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Buckley v. Valeo

424 U.S. 1 (1976), argued 16 Nov. 1975, decided 30 Jan. 1976 by varying votes on specific questions; opinion was unsigned, Burger, Blackmun, Rehnquist, White, and Marshall all dissented in part, Stevens not participating. Rarely has the Court recast congressional legislation in so many substantial particulars as it did in this case in ruling on the several provisions of the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA) of 1971, as amended in 1974, and on relevant provisions of the Revenue Act of 1971, as amended in 1974. As the per curiam opinion indicates, different majorities of the eight participating justices decided the various challenges raised by candidates and others seeking to prevent the new campaign legislation from taking effect in the 1976 election.

The Court invalidated a provision of the law that permitted Congress to choose a majority of voting members of the Federal Election Commission (FEC) created to administer and enforce the FECA. Holding that this arrangement violated the Appointments Clause that empowered only the president to nominate such officers, the Court effectively told Congress to rewrite this portion of the FECA (which it promptly did) in order to maintain the FEC's considerable powers. The powers themselves were upheld, as were the FECA's detailed disclosure and reporting requirements.

More complicated were the Court's holdings on the First Amendment challenges to FECA restrictions of contributions and expenditures in federal elections. It upheld the several contribution limits (for example, the thousand‐dollar maximum that each individual can contribute to a congressional or presidential candidate in each election campaign) on the ground that they are appropriate legislative weapons against improper influence stemming from the dependence of candidates on large contributions. On the other hand, expenditure limits were invalidated as substantial and direct restrictions on political expression in violation of the First Amendment. The Court thus erased Congress's attempt to fix not only overall limits on a candidate's expenditures, but also the limits on how much others could spend relative to a candidate (apart from direct contributions to the candidate) and the limits on how much candidates could spend from their own or their family's funds.

Invalidation of the last of these limits illustrates the nature of the Court's distinction between contributions and expenditures. Using millions of one's own dollars in a campaign, though effectively substituting for large contributions from others, does not corrupt or even seem to corrupt the candidate. Nevertheless, unwealthy opponents might well regard the Court‐granted freedom of a rich candidate to spend millions from family wealth as an especially unfair advantage because they could not now, under the law, so readily compensate by finding a few very large contributors. A larger and more significant legal loophole was created by the Court's invalidation of the provision for limiting how much individuals and groups could spend to help candidates. These expenditures need only be “independent” of the candidate and the candidate's campaign committee in order to be unlimited as contributions to candidates are not.

In contrast to its mixed response to Congress's regulations of private campaign finance, the Court fully upheld the new provisions for public funding of presidential campaigns. These provisions include income tax check‐off funds for parties to conduct presidential nominating conventions, for presidential primary candidates (on a matching basis), and for presidential general election candidates (on a virtually full‐funding basis). Such funding, the Court held, is within Congress's power to spend under the General Welfare Clause, and it does not violate either the First Amendment or the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause. The latter issue arose because the arrangement for distributing funds was more likely to help major parties and their candidates than minor parties, new parties, or independents. But the Court interpreted the law as allowing sufficient opportunity for minor parties and their candidates to qualify for public funds, even though at lower levels.

One last element of judicial law making should be noted. In upholding public funding, the Court also ruled that it is constitutionally valid to require, as Congress had done, that a presidential candidate must agree to an expenditure ceiling as a condition for receiving such funding. A ceiling thus voluntarily accepted does not fall under the Court's general prohibition of expenditure ceilings. Accordingly, if Congress or state legislatures should want to fix expenditure ceilings for candidates for other offices, the constitutional means to do so is to provide public funds along with the ceilings. But the Court made clear, in Federal Election Commission v. National Conservative Political Action Committee (1985), that such ceilings cannot be applied to those spending independently to help a publicly funded candidate.

In other campaign finance cases during the quarter century after 1976, the Court followed Buckley while amplifying and interpreting its scope. Thus, Buckley remained relevant when the Court was asked to rule on the constitutional challenges to the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002.

See also Elections; Financing Political Speech; Speech and the Press.

