A Look Back at the Panic Over Big Money in Politics
Law professor Ann Southworth offers a balanced take on the fallout from the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision.

Big Money Unleashed: The Campaign to Deregulate Election Spending, by Ann Southworth, University of Chicago Press, 336 pages, $32.50
A decade ago, it passed for common wisdom that the Republican Party and maybe the Democrats too were captives of a wealthy donor base that could lock up electoral results by burying rivals in campaign spending.
It all seems long ago. As populist energies surged through U.S. politics following the rise of Donald Trump, Big Money's power has come to seem overrated, to say the least. Corporate America preferred almost any random Republican off the street to Trump, which made no difference. Democrats, who'd been doing well with business donors for years, have outraised and outspent Trump by a wide margin each time, and that didn't seem to matter much either. Even so-called dark money, a category in which the Democrats surged ahead in the 2018 and 2020 cycles, seems to have lost its magical powers.
For years, reformers had been arranging the rules in ways that benefited candidates who could marshal small donations and what is called earned media, as opposed to paid advertising. As it happened, Trump excelled at both these skills. So did others: On Capitol Hill, Republican and Democratic grandees alike were toppled in primaries by unknown challengers with scant funding but a more militant ideological tone and savvy social media skills. That's what happened in the 2018 New York primary where little-known challenger Alexandria Ocasio--Cortez handily beat Democratic House Caucus chair Joe Crowley after being outspent 18 to 1 ($1.5 million to $83,000).
Perhaps I'm being too bold in saying that the panic over money in politics is now dead. But if you want to revisit that controversy from a point at which it was very much alive, Ann Southworth's Big Money Unleashed is a reasonably illuminating new book. It offers insight into what veteran campaign finance lawyers were thinking as they looked back a few years after the Supreme Court's 2010 case of Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.
In Citizens United, the high court laid out a clear and straightforward application of the First Amendment: You are entitled to speak your mind at your own expense about political candidates, so long as your speech is not a quid pro quo trade of favors. What's more, that liberty applies to associations and businesses, not just individuals.
Then-President Barack Obama declared that the decision "strikes at our democracy itself." Misconceptions were launched about the origins of legal personhood for corporations that continue to be spread to this day. Whole organizations were founded with names like End Citizens United.
From this book's title, I was braced for another diatribe about The Case That Ruined Everything. Happily, that isn't what I found. In the aftermath of the decision, Southworth, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine, decided to interview dozens of lawyers on the front lines of constitutional campaign finance litigation, both "reformers" (as she calls those favorably disposed to regulation) and "challengers" (as she calls those who want the courts to invalidate many such rules). Allowing them anonymity to encourage candor, she asked them how they saw their work, what they thought of the other lawyers and groups, and much more.
Those interviews are at the heart of the book. Having spoken to a fair number of legal types in this area myself, I think they ring true. While Southworth's own sympathies appear to lie with the reformers, she lets both sides speak for themselves, often in long direct quotes. (I wouldn't be surprised if one or more of her interview subjects were associated with my own Cato Institute, which gets mentioned fairly often, but I haven't tried to check.)
In all, she interviewed 52 lawyers from July 2015 to November 2017. That's what I mean about the timing problem—though I don't dismiss the value of having a snapshot of the insider debate shortly before things changed.
Southworth sets the stage by laying out the legal cases. In the early constitutional challenges, she notes, neither the parties nor the amicus briefs fell out particularly along partisan lines.
Prevailing majorities crossed left-right lines in such early campaign finance cases as Buckley v. Valeo (1976) and First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti (1978). In the 5–4 case of FEC v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life (1986), the liberal lion William Brennan, writing for the Supreme Court majority, found that cause-oriented nonprofits that were plainly independent from corporate or union donors had a First Amendment right to publish flyers rating politicians' stands on their issues. At the same time, Brennan was adamant against allowing business any such rights. Meanwhile, Chief Justice William Rehnquist—then considered the Court's archconservative—was a reliable vote to uphold campaign regulations of all sorts.
Later Republican appointees took a more expansive view of the First Amendment than Rehnquist did. By the '90s, today's familiar left-right alignment had settled into place.
