[here's an idea that I posted to pen-l many years ago]

Voter Vouchers Can Help Clean Up Politics [opinion page, L.A. TIMES]
By Richard L. Hasen

Richard L. Hasen is a professor at Loyola Law School [part of the
greater LMU "family"] and author of "The Supreme Court and Election
Law" (NYU Press, 2003).

May 10, 2005

From the Los Angeles mayor's race to the race for the presidency, the
role of independent campaign finance spending — money that isn't
directly coordinated with candidates — has never been more important.
In the [excessively long and acrimonious] Hahn-Villaraigosa contest,
independent spending is at a record of more than $2.3 million, which
frees the candidates to exceed the $1.8-million spending cap each
agreed to when he took partial public funding for his campaign. On the
national level, the so-called 527 organizations (remember the Swift
Boat Veterans and MoveOn.org?) are gathering six- and seven-figure
donations, and those donations are taking the place of the "soft
money" gifts to political parties that Congress outlawed in 2002.

So is this independent spending yet another campaign finance
"loophole" that should be closed, or is it something to be celebrated
as part of the vigorous free exchange that should take place in the
election season? It's neither. Instead, it's an unavoidable
consequence of our private system for financing elections, and it
cannot and should not be limited until we shift to full and fair
public financing.

To understand the rise of independent spending, it's necessary to look
at the Supreme Court's 1976 decision in Buckley vs. Valeo. In that
case, the Supreme Court upheld the ability of Congress to limit
contributions to candidates. Giving a donation was the significant act
of speech and association, according to the decision, and limiting
merely the amount didn't take much away from that right. Moreover,
large contributions given to candidates raise concerns about
corruption, so limiting them would help prevent damage to the
political process that could come from even the appearance of
corruption.

When it came to independent spending, however, the court said that
curbing contribution amounts would have too much of a detrimental
effect on 1st Amendment rights. The federal law at issue in Buckley
would have barred most individuals from spending as little as $1,000
on, say, a newspaper ad promoting a presidential candidate. Not only
would that limit important voices in a political campaign, the court
held, it could not be justified by a concern about corruption or the
appearance of corruption, given the requirement that such efforts be
independent from the candidates. So the court's decision let
independent spending stand and paved the way for the situation today.

The free-speech justification in this reasoning is pretty persuasive.
We would have a poorer political debate if the only ones that could
meaningfully participate through campaign spending were the parties,
the candidates and the media (the media being big campaign spenders
that are exempt from most campaign finance laws).

But what about the court's rationale on corruption and independent
spending? Surely many Angelenos believe that James K. Hahn and Antonio
Villaraigosa are likely to give special access to the heads of unions
that are running independent ads supporting them. And some suspect
that so-called independent spenders are really in cahoots with the
candidates anyway (that's probably not true — it's too easy to watch a
campaign from the outside and legally devise a complementary
strategy). None of this reassures the voters that the system is clean.

There is a way to solve the appearance of corruption and at the same
time fulfill the need to allow the maximum number of voices to be
heard during a campaign: public financing, distributed to candidates,
causes and parties. Imagine if the city gave Los Angeles voters $25
each in campaign vouchers to distribute to his or her favorite city
candidate, party or interest group, and this was the only money
allowed in L.A. campaigns. The potential for corruption drops
precipitously, the number of voices heard, via donations, rises.

A few things would have to happen first. The city would have to decide
how much money should be allotted to allow for vigorous, competitive
city campaigns. And the Supreme Court would have to reverse itself on
some provisions of Buckley vs. Valeo in order to, under the right
circumstances, allow limits on all kinds of campaign spending.

But that could be happening sooner rather than later. The 2nd Circuit
Court of Appeals recently issued an opinion strongly suggesting that
Vermont's mandatory candidate spending limits are constitutional.
Those limits, among the nation's strictest, were meant to challenge
Buckley vs. Valeo, and the question may well be headed for the U.S.
Supreme Court. That means the court may take its first serious look in
nearly 30 years at the question. The final word on spending limits —
and the corrupting effect of "independent" money — is yet to come.

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-hasen10may10,0,5326006.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions

-- 
Jim Devine
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://myweb.lmu.edu/jdevine

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