theintercept | FOR YEARS, THE Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision in Citizens United was
depicted by Democrats as the root of all political evil. But now, the
core argument embraced by the Court’s conservatives to justify their
ruling has taken center stage in the Democratic primary between Hillary
Clinton and Bernie Sanders — because Clinton supporters, to defend the
huge amount of corporate cash on which their candidate is relying,
frequently invoke that very same reasoning.
The crux of the Citizens United ruling was that a legal ban
on independent corporate campaign expenditures constituted a limit on
political speech without sufficient justification, and thus violated the
First Amendment’s free speech guarantee. A primary argument of the
Obama Justice Department and Democrats generally in order to uphold that
campaign finance law was that corporate expenditures are so corrupting
of the political process that limits are justified even if they
infringe free speech. In rejecting that view, this was the key argument
of Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the five-judge conservative
majority (emphasis added):
For the reasons explained above, we now conclude that independent expenditures, including those made by corporations, do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.
Does that sound familiar? It should. That key argument of the right-wing justices in Citizens United
has now become the key argument of the Clinton campaign and its media
supporters to justify her personal and political receipt of millions
upon millions of dollars in corporate money: “Expenditures, including
those made by corporations, do not give rise to corruption or the
appearance of corruption” — at least when the candidate in question is
Hillary Clinton.
Indeed, the Clinton argument actually goes well beyond the Court’s conservatives: In Citizens United, the right-wing justices merely denied the corrupting effect of independent
expenditures (i.e., ones not coordinated with the campaign). But
Clinton supporters in 2016 are denying the corrupting effect of direct campaign donations by large banks and corporations and, even worse, huge speaking fees paid to an individual politician shortly before and after that person holds massive political power.
Another critical aspect of the right-wing majority argument in Citizens United was
that actual corruption requires proof of a “quid pro quo” arrangement:
meaning that the politician is paid to vote a certain way (which is,
basically, bribery). Prior precedent, said the Citizens United majority, “was limited to quid pro quo corruption,” quoting a prior case as holding that “the hallmark of corruption is the financial quid pro quo: dollars for political favors.”
Does that sound familiar? It should. That, too, has become a core Clinton-supporting argument: Look, if you can’t prove that Hillary changed her vote in exchange for Goldman Sachs speaking fees or JPMorgan Chase donations (and just by the way, Elizabeth Warren believes she can prove that), then you can’t prove that these donations are corrupting. After all, argue Clinton supporters (echoing the Citizens United majority), “the hallmark of corruption is the financial quid pro quo: dollars for political favors.”
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