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Title: Money in political campaigns


1
Money in political campaigns
2
  • Money is the mothers milk of politics
  • Jesse Unruh, Speaker of the California Assembly
    from 1961 to 1968.

3
  • Money is the root of all evil.

4
What are the issues?
  • How much can candidates raise?
  • How much can various donors contribute?
  • What is the relationship between independent
    political speakers and candidate campaigns?
  • How much do candidates get from the government to
    campaign, and how do they qualify?

5
http//www.opensecrets.org/overview/index.php
6
http//elections.nytimes.com/2008/president/campai
gn-finance/map.html http//www.usatoday.com/news/
politics/election2008/campaign-finance-tracker.htm

7
Costs of campaigning have risen sharply
Source Center for Responsive Politics
/OpenSecrets.Org
8
2006 High and low spenders
House Senate
Average winner spent 1,253,031 9,635,370
Average loser spent 622,348 7,406,678
Most expensive campaign 8,112,752 40,828,991
Most expensive campaigner Vernon Buchanan (R-FL) Hillary Clinton (D-NY)
Least expensive winning campaign 182,375 1,529,370
Least expensive winning campaigner Wayne T. Gilchrest (R-MD) Craig Thomas (R-WY)
Most receipts from PACs 2,437,580 5,433,898
Candidate with most PAC receipts Deborah Pryce (R-OH) James M. Talent (R-MO)
Source Center for Responsive Politics/OpenSecrets
.Org
9
The effect of money
  • The biggest spenders dont necessarily win
  • Billionaires that have spent huge sums have often
    failed to gain much support
  • Most officials are at least fairly well to do and
    few are poor

10
Who raises what?
  • Federal candidate comm
  • Only federal money
  • State candidate comm
  • Only state money
  • National Parties
  • Only federal money
  • State/Local parties
  • Federal
  • Levin
  • State
  • PACs
  • Federal
  • State
  • 527s
  • Neither fed nor state money

11
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12
Special Rules for Candidates
  • Only federal funds
  • Same restrictions on fundraising
  • Restrictions on spending
  • Millionaires Amendment

13
History of money in politics
  • Money has been involved in politics as long as
    the United States has existed
  • Politics was tied to patronage throughout the
    1800s
  • To get a government job you were expected to
    contribute to a candidates campaign funds
  • Backing the right horse was important

14
Earliest politics
  • During the early development of federal politics,
    coalitions formed around favored individuals, and
    around policies. No permanent parties of the
    sort we are used to existed. Campaigns consisted
    of supporters publishing tracts in favor of a
    candidate, holding political gatherings that
    supported him (and often providing liquor in the
    process).

15
Popular sovereignty
  • As responsibility for nomination of presidential
    candidates gradually moved from congressional
    caucuses for the developing parties to popular
    vote, it became necessary to communicate with the
    wider public. That demanded money.

16
How to get the money?
  • The first targets in the quest for campaign
    funds were federal government employees, who were
    assessed a percentage of their salaries as a
    condition of continued employment.
  • Center for Public Integrity
  • Andrew Jackson developed the system, reforming
    the civil service system by rewarding supporters
    with jobs. Bills in Congress to put an end to
    this system were regularly defeated.

17
Attempts at reform
  • 1867solicitation of funds from workers at Navy
    yards outlawed, and workers protected from being
    fired if they refused to give
  • 1877President Rutherford B. Hayes ordered all
    government officials to stay out of political
    activities beyond expressing their views on
    issues and voting
  • 1883Pendleton Act provided for selection of some
    federal employees through competitive
    examinations and shielded them from political
    assessments

18
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19
Result?
  • Political parties, now much more the
    professionalized organizations we know today,
    turned to wealthy donors for money
  • Begins in earnest with Ulysses S. Grant
  • 1896 Mark Hanna tapped corporate wealth for
    William McKinley (3 million)

