Federal Election Commission Agrees to Decide Rights of SpeechNow.org, Independent Speech Groups
Federal Election Commission Agrees to Decide Rights of SpeechNow.org, Independent Speech Groups
November 29 -- The
Federal Election Commission yesterday agreed to decide whether a new
independent speech group may advocate for or against candidates free of
contribution limits imposed on political committees under federal law.
The Commission has 60 days to issue an "advisory opinion" responding to
a request from SpeechNow.org and its lawyers with the Center for
Competitive Politics and the Institute for Justice.
SpeechNow.org
is a nonpartisan independent speech group that supports free speech and
associational rights. It plans to speak out in support of candidates
who favor free political speech and oppose those who back so-called
campaign finance "reform" legislation that restricts the rights to
speech and association.
The group, with a new form of
organizational charter believed to be the only one of its kind in the
nation, is completely independent of candidates and parties. In
keeping with its mission to magnify the voices of individual citizens
opposed to the erosion of political speech rights, SpeechNow.org will
accept only individual, not corporate, contributions. Its charter bans
donations to candidates and political parties.
The group wants to
run TV ads supporting and opposing candidates on free speech issues
during the 2008 election cycle-if the FEC agrees that SpeechNow.org's
operational plan complies with the law.
At issue is whether
independent speech groups like SpeechNow.org must organize and register
with the FEC as "political committees" and limit donations to $5,000.
SpeechNow.org supporters are allowed to individually spend as much as
they want advocating for or against candidates. However, the law is
unclear as to whether two or more of them can work together advocating
for free speech. The group has ads written, but needs the
contributions supporters have pledged, contingent on clarification of
the law by the FEC, for production and broadcast costs. The supporters
cited in the FEC request each plan to donate more than $5,000.
"It's
common sense that if we can each speak separately without limits, then
we should be able to join together and speak as a group," said
SpeechNow.org President David Keating. "I am hopeful the FEC will
agree with our interpretation of the law so we can begin to liberate
speech from the grip of politicians who have passed laws to preserve
their power by squelching criticism."
"SpeechNow.org and its
supporters simply want to make their views about candidates known,"
said Bradley Smith, chairman of the Center for Competitive Politics and
former FEC chairman. "Regulating completely independent groups as
political committees would be a radical extension of the law and a
severe blow to free speech and association. If contributions to
SpeechNow.org are limited, its members will lack the resources to be
heard."
CCP Vice-President Stephen M. Hoersting added,
"SpeechNow.org's leaders risk criminal fines and jail time if they
accept the money already pledged to air the ads already written that
urge voters to oppose candidates. No one should have to risk going to
jail to exercise their constitutional rights."
Imposing
contribution limits would restrict SpeechNow.org's ability to speak
effectively-without any constitutional basis. According to the U.S.
Supreme Court, preventing corruption is the only justification for
limiting individuals' political contributions, but because
SpeechNow.org will never contribute to any candidate, is completely
independent of candidates and parties, and refuses donations from
corporations and labor unions, there is no risk of corruption.
IJ
Senior Attorney Steve Simpson concluded, "Citizens must be free to join
together, pool their resources and urge voters to vote for or against
politicians. Speaking about candidates isn't ‘corrupting;' it is our
constitutional right under the First Amendment."