— Leon D. Epstein

 
 
Wikipedia: Buckley v. Valeo
Buckley v. Valeo
Seal_of_the_United_States_Supreme_Court.png
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued November 10, 1975
Decided January 30, 1976
Full case name: James L. Buckley, et al. v. Francis R. Valeo, Secretary of the United States Senate, et al.
Citations: 424 U.S. 1; 96 S. Ct. 612; 46 L. Ed. 2d 659; 1976 U.S. LEXIS 16; 76-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) P9189
Subsequent history: As amended.
Holding
The Court upheld federal limits on campaign contributions and ruled that spending money to influence elections is a form of constitutionally protected free speech.
Court membership
Chief Justice: Warren E. Burger
Associate Justices: William J. Brennan, Potter Stewart, Byron White, Thurgood Marshall, Harry Blackmun, Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr., William Rehnquist, John Paul Stevens
Case opinions
Per curiam.
Concurrence/dissent by: Burger
Concurrence/dissent by: White
Concurrence/dissent by: Marshall
Concurrence/dissent by: Blackmun
Concurrence/dissent by: Rehnquist
Laws applied
U.S. Const. amend. I, Article II, Sec. 2, cl. 2

Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States upheld federal limits on campaign contributions and ruled that spending money to influence elections is a form of constitutionally protected free speech. The court also stated candidates can give unlimited amounts of money to their own campaigns.

History

In 1974, over the veto of President Gerald R. Ford, the Congress passed significant amendments to the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, creating the first comprehensive effort by the federal government to regulate campaign contributions and spending. The key parts of the amended law limited contributions to candidates for federal office (2 USC §441a), required the disclosure of political contributions (2 USC §434), provided for the public financing of presidential elections (IRC Subtitle H), limited expenditures by candidates and associated committees, except for presidential candidates who accepted public funding (formerly 18 U.S.C. §608(c)(1)(C-F)), limited independent expenditures to $1000 (formerly 18 U.S.C. §608e); limited candidate expenditures from personal funds (formerly 18 U.S.C. §608a), and created and fixed the method of appointing members to the Federal Election Commission (FEC) (formerly 2 U.S.C. §437c(a)(1)(A-C)). A lawsuit was filed in the District Court for the D.C., on January 2, 1975, by Senator James L. Buckley of New York, former Senator, 1968 presidential candidate Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota, and others. The suit was filed against Francis R. Valeo, the Secretary of the Senate and ex officio member of the FEC who represented the U.S. federal government. The court denied plaintiffs' request for declaratory and injunctive relief. Plaintiffs then appealed to the Court of Appeals.

The petitioners sought for the district court to overturn the key provisions outlined above. They argued that the legislation was in violation of the 1st and 5th Amendment rights to freedom of expression and due process, respectively.

Decision

In a lengthy per curiam decision issued on January 30, 1976, the court sustained the Act's limits on individual contributions, as well as the disclosure and reporting provisions and the public financing scheme. However, the limitations on campaign expenditures, on independent expenditures by individuals and groups, and on expenditures by a candidate from his personal funds were found to be constitutionally infirm in that they placed severe restrictions on protected expression and association, yet lacked any compelling countervailing government interest necessary to sustain them.

The Court also held that the method for appointments to the Federal Election Commission was an unconstitutional violation of Separation of Powers. The scheme by which the eight members of the commission were chosen was that the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House of Representatives were ex officio members of the Commission without a right to vote, two members would be appointed by the President pro tempore of the Senate upon recommendations of the majority and minority leaders of the Senate, two would be appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives upon recommendations of the majority and minority leaders of the House, and two would be appointed by the President. The six voting members would then need to be confirmed by the majority of both Houses of Congress. In addition there was a requirement that each of the three appointing authorities was forbidden to choose both of their appointees from the same political party. The Supreme Court held that this appointment scheme was unconstitutional because it impinged on the President's power to appointment Officers of the United States found in Article II, Section 2, clause 2 of the Constitution.

Criticism

Although the decision upheld restrictions on the size of campaign contributions, because it struck down limits on expenditures some argue that this precedent allows those with great wealth to effectively drown out the speech average citizens. Among those criticizing the decision on this line was philosopher John Rawls, who wrote that the Court's decision "runs the risk of endorsing the view that fair representation is representation according to the amount of influence effectively exerted." (See: wealth primary.)

On a somewhat different note, Justice Byron White, in dissent, argued that the entire law should have been upheld, in deference to Congress's greater knowledge and expertise on the issue.

From the other side, some disagree vigorously with Buckley on the grounds that it sustained some limits on campaign contributions which, they argue, are protected by the First Amendment as free speech. This position was advanced by Chief Justice Warren Burger in his dissent, who claimed that individual contributions and expenditures are protected speech acts. Justices Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia, argued for overturning Buckley on these grounds, but their position has not been adopted by the court. Despite criticism of Buckley from both sides, the case remains the starting point for judicial analysis of the constitutionality of campaign finance restrictions. See e.g. McConnell v. FEC, upholding the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 ("McCain-Feingold Bill"). This legislation included a prohibition on soft money as well as limits on independent expenditures by private groups.

See also

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