20
More reform attempts
  • 1901 Republican Senator William E. Chandler
    introduced a bill to bar federally chartered
    corporations from contributing to elections at
    any level
  • Unsuccessful
  • Pitchfork Bill Tillman induced to follow up
  • 1907 Tillman Act barred corporate contributions
    to campaigns
  • Teddy Roosevelt, criticized for his money
    collection, called for legislation to combat
    bribery, public disclosure of contributions and
    public financing of campaignsbut he was
    unsuccessful

21
New levels of money and Supreme Court action
  • Henry Ford lost his bid for U.S. Senate from
    Michigan to Truman H. Newberry (R) who had spent
    ten times the federally mandated limit.
  • 180,000
  • Newberrys case led to a SCOTUS decision that
    Congress had overreached its powers regarding
    primaries

22
New Scandals
  • Teapot Dome
  • One of the oilmen implicated in the scandal had
    made significant contributions to Republican
    Party to pay off their 1920 debt. Because they
    were made after the election, they did not need
    to be disclosed.
  • 1925 Federal Corrupt Practices Act
  • As much loophole as law
  • Spending limits applied only to party committees,
    leading to the development of candidate campaign
    committees, political action committees (PACs)

23
Subsequent actions
  • Roosevelt New Deal
  • Republicans saw this as a massive patronage
    system
  • Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky
  • Said to have financed his campaign through the
    solicitation of thousands of relief workers
  • 1939 Clean Politics Act (Hatch Act)barred the
    solicitation of campaign money from all federal
    employees and specifically from workers on public
    works payrolls
  • Later amended to limit individual donations to
    federal candidates (5,000) or national party
    committee and limit to 3 million what any party
    committee operating in two or more states could
    receive or spend

24
Limiting the Unions
  • War Labor Disputes Act of 1943prohibited labor
    unions from contributing until six months after
    wars end
  • Labor Management Relations Act (Taft-Hartley)
    of 1946 made ban on union-treasury money
    permanent
  • Spurred the growth of PACs
  • Unions formed committees to collect voluntary
    contributions from workers that paid for a wide
    range of political activity (voter education,
    GOTV, registration, etc.)

25
  • 1943 CIO establishes CIO-PAC
  • Raises more than 1.4 million
  • After AFL merger, AFL-CIO Committee on Political
    Education
  • By 1956, 17 labor PACs contributing 2.1 million
    in federal elections
  • 1968 37 labor PACs contribute 7.1 million
  • Business got started late
  • AMPAC (American Medical Association)
  • BIPAC (Business-Industry)

26
The need for money explodes
  • The 1968 presidential election vastly increased
    the cost of presidential campaigns
  • Selling of the President
  • Senatorial campaigns would gradually follow suit
  • Then House
  • Demand for money for television commercials drove
    the need for donations
  • 1970Congress passes legislation limiting total
    spending on broadcast ads and requiring
    broadcasters to give lowest rates to
    candidatesNixon vetoes

27
1972 Federal Election Campaign Act
  • At the end of Nixons first term, the Federal
    Election Campaign Act was passed by Congress
  • Nixon reluctantly signed
  • Watergate
  • 1974 Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments

28
  • FECA with amendments was the most sweeping
    campaign finance reform in history
  • But before the ink was dry, campaign managers
    were looking for loopholes
  • The law was pretty much immediately challenged in
    the courts
  • Eventually, Buckley v. Valeo, decided by the
    Supreme Court, would limit FECA considerably

29
Campaign Finance Reform and Buckley II
Original Provision Effect of Buckley v. Valeo
Contribution limits
Individual limits 1k/candidate/election Affirmed
PAC limits 5k/candidate/election Affirmed
Party committee limits 5k/candidate/election Affirmed
Cap on total contributions individual can make to all candidates (25k) Struck down (freedom of speech)
Cap on spending on behalf of candidates by parties Affirmed
  • www.mit.edu/17.251/finance.ppt

30
Campaign Finance Reform and Buckley I
Original Provision Effect of Buckley v. Valeo
Expenditure limits
Overall spending limits (Congress and president) Struck down partially (freedom of speech)
Limits on the use of candidates own resources Struck down entirely (freedom of speech)
Limits on media expenditures Struck down entirely (freedom of speech)
Independent expenditure limits Struck down entirely (freedom of speech)
  • www.mit.edu/17.251/finance.ppt

