U.S. Supreme Court leans toward Senator Cruz over campaign finance
challenge
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[January 20, 2022]
By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
(Reuters) -Conservative U.S. Supreme Court
justices on Wednesday appeared sympathetic toward Republican Senator Ted
Cruz's challenge to a provision of a major campaign finance law that
caps the amount of money political candidates can be reimbursed after an
election for personal loans to their own campaign organizations.
Cruz, backed by fellow Republicans, has argued that the $250,000 loan
repayment cap violates the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment guarantee
of freedom of speech by unjustifiably burdening political expression.
The federal agency that enforces election laws has called the cap an
anti-corruption measure.
The provision is part of a bipartisan 2002 law that already has been
chipped away at by the Supreme Court including in a landmark 2010 ruling
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-court-politics/landmark-supreme-court-ruling-allows-corporate-political-cash-idUSTRE60K3SK20100121
that allowed unlimited independent spending by corporations and unions
during elections as constitutionally protected free speech.
The court has a 6-3 conservative majority.
The justices heard about 90 minutes of oral arguments in an appeal by
Democratic President Joe Biden's administration, acting on behalf of the
Federal Election Commision (FEC), of a Washington-based three-judge
panel's 2021 ruling unanimously striking down the provision on free
speech grounds.
The only potential impediment to a Cruz victory appeared to be concerns
by some justices, including conservative Chief Justice John Roberts,
that the lower court should have tackled a separate challenge to a
related regulation before addressing the constitutional question at
issue.
The FEC has said the cap was enacted to deter corruption by preventing
political donors from making contributions after an election that flow
directly to a candidate.
Cruz, first elected to represent Texas in the Senate in 2012, sued the
FEC after his successful 2018 re-election race against Democratic rival
Beto O'Rourke. Cruz had lent his campaign organization $260,000 but was
limited by the law to a $250,000 reimbursement from his campaign.
The FEC argued that Cruz lacked the proper legal standing to bring the
challenge because he deliberately loaned his campaign more than the cap
specifically in order to justify his lawsuit.
Conservative Justice Clarence Thomas appeared dismissive of that
argument, noting that people challenging unconstitutional laws often use
such tactics. Thomas cited Homer Plessy, a Black man who sat in a
"whites only" car on a train in Louisiana so he could challenge racial
segregation in the South. The Supreme Court later upheld segregation in
the notorious 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson ruling that was overturned six
decades later.
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Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) ) speaks with reporters outside the Capitol
building in Washington following a roll call vote in the Senate,
U.S. April 19, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
If Plessy wanted to avoid
litigation, "all he has to do is go to another car," said Thomas,
the court's only Black member.
Conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh said the cap appears to impose
"a chill on your ability to loan your campaign money," which would
potentially violate free speech rights under court precedents.
Kavanaugh also questioned why corruption fears are triggered only
after a loan reaches $250,000, noting that individual donors can
give just $2,900 to a campaign during each election cycle. Loans
above the cap can also be paid using money raised before the
election.
Conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett said there was no evidence of
corruption concerning repayment of loans before the provision was
enacted.
Liberal Justice Elena Kagan, who as a senior U.S. Justice Department
lawyer represented the FEC in the Citizens United case, defended the
provision, saying post-election contributions aimed at paying off a
loan are a direct gift to a candidate.
The law does not impose any restrictions on a candidate's ability to
spend his own money, it merely "limits the amount of speech a
candidate can make on somebody else's dime," Kagan said.
The Supreme Court has struck down various provisions of the 2002
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA), often called the
McCain-Feingold law in recognition of its main sponsors, former
Senators John McCain and Russ Feingold.
Campaign finance watchdogs have said lifting the cap would increase
expectations by political donors for official favors by letting
people and corporations donate directly to a winning candidate after
Election Day. Cruz's lawyers counter that the cap serves no
anti-corruption purpose. Like a related provision struck down in
2008, they said, it was aimed to protect incumbents facing wealthy
challengers.
Cruz unsuccessfully sought his party's 2016 presidential nomination,
later becoming a prominent supporter of former President Donald
Trump.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will
Dunham)
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