"Money is speech"
"Money is speech"
"Money is speech"
the supreme court ruled that campaign spending is a protected form of free speech
Answer this question… could spend unlimited amounts of their own personal money on their campaign.
The 1976 Supreme Court decision that created the soft money loophole was Buckley v. Valeo. In this case, the Court held that government restrictions on campaign contributions and expenditures were constitutional, but it also ruled that regulations on spending by political parties violated the First Amendment. This ruling opened the door for parties to raise unlimited funds at the state level, leading to the rise of soft money in political campaigns.
The Federal Election Campaign Act added more transparency to political donations. The first amendment of the bill allowed for unlimited spending on activities such as voter turnout. However, a 2007 Supreme Court ruling struck down a ban on union and corporate independent spending that violated the Taft Hartley Act of 1947.
it weakened campaign finance laws by ruling that corporations and unions could not be prohibited from running ads, and that corporations could spend an unlimited amount on federal elections
"Supreme" in this context means "big". It might be (for example) somebody sacrificing his life, or that of his family, for something more important.
1987
Kiki Kang (New York) & Amanda Norgaard (Supreme) are two of the current models that appear in the Topshop Spring 2010 ad campaign.
probably chuck norris but if he cant then i would go with vermon supreme
federal spending