence of political dark money and 501(c)(4) organizations being used to circumvent campaign finance laws, and the use of shell corporations to circumvent campaign finance disclosure rules and Federal tax laws. The article concludes by listing additional arguments in favor of the Supreme Court revisiting Citizens United including: the breadth of the First Amendment, the idea of corporations being “creatures of the state,” the ability of PACs to allow corporate political participation, the issue of a state’s power to exclude foreign corporations from participation in their democratic political institutions, shareholder protection, the treatment of public unions, and the Supreme Court’s history of altering constitutional doctrine when its understanding of the doctrine’s factual underpinnings no longer appear to be accurate.
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