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How Cities and States are Sticking It to Citizens United

From courthouses to statehouses, the pro-corporate ruling is under pressure.
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Corporate flag, photo by watchingfrogsboil

The Supreme Court may have declared in Citizens United v. the FEC that corporations have a First Amendment right to spend unlimited amounts of money to influence elections, but that doesn’t mean cities and states have to be happy about it.

They’re expressing their disagreement on an increasing number of battlegrounds, with Citizens United under challenge in courts, in city council meetings, in state legislatures, on ballots, and in the streets.

Dissension in the Courts

Some of the most interesting recent action has been in the courts, with lower courts—including a state Supreme Court and a federal appeals court—taking on Citizens United.

“While, as a member of this Court, I am bound to follow Citizens United, I do not have to agree with the Supreme Court’s decision."
     -Justice James C. Nelson

In Montana, the state Supreme Court upheld a longstanding law limiting corporate spending in politics. A lower court had held that Citizens United invalidated the Corrupt Practices Act, a law passed by citizens’ ballot initiative in 1912, when it was common practice for the copper industry to bribe state politicians. Unwilling to lose a basic, century-old protection against corruption, the state appealed the issue to the Montana Supreme Court, which on Dec. 30 allowed the law to stand.

For over 100 years, Montana has had an electoral system that preserves the integrity of the political process, encourages full participation, and safeguards against corruption,” said Attorney General Steve Bullock, who argued the state’s case. “The Supreme Court’s decision upholds that system and is truly a victory for all Montanans.”

The decision holds that Montana—for a host of reasons, from its history of corrupt industries to its thinly spread population—has a compelling interest in keeping the law. “If the statute has worked to preserve a degree of political and social autonomy, is the State required to throw away its protections?” asked Chief Justice Mike McGrath, writing for the majority.

Even Justice James C. Nelson, who dissented, did so regretfully. “While, as a member of this Court, I am bound to follow Citizens United, I do not have to agree with the Supreme Court’s decision,” he wrote. “And, to be absolutely clear, I do not agree with it.”

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals took a similar stand when, in late December, it upheld a 2006 New York City law that, among other things, bans lobbyists from giving gifts to City officials and requires them to disclose all fundraising and consulting activities. A group of plaintiffs challenging the law hoped it would be invalidated under Citizens United; the court dismissed their lawsuit, upholding the City’s right to put limits on political contributions and prevent “pay-to-play” schemes.

Judge Guido Calabresi, in a concurring opinion, explained his reasoning for maintaining limits on corporate lobbying: “If an external factor, such as wealth, allows some individuals to communicate their political views too powerfully, then persons who lack wealth may, for all intents and purposes, be excluded from the democratic dialogue.”

From Cities and States to the U.S. Constitution

Though lower courts can take stands against it, the Supreme Court’s ruling—that money is constitutionally protected free speech and that corporations are legal persons entitled to such protections—is final. If the Montana and New York City cases are appealed to the Supreme Court, the lower court rulings are likely to be reversed; Montana and New York City would quickly see the end of their hard-won protections.

Protester at Occupy Boston, photo by sharonkuboKeeping It Clean

Maine found a groundbreaking way to keep money out of politics—but can it last?

That’s why the New York City Council on Wednesday joined a group of other cities (including Los Angeles, Boulder, Albany, Oakland, and Madison) in asking Congress to pass a Constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United. The resolution declares support for an amendment saying “that corporations are not entitled to the entirety of protections or ‘rights’ of natural persons, specifically so that the expenditure of corporate money to influence the electoral process is no longer a form of constitutionally protected speech.”

The same day, California lawmakers introduced a similar resolution in the state legislature.

Meanwhile, activists are gearing up for the upcoming 2-year anniversary of the ruling, planning rallies on the steps of the Supreme Court and federal courthouses across the country.

It won’t be easy to stop big money from undermining our democracy. But momentum is building. The desire for a functioning democracy, writes Judge Calabresi in his concurring opinion for the 2nd Circuit, “is, I believe, something that is so fundamental that sooner or later it is going to be recognized. Whether this will happen through a constitutional amendment or through changes in Supreme Court doctrine, I do not know. But it will happen.”


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Brooke Jarvis wrote this article fore YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Brooke is YES! Magazine's web editor.

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YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Jarvis, B. (2012, January 05). How Cities and States are Sticking It to Citizens United. Retrieved May 16, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://cms.yesmagazine.org/blogs/brooke-jarvis/how-cities-and-states-are-sticking-it-to-citizens-united. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

Brooke Jarvis's article re Citizens United

Posted by marte at Jan 07, 2012 07:13 PM
This site is new to me. Brooke Jarvis, I just found this post of yours on Common Dreams/ General tone of comments on that site has for me become contain so many downers I came here just to say THANK YOU for such heartening report. "Made my day" amidst all the prevailing doom, gloom, and snark :-( ;-).

Citizens United

Posted by mark orro at Jan 21, 2012 09:46 AM
What about labor union money? They piss away union members money, supposed to be kept for retirement and HC, without consent of the dues paying members. If you want corp money ou then get union and special interest money out also. Of course liberals dont want to compromise on ANYTHING!

MONEY OUT OF POLITICS

Posted by LOU THE LIBERAL at Jan 22, 2012 03:11 AM
SO MUCH FOR COMMON SENSE

WE THE PEOPLE OWN THE AIRWAVES AND YET WE ALLOW MONEY (THAT IS PRIMARILY USED TO "GET THE MESSAGE OUT" OVER OUR AIRWAVES THROUGH MEDIA COMPANIES THAT SHUT UP THE AVERAGE PERSON) TO BE RAISED TO BUY THE AIRWAVES.

WE COULD SOLVE THIS PROBLEM SIMPLY...FREE AIRTIME FOR QUALIFIED CANDIDATES (certain # of signatures, forcing grassroots activities by those candidates, etc) during a 90 day period that will allow candidates to out line their platforms.

The current system disconnects the people, forces officeholders to spend at least half the term raising money to buy ads on the airwaves that we own.

We have confused these issues to the point that we now have FEC rules with so many loop holes and exceptions that you need to be an expert to actually comply and even when compliance is achieved it does nothing to stop the corruption that is destroying the US.

Only we allow money to trump votes, the people's will, democracy, our ownership of the very airwaves that are sold to the politicians that should be serving the people.

it is all screwed up and anyone who looks must see that

this isnt working and we can't play this game any longer while this great coontry slides down the path to oligarchy

citizens united must be the wake up call or it will be the death knell of our democracy

get the money out of elections and take back our democracy

enough is enough

Value crisis

Posted by Sergio at Mar 19, 2012 09:12 PM
I think this is all about the value crisis we are living nowadays.

Leadership is disappearing and being revolutionized. The world is changing and transforming itself in a global monarchy.

You can visit my blog. It's in spanish but you can translate it with Google. I made posts about that and I'm going to continue: http://www.sergiogabrie.net

Regards from Argentina.

Value crisis

Posted by Sergio at Mar 19, 2012 09:13 PM
I think this is all about the value crisis we are living nowadays.

Leadership is disappearing and being revolutionized. The world is changing and transforming itself in a global monarchy.

You can visit my blog. It's in spanish but you can translate it with Google. I made posts about that and I'm going to continue: http://www.sergiogabriel.net

Regards from Argentina.

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