I’ve gotten a few emails from people asking me about Citizens United v. FEC, and what I think about it.
So, in order:
1.) Corporations were already mostly free to engage in political speech anyway, thanks to Wisconsin v. RTL a few years ago, which said they had the right to engage in “issue” advertising. In other words, a corporation running an ad saying “vote for Senator Floozits” would be prohibited, but running an ad saying “Do you want to lose your job because of spotted owls? Tell Senator Floozits you don’t want to lose your job because of some vote on environmental regulation!” would be more or less kosher. The dividing line here is obviously a very fine one, and for the purposes of influencing an election it’s largely meaningless.
2.) After President Obama gave his State of the Union speech saying that foreign-owned corporations could now influence elections, a bunch of conservative organizations and the New York Times jumped up to play fact-checker, saying that parts of the U.S.C. said that foreign corporations weren’t allowed to buy electoral advertisements. First off, this is only a technicality; a domestically-owned subsidiary of a foreign corporation with a majority of foreign-born board members (or even simply license requirements allowing them to be influenced) can get past that restriction quite easily. But that’s before you get into shell corporations. (After Citizens dropped, I asked a friend of mine who’s big into business law how many ways he could think of to get around the foreign ownership restriction. He thought about it for a minute and then said he could think of six.)
3.) Some people have suggested that this decision is a victory for smaller corporations to enter into political dialogue, or that individual citizens can now form corporations for the purposes of generating political speech. These are both extremely stupid arguments. Smaller corporations by and large can’t afford to influence political dialogue on any meaningful level that wasn’t available to the individuals participating in them already, and individual citizens already had the opportunity to form advocacy groups (and have done so with some impressive successes).
4.) And yes, of course I think it’s a bad decision – mostly because I’m very much in favour of greater restrictions on corporate rights rather than less, because they are imaginary people, and imaginary people do not, as a rule, have moral character which informs their action. People complaining that campaign finance reform failed to stop corporate speech miss the point: ideally elections should be solely publicly funded. You sign up for your campaign, you get X dollars and a paid half-hour of media time somewhere to make your case for electability. Of course this will never happen, but so will lots of other things that are great, like McDonald’s bringing back the Shamrock Shake on a permanent basis. Why doesn’t the Supreme Court make a decision saying McDonald’s has to bring back the Shamrock Shake forever? And also the McRib.
5.) Additional commentary on the decision that I recommend can be found here.
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I say that, in light of this ruling, the term “corporate merger” should be legally referred to as “marriage.”
This is to be followed by the ruling that owning stock in a corporation is unconstitutional because slavery was outlawed in the U.S. by the 13th amendment.
I will now sit back and await my appointment to the Supreme Court, as my wisdom is wasted otherwise. 🙂
[…] on a tangential note, MightyGodKing adds his two-cents regarding the Citizens United decision. Shorter: he thinks it sucks, but can’t muster the […]
I heard one pundit calculate that, given the current approximate cost of winning a Senate race, for an investment of a mere 200 million dollars a year for six years (for a total of 1.2 billion), a corporation theoretically could blitz the airwaves enough to cause the candidates it wanted to win all 100 Senate seats and completely own the upper chamber of Congress (and thereby also any judges and cabinet positions nominated after that point).
Putting that number in context, Exxon Mobil made $45 billion in PROFITS in 2009 alone (and $7.8 billion in profits in just the 4th quarter).
(Of course, that wouldn’t happen in a vacuum; I suspect what’d probably be more likely is either a trust of corporations with similar ideals who agree to work together to spend/force everyone else out of the electoral process, or a bidding war/arms race when two opposing corporations go head to head. But wouldn’t it be entertaining to see Congressmen show up on CSPAN with logos of their corporate “sponsors” plastered all over their suits?)
“….Senator Floozits (R-Lockheed) will now rebut the words of his esteemed associate Senator Plumdid (D-Microsoft)….”
Is there any way to pass a law that says something to the affect of “if you can’t vote, you can’t donate”? To me, allowing corporations to get all politically at all is to allow the individuals that own and operate said corporations a double dose of political power that is not allowed for us normal schmucks.
Some people have suggested that this decision is a victory for smaller corporations to enter into political dialogue, or that individual citizens can now form corporations for the purposes of generating political speech.
Really? Are there really people who say this? I guess I can believe it – some people will say anything if you pay them enough. Are there people who believe it though? The only people I would think could believe something like that sincerely are college students who have never had a job of their own and have never taken a single economics or poly sci course in their lives…
Damnit. I ignored all of the political context and just got really hungry for a McRib and a Shamrock Shake.
DAMNIT.