Personal Democracy Plus Our premium content network. LEARN MORE You are not logged in. LOG IN NOW >

As Courts Overturn Campaign Finance Limits, Small Online Donations Will Matter More

BY Colin Delany | Sunday, September 20 2009

Cross-posted from Epolitics.com

The announcement largely got lost in Friday clutter, but U.S. campaign finance restrictions took a serious hit at the end of last week. With the Roberts Supreme Court already apparently reconsidering past precedents with an eye toward treating corporate and union donations as free speech, a federal appeals court has now ruled on behalf of Emily's List that nonprofits can use functionally unbounded "soft money" to finance their election-year activities.

For decades, candidates and their financial supporters have lived within a series of limits on the amounts and sources of their campaigns' funding. Individual donors can give no more than $5000 per campaign under the current rules, for example, while direct donations from corporations and labor unions are banned altogether. Of course, every measure eventually demands a countermeasure, and political professionals have long used techniques from "bundling" donations from networks of large donors to creating formal Political Action Committees to aggregate contributions from people sharing a particular set of interests or legislative goals.

The 2004 election cycle saw a dramatic rise in the number and size of nonprofit organizations that bought TV ads, organized voter turnout drives and conducted political "education" campaigns that were effectively working on behalf of (or against) one candidate or party, and because they used "soft money" in the process, their donors weren't limited in how much they could give and didn't fall under the strict disclosure rules required when trying to influence an election.

Though the actual results of their work were mixed, and as individual donors such as George Soros became demons to their enemies, Congress responded by trying to stifle the practice by law. It was those restrictions that were struck down on Friday, and it's quite possible that the Supreme Court will soon invalidate even more of the campaign finance regulatory system.

The upshot is more money flowing into American politics, and almost certainly arriving in larger chunks than before. Some will land directly in candidates' bank accounts, but even more may go to independent political actors who might or might not be coordinating with their work with campaigns behind the scenes. But a candidate being hit by outside attack ads and other soft-money campaigns already has a countermeasure at hand, since the natural answer to big political money is to pile up large amounts of small money. As Obama's campaign showed in 2008, if you have enough people on your list, aggregating their individual small donations can add up to real money real quick.

The techniques Obama used to raise $500 million online are no secret (many of them have been common practice at nonprofit organizations for years), and the tools available to congressional, state and local candidates are already more than adequate to the task. What's been lacking in most cases so far has been the skills and the will to apply them consistently in the thousands of political races that unfold every two years. Obama showed that online organizing and online fundraising work can on a presidential level, but we've only just begun to see them applied effectively in races up and down the political scale. More on that shortly.

cpd

News Briefs

RSS Feed yesterday >

Claire McCaskill Hires Blue State Digital's Alex Kellner As Digital Director

Missouri's senior Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill has hired Blue State Digital's Alex Kellner as its digital director. GO

Controversial Hoekstra Microsite Targeting Debbie Stabenow Created By The Prosper Group

Michigan Senate candidate Pete Hoekstra has caused a firestorm in the past 24 hours with a new campaign ad that depicts China as a young woman riding a bike in a rural area speaking in broken English. The thirty second spot aired in Michigan during the Super Bowl on Sunday, and it accuses Democratic incumbent Debbie Stabenow of aiding ... GO

White House CTO Aneesh Chopra's Exit Interview

On his way out of the White House and back to Virginia, where he is expected to run for public office — but will neither confirm or deny that's the plan — Aneesh Chopra describes the shape of the post he pioneered as the country's first-ever chief technology officer.

As a result of Chopra's interview with The Atlantic's tech/politics correspondent, Nancy Scola, there's now a public record of what this first-ever CTO thinks the CTO's job actually is ("On any topic that is a priority for the president, my role is evaluate how technology, data, and innovation can advance, support, and improve upon those strategies," among other things) and how it might be improved.

GO

friday >

Slovenian ambassador apologizes for signing ACTA, Poland halts ratification

Apparently, some EU countries are reconsidering their support to ACTA, only a week after signing the agreement.
Helena Drnovsek Zorko, Slovenia's ambassador to Japan, has in fact issued a public apology to her country for signing it. Meanwhile, Poland Prime Minister Donald Tusk says he's halting the ratification process of the international treaty.
Last week people took the streets in Poland, and a protest is planned in Ljubljana tomorrow. GO

thursday >

Did Newt Gingrich Lose Florida for Want of a Better API?

Slate's Sasha Issenberg has a great story outlining one narrative about Newt Gingrich's loss in Florida: He inspired a group of tech-savvy volunteers, but gave them no way to plug in to the campaign. GO

House GOP Hosts Legislative Data and Transparency Conference

Today, House Republicans are hosting a conference on legislative data and transparency. The goal, as it's been explained to me, is to set the table for a conversation between House leadership and open government/open data advocates about what the House could or should do next.

More information on the conference is here. It's being live streamed.

GO

When House Republicans Aren't Winning With Transparency

House Republicans have been pushing the results of their transparency initiatives, such as a pilot project to archive video of some committee hearings.

But other committee hearings are apparently off-limits. Politico reports today that documentary filmmaker Josh Fox was arrested while attempting to videotape a House Science Committee hearing on hydrofracking. Only credentialed members of the Congressional press corps can film hearings of that committee.

The archived webcast of that hearing, which was streamed live, is here, if you can get the software to work. Each committee chair has discretion over what to do with video of their hearings, although there's also an office of in-House broadcasters who keep archival footage of everything, staffers have told me previously. As a result, there's no universal standard for how hearings are streamed or archived. The Science Committee uses a content delivery platform powered by Akamai.

GO

Komen's Planned Parenthood Decision Raising Eyebrows Online

Online campaigns have begun to organize in response to news that the breast cancer group Susan G. Komen for the Cure would be cutting its financing to Planned Parenthood for breast cancer screening and education programs. According to the news reports, Komen says the decision is not in response to pressure from anti-abortion groups, as Planned Parenthood alleges. Rather, a spokesperson told the A.P., the main factor is a new rule adopted by Komen that prohibits grants to organizations being investigated by local, state or federal authorities. Currently, Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-Fla.) is looking in to how Planned Parenthood spends and reports its money. "Susan D. Komen" has been trending on Google since yesterday. GO

More