Posted by Jonathan Adler:
Is *Caperton* Really About Free Speech:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_03_01-2009_03_07.shtml#1236287339


   Former FEC Commissioner and longtime law professor Bradley Smith and
   his Center for Competitive Politics colleague Jeff Patch co-authored
   an [1]interesting op-ed on Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal for the WSJ.
   The case involves a claim that Caperton�s due process right to an
   impartial tribunal was violated when a justice of the West Virginia
   Supreme Court, Brent Benjamin, failed to recuse himself despite Massey
   Coal CEO Don Blankenship�s expenditure of $3 million to unseat the
   incumbent justice Benjamin replaced. While most coverage of the case
   suggests the issue is whether wealthy individuals or corporations can
   �buy� favorable judicial outcomes through campaign expenditures, Smith
   and Patch suggest that Caperton is best understood as a case about
   political speech in the context of judicial elections. They warn that
   a decision overturning the West Virginia Supreme Court�s invalidation
   of a $50 million verdict for Massey Coal could have profound First
   Amendment implications.

     most stories portray Mr. Blankenship as having in effect "bought" a
     justice in order to win a favorable outcome in his case. But Mr.
     Blankenship did not contribute $3 million to Mr. Benjamin's
     campaign; he spent the money on his own. Mr. Benjamin did not
     request Mr. Blankenship's aid, discuss the spending with him, agree
     to anything, or even meet him until 2006. . . .

     Does it matter? Even if Mr. Blankenship spent his money without Mr.
     Benjamin's consent or prior knowledge, even if Mr. Benjamin was
     legally powerless to stop him, aren't we picking nits? After all,
     $3 million dollars is a lot of money.

     The distinction matters because the difference between campaign
     contributions and independent spending has, for more than 30 years,
     occupied a central position in campaign finance law. The Supreme
     Court has ruled that the government may regulate direct
     contributions to candidates, which can create at least the
     appearance of a quid pro quo exchange. But the Court has
     consistently rejected regulation of independent expenditures,
     recognizing that if the government can regulate any spending that
     might influence an election or make a candidate grateful, it can
     effectively regulate all political speech. . . .

     But suppose the Court holds that Justice Benjamin had a
     constitutional obligation of recusal. What would the standard be,
     exactly? $50,000? $1,000? $100? Should a judge be expected to scan
     all campaign-finance filings in an election cycle -- especially
     when some types of independent speech do not have to be reported?

     Short of abolishing judicial elections -- which many "reform"
     groups would like to do -- there is no credible way to craft a
     workable recusal standard based on independent speech.

References

   1. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123604532738815399.html

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