While the reformer side drew heavily on the views and talent of law professors, the challengers too drew intellectual guidance from a dissident band of legal academics who saw the First Amendment issues in their full scope before the Court did. These undersung heroes of liberty included Lillian BeVier of the University of Virginia, Martin Redish of Northwestern University, and the late Ralph Winter of Yale University.
The lawyers who spoke with Southworth fell mostly into two categories: those employed by advocacy groups, and those who "practiced in court on behalf of candidates and parties." In general, the advocacy-group lawyers "expressed stronger views and used sharper rhetoric," while the practicing litigators couched issues in a more nuanced way and sometimes threw shade on "what they viewed as the simplistic" takes of their allies.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan once said that institutions that fight each other come to resemble each other. Sure enough, the reformer and challenger camps have more than a little in common. Both rely on foundation support, with the reformers backed by the likes of the Joyce Foundation, Pew Charitable Trusts, Ford Foundation, and George Soros's Open Society Foundations while the challengers draw on the Bradley and Searle foundations (both of which have supported Reason Foundation, which publishes this magazine), among others. The reformers had a considerable head start, with a "center-left network" having "been dominant among legal elites through the mid-1980s."
Southworth—the author of an earlier book on the conservative legal movement, Lawyers of the Right—generally avoids caricaturing either side. She is especially interested in questions of coalition dynamics. What makes groups with little outward in common cooperate? Why do gun rights groups so avidly support the challenger cause, and environmental groups the reformer? Part of the answer is plausible enough: "You don't argue against your friends," as one reformer told her.
She presses a conservative populist on this point: Doesn't your work here simply help big business? But it seems to me that her own interviews, as well as her source material, provide a more than adequate answer to her question. To begin with, a remarkable number of key legal cases—from the aforementioned FEC v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life through FEC v. Wisconsin Right to Life (2007) to Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus (2014)—bear the names of anti-abortion groups. This probably reflects the fact that speaking about politicians' records is central to these groups' mission, and it might also suggest that campaign finance regulators have not taken an exactly friendly stance toward them over the years.
Another lawyer from the challenger side who identifies as a grassroots "outsider" tells Southworth that while he feels an antagonism toward the GOP's business wing, he thinks the correct course of action is to outvote it, not to try to regulate its speech.
After reading the interview excerpts, I concluded that one reason campaign finance regulation has been faring poorly is that it tends to unite right-of-center groups while dividing the left. To be sure, the reformer coalition is good at not showing visible fissures on this issue; the nearest thing to a crack is the way some leaders of the American Civil Liberties Union still stand up for the First Amendment side. Below the surface, however, many tensions simmer. Behind the fine talk of democratic values, nearly all of the major participants in the reformer coalition are closely calculating their self-interest.
Unions? They were directly regulated by the law struck down in Citizens United. Progressive nonprofits? They've "always been a little bit leery" of this kind of regulation, notes one lawyer, since they can wind up in the target sights. "The NAACP gets tons of corporate money, tons of corporate money, because corporations want to buy favor with civil rights groups," says another. Hollywood liberals? Among the great fundraisers of all time. You get the picture.
Pick whatever issue you will, and you will find people with money on both sides. One of Southworth's informants sums it up well: "In America, there is no moneyed interest. There are people with money, but their interests are so varied, enormously varied and conflicting." We can't, and shouldn't want to, throttle them all.
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Pick whatever issue you will, and you will find people with money on both sides.
2024 potus election – there is money on boaf sidez but not in the rear due to an unserious, closet progressive that has essentially managed to chase away support and donors in droves. Not surprised the editors claiming to get behind option 3 let that slip in suggesting that they really were always going to strategically and reluctantly cast a vote elsewhere.
This posts has puns oliver it.
I heard it’s because he’s gay.
I subscribe to some liberal sites, and as a result get regular emails from them. I recently received an email from PublicCitizen.org. Now, PublicCitizen.org is a 501(c)(4) corporation, who's primary purpose seems to be opposing the ruling handed down in the Citizens United case.
Recall that the Citizens United case hinged on the fact that a 501(c)(4) corporation produced a movie that had a political purpose, in this case a documentary "Hillary: The Movie" that was intended to highlight Mrs. Clinton's shortcomings the first time she was running for president.
The email from Public Citizen was urging me to donate money to support their production of a documentary DVD highlighting how bad the Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United was.
