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Still, the Supreme Court decision prompted by his anti-Hillary Clinton movie has done far more to expand the reach of political advertising for other outside groups than it has for Citizens United. "It was always a custom-designed test case," said Trevor Potter, a campaign finance lawyer who worked on John McCain's Republican presidential campaign and is a critic of the ruling. "The beneficiaries were always going to be other players." Obama, who took the unusual step of denouncing the court's decision during this year's State of the Union address, has made the case a staple of his current stump speech and has criticized it twice during his Saturday morning radio and Internet addresses. "I want you to understand right now all over this country special interests are planning and running millions of dollars of attack ads against Democratic candidates," Obama said at a Democratic fundraiser in New York on Wednesday. "Because of last year's Supreme Court decision in Citizens United, they are now allowed to spend as much as they want, unlimited amounts of money, and they don't have to reveal who is paying for these ads." Obama's chief political adviser, David Axelrod, continued that line of criticism Sunday, complaining that Republicans had blocked legislation to require groups that air political ads to reveal their donors. "You know, there's an old saying that if you want to keep things secret, you have something to hide," Axelrod said on ABC's "This Week." Bossie takes delight in the attention. "You can see by the actions of the White House and the Congress, this Citizens United ruling has gotten under the skin of the liberal establishment, the leadership of the House and Senate and the White House," he said. "They are completely emotional." ___ Online:
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