31
Subsequent changes
  • Congress amended FECA to try to deal with Buckley
    v. Valeo
  • 1976 Changes in limits (higher for PACs than
    individuals)
  • Led to explosion of PACs and PAC money
  • 1979 reduction in paperwork burden

32
What is public funding?
  • Public funding of Presidential elections means
    that qualified Presidential candidates receive
    federal government funds to pay for the valid
    expenses of their political campaigns in both the
    primary and general elections. National political
    parties also receive federal money for their
    national nominating conventions.
  • FEC

33
Primary matching funds
  • Partial public funding is available to
    Presidential primary candidates in the form of
    matching payments. The federal government will
    match up to 250 of an individual's total
    contributions to an eligible candidate.

34
Candidates must qualify
  • Only candidates seeking nomination by a political
    party to the office of President are eligible to
    receive primary matching funds.
  • He or she must raise in excess of 5,000 in each
    of at least 20 states (i.e., over 100,000).
  • a maximum of 250 per individual applies toward
    the 5,000 threshold in each state.

35
  • Candidates also must agree to
  • Limit campaign spending for all primary elections
    to 10 million plus a cost-of-living adjustment
    (COLA).
  • Limit campaign spending in each state to 200,000
    plus COLA, or to a specified amount based on the
    number of voting age individuals in the state
    (plus COLA), whichever is greater.
  • Limit spending from personal funds to 50,000.

36
Impact
  • More candidates can enter the primary election
    with a meaningful presence
  • But the limits are low enough that many major
    candidates opt out of the public finance system
    in the primaries

37
Public financing
  • Major parties receive money for their nominating
    conventions
  • Probably the most controversial of all public
    financing
  • Still, the great majority of convention money
    comes from PACs, lobbyists
  • General election funds come in lump sum (all
    candidate is allowed to spend) if accepted
  • However, money flows to non-candidate committees
    and is used in ways that support candidacy

38
Federal Election Commission
  • Purpose
  • In 1975, Congress created the Federal Election
    Commission (FEC) to administer and enforce the
    Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA)
  • the statute that governs the financing of federal
    elections.
  • The duties of the FEC, which is an independent
    regulatory agency, are to
  • disclose campaign finance information
  • enforce the provisions of the law such as the
    limits and prohibitions on contributions,
  • oversee the public funding of Presidential
    elections.

39
  • 1978 FEC rules that FECA allowed for money to be
    used in grassroots organizing, voter
    registration, GOTV, without regard to limitations
    on contributions
  • PAC growth
  • 19741,146 PACs
  • 19864,157 PACs
  • Congress applied ruling to parties
  • Contributions for these activities came to be
    known as soft money

40
  • How was it exploited?
  • Candidate campaign raises money for party
    committee, then party committee spends it on
    activities that support the candidate

41
Soft money growth( in millions)
Source Center for Public Integrity
42
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43
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44
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45
Independent expenditures
  • Individuals or organizations could make
    independent expenditures as long as they were
    independent of a candidate or official campaign
    committee.
  • NRA
  • MoveOn.Org
  • Willie Horton
  • Swift Boat Veterans

46
Issue advocacy
  • Committees paid for ads professing to push or
    oppose issues associated with a candidate without
    expressly calling for people to vote for or
    against that candidate
  • Source Center for Public Integrity
  • SCOTUS magic words
  • Vote for XXXX
  • Vote against XXXX

47
Public finance
  • By the 1990s, public finance money drying up
  • Too many candidates getting too much money
  • Increase in check-off to 3, but fewer checking
    off
  • Decline in public support for parties

48
Source Public Citizen from FEC data
49
Still more reform
  • Clinton/Gore fundraising scandals
  • McCain-Feingold
  • Very controversial
  • First Amendment
  • Bias toward major parties
  • Opposed by diverse coalition
  • Mitch McConnell

