|
Campaign Reform
"Campaign Finance Reform"
Muzzles Political Dissent
Texas Straight Talk -
By Congressman Ron Paul
In a devastating blow to political speech, the Supreme Court recently
upheld
most of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance bill passed by Congress last
year. The legislation will do nothing to curb special interest power or
reduce corruption in Washington, but it will make it harder for average
Americans to influence government. 'Campaign finance reform' really
means
the bright-line standard of free speech has been replaced by a murky set
of
regulations and restrictions that will muzzle political dissent and
protect
incumbents. Justice Scalia correctly accuses the Court of supporting a
law,
"That cuts to the heart of what the First Amendment is meant to protect:
the
right to criticize the government. This is a sad day for freedom of
speech."
Two important points ignored by the Court should be made. First, although
the new campaign rules clearly violate the First amendment, they should
be
struck down primarily because Congress has no authority under Article I
of
the Constitution to regulate campaigns at all. Article II authorizes
only
the regulation of elections, not campaigns, because our Founders knew
Congress might pass campaign laws that protect incumbency. This is
precisely
what McCain-Feingold represents: blatant incumbent protection sold to the
public as noble reform.
Second, freedom of the press applies equally to all Americans, not just
the
institutional, government-approved media. An unknown internet blogger, a
political party, a candidate, and the New York Times should all enjoy the
same right to political speech. Yet McCain-Feingold treats the
mainstream
press as some kind of sacred institution rather than the for-profit
industry
it is. Why should giant media companies be able to spend unlimited
amounts
of money to promote candidates and issues, while an organization you
support
cannot? The notion of creating a preferred class of media, with special
First Amendment rights, is distinctly elitist and un-American.
Outrageously, the Court failed to strike down a provision of the campaign
finance bill that virtually outlaws criticism of incumbent politicians
for
60 days before an election -- exactly the time when most voters learn about
candidates and issues. The ban essentially prohibits any group from
airing
radio or television ads that cast politicians in a negative light during
the
critical final months of an election. The ban even carries the
possibility
of criminal penalties, meaning the Court has endorsed criminalizing
political dissent! Incumbent politicians certainly will be the
beneficiaries of the new ban, as they no longer have to suffer through
ads
that criticize their performance.
Wealthy people will always seek to influence politicians, because
government
unfortunately plays a very big role in determining who gets (and stays)
rich
in our country. Our federal government has become a taxing, spending,
and
regulating leviathan that virtually controls the economy. Having rejected
the notion of limited, constitutional government, we can hardly be
surprised
when special interests use corrupting campaign money to influence the
process! We need to get money out of government; only then will money
not
be important in politics. Big government and big campaign money go
hand-in-hand.
To view this article on-line go to:
www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2003/tst122203.htm
|