140 likes | 312 Views
Citizens United Decision and Political Inequality. Jan Saxhaug and Mariyam Naadha. Agenda . Citizens United vs. FEC Pros vs Cons Outside Spending since Citizens United Impact on Interest Groups What does this mean for the marginalized? . Citizen's United vs. FEC.
E N D
Citizens UnitedDecision and Political Inequality Jan Saxhaug and Mariyam Naadha
Agenda • Citizens United vs. FEC • Pros vs Cons • Outside Spending since Citizens United • Impact on Interest Groups • What does this mean for the marginalized?
Citizen's United vs. FEC • 5-4 decision overturning key provisions of the BCRA (2002) • Political spending is form of protected speech– government restrictions are unconstitutional. • Allows corporations to spend treasury funds on election advocacy directly or through an outside group • Corporations can donateto 501 (c) (4) and (c) (6)non-profitswhich can run election ads without revealing corporate donors
Mitt is right, Corporations are people too! • Victory for the 1st Amendment! • Small entities like non-profits affected too. • Why are media corporations any different? • Citizens United doesn't change much • Many corporations aren't eager to jump into political realm anyway.
But, it's not fair! Dissent: Justice Stevens • Legal entities- not “We the People” • Influence electoral process • President Obama- “undermines the influence of Americans who makes small contributions” • Lobbyist threat-advertising against re-election Source:www.nancho.net
Citizens United Decision- Opinion Polls Source: Gallup 2010
Citizens United- Opinion Polls Source: Gallup 2010
Independent Expenditure- Since Citizens United Source: Center for Responsive Politics
Independent Expenditure Presidential Elections 1992 - Present 1992 - 1.5 million 2000 - 2.6 million 2004 - 14 million 2008 - 37.5 million 2012- 88 Million- 234% of 2008 and 628 % of 2004
Independent Expenditure- Citizens United • Since 2006- groups that do not disclose their donors- increased from 1% to 47% • 501 c non-profit spending increased from 0% to 42 % (total spending by outside groups) • Outside interest groups spent more on election seasons political advertising than party committees-first time in 20 years. • Amount of independent expenditure and electioneering communication by outside groups-quadrupled since 2006. • 72% of political advertising spending in 2010-sources that were prohibited from spending money in 2006.
How has Citizens United affected Political Representation? Bartels argues that that politicians pay greater attention to high-income constituents. Verba discusses the right to participate vs. the capacity to participate. Cigler and Loomis argue that well funded special interests force the government to respond to their demands at the expense of the "collective needs of society.” Strolovitch's argument is that social welfare organizations often focus on the need of the advantaged subgroups because they have the resources.
Discussion Should corporations and unions be allowed to usemoney from their generalfunds to makeindependent advertisements in support of or inopposition topolitical candidates? And, what does it mean for political representation of the marginalized?
Sources: Syllabus. Supreme Court Of the United States. CITIZENS UNITED v. FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION Kirpatrick, D. “Lobbyists Get Potent Weapon in Campaign Financing” New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/22/us/politics/22donate.html Hasen, R. “The Numbers don’t lie” Slate magazine. http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2012/03/the_supreme_court_s_citizens_united_decision_has_led_to_an_explosion_of_campaign_spending_.html Bartels, Unequal Democracy: The Political Economy of the New Gilded Age. (2008) Chapter 9 Strolovitch, “Do Interest Groups Represent the Disadvantaged?” (2006) Gallup Politics. “Public Agree with Court: Campaign Money is Free Speech” (2010) http://www.gallup.com/poll/125333/public-agrees-court-campaign-money-free-speech.aspx