50
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act(McCain-Feingold
2002)
  • Meant to close loopholes that allowed soft money
    to flow into campaign committees and to control
    advertising said to be aimed at issues but
    actually performing as campaign promotion

51
BCRA
Eliminated all soft money contributions to national party committees
Increased individual limit from 1,000 to 2,000 with index for inflation (2,300 in 2008)
Banned the use of certain political communications by corporate, union or incorporated non-profit committees within 30 days of primary or convention, or 60 days of general (political communications)
Millionaires amendment
Stand by your ad (Im Bruce Lunsford and I endorsed this message)

52
Challenged in McConnell v FEC
  • SCOTUS allowed the great majority of BCRA to stand

53
527s and 501s
  • Groups that are not tied to campaigns but engage
    in political speech
  • United States tax code, 26 U.S.C.  527
  • 527s were the target of McCain-Feingold
  • Short decline, but SCOTUS decision may lead to
    resurgence
  • A 527 group is created primarily to influence the
    nomination, election, appointment or defeat of
    candidates for public office. The term is
    generally used to refer to political
    organizations that are not regulated by the
    Federal Election Commission or by a state
    elections commission, and are not subject to the
    same contribution limits as PACs.
  • In 2004, the FEC decided that the law did not
    cover these independent 527 organizations unless
    they directly advocated the election or defeat of
    a candidate.

54
  • In 2006 and 2007 the FEC fined a number of
    organizations, including MoveOn and Swift Boat
    Veterans for Truth, for violations arising from
    the 2004 campaign. The FEC's rationale was that
    these groups had specifically advocated the
    election or defeat of candidates, thus making
    them subject to federal regulation and its limits
    on contributions to the organizations.

55
  • In 2004, a total of 439,709,105 was spent by
    these organizations alone, 307,324,096 of which
    was spent by Democratic/liberal groups and
    132,385,009 of which was spent by
    Republican/conservative groups.
  • http//www.opensecrets.org/527s/

56
501(c)(3)
  • Charitable Organizations
  • All 501(c)(3) organizations are permitted to
    educate individuals about issues, or fund
    research that supports their political position
    without overtly advocating for a position on a
    specific bill. They are not supposed to directly
    promote a candidate or engage in electoral
    activities. However, recent actions that come
    close have been accepted by the SCOTUS.

57
  • A major portion of BCRA was diluted in FEC v.
    Wisconsin Right To Life (2007) when the SCOTUS
    decided that the group could not be refused the
    right to advertise during the 60-day window if
    their commercials could reasonably be seen as a
    political appeal other than support for or
    opposition to a political candidate
  • More recently, millionaires amendment found
    unconstitutional

58
George W. Bushs innovation
  • Bundling
  • Large donors tap their friends for maximum
    individual donations then give in a bundle to
    the candidate committee
  • 500K bundles used to support Bushs primary
    campaign
  • 100K plus Pioneers
  • Primary funding total 95.5 million
  • Took federal dollars for general election

59
Bundling
60
Source Campaign Finance Institute
61
Bundling
  • While there are disclosure requirements for
    bundling, they only go into effect when a bundler
    personally hands over checks. Most campaigns get
    around the disclosure provision by not having the
    bundler ever touch the checks.

62
  • The Bush and Kerry campaigns evaded the
    disclosure regulation for earmarked contributions
    through the new style of bundling activity in
    which identification numbers are assigned to each
    bundler, who in turn ask contributors to write
    the bundlers ID number on the checks and then
    give the checks to the campaign on their own.
    This allowed the bundler to get credit from the
    campaign for the contributions, while
    sidestepping the FECs official disclosure
    requirements.

63
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64
Source Campaign Finance Institute
65
Internet innovations in finance
  • Howard Dean developed new means to expand funding
    through small individual donations collected via
    the Internet
  • Barack Obama expanded on the idea and has
    generated huge sums through small donations on
    the Internet
  • 150 million in September 2008
  • Ron Paul extremely successful fundraiser during
    Republican primaries
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