That's right: a 501(c)(4) corporation made a movie with the express political purpose of protesting the Supreme Court decision that a 501(c)(4) corporation could make a movie with an express political purpose!
Thats ok because the republicans did it first - strawcasmic.
And because Democrats stand for the Little People!
I hear they only act with good intentions.
I hear some of them will bend over behind the Little People, too!
Democrats are stealing from the Republican playbook.
But who did it first is what matters!
Actually Democrats did 'it' first with Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 but the Obama Administration ruled that film was A-Okay but Hillary The Movie wasn't A-Okay at all and had to be blocked by the FEC.
I'm sure the fact that their support and opposition for these movies perfectly matches whether the movies help or hurt Dems is purely coincidental - just like all of sarc's comments.
But only within 60 days before an election.
For years this group Public Citizen has pretended that they simply want to hold government accountable, and especially that they want to see Citizens United ruling overturned or obviated via Constitutional amendment.
They keep saying they just want to get the corrupting influence of money out of politics.
I've pointed out many times before that when they screamed about "millionaires and billionaires" like the Koch brothers, they never once complained about Tom Steyer or George Soros or Michael Bloomberg's spending, nor once complained about the hundreds of millions of dollars spent by unions to prop up Democratic candidates.
I've also pointed out the irony that they are exactly the kind of group that Citizens United ruling enabled--a 501(c)4 corporation engaging in political speech.
Now they've stopped even pretending, as most emails I get from them for the last 5 or 6 years are basically campaign flyers for Democrats.
E.g.:
We have to be brutally honest about two realities.
If we don’t absorb, grapple with and respond to BOTH things, we won’t understand what’s happening in America or the work ahead of us.
First, Trump’s racism and demagoguery has genuine political appeal to large swaths of the American public, and there’s every reason to expect him to double down on his fascist tendencies.
Second, if we play our cards right, November 6 will be a turning point not just in our fight to block the efforts of the criminogenic Trump administration, but in the arc of American history.
We have a major opportunity to turn our country around and launch it on a course for justice and democracy.
Fearsome threats and unparalleled opportunity.
That’s our dual reality.
And, we will fight for — and, in time, win — a transformative, progressive agenda that speaks to people’s legitimate grievances and is our best antidote to Trump’s proto-fascism.
That’s how we energize and mobilize progressives AND how we diminish the effectiveness of Trump’s demagoguery.
This is a moment unlike any other in American history.
We must intensify our vigilance against Trump, who is likely to double down on his worst, proto-fascist tendencies.
But at the same time, we can set ourselves on a path to do great things.
Can you make a contribution right now to jumpstart our ambitious agenda for the soul of America?
Wow. You nailed that one. That could have been written by Debbie Wasserman Schultz. DNC101 right there.
Second, if we play our cards right, November 6 will be a turning point not just in our fight to block the efforts of the criminogenic Trump administration, but in the arc of American history.
This is actually a tell and/or the key. The Bush Family, The Clinton Family/Foundation, The Obamas... a Trump victory is a rather definitive end to some political lineages and the derailing of a number of political money trains.
If Trump wins making less money, again, the whole *political* 501(c) gig is up and the political foundations organized around Presidential libraries and whatnot have to turn to curating Presidential documents that no one reads. If you're helping people as a social org, there's a reason to donate money. If you're auspiciously helping people as a social org while acting as a political money funnel, there's a reason to donate money. If you're not helping people and the amount of money being shoveled into your political funnel has zero ROI, there's no reason for you to exist.
Similar to what's happening to lots of legacy media where writers and staff make a big stink about their own personal issues and the owners and (lack of) readership are largely OK if they take a hike.
Black Pigeon just dropped a video about the transforming of the nation should team statist win:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=IHqWZRKWT9o
Let's hope that many Desperate Democrats actually do leave the US this time if Trump wins.
It ended when big money all coalesced around Democrats during the Obama years
It was never about money in politics. It was about the money going to Republicans. They loved the money groups like unions donated and they had no issue with the money that corporations gave to nonprofits that was then funneled to Democrats but they absolutely despised any corporate money that went to Republicans.
And the hind-sight lesson for the day is........
Exactly how BIG and treasonous has the Union of States government become when the people are spending BIG $ to influence it. If SCOTUS had been honorable and LIMITED the Union of States government none of these issues would even be a thing.
[Na]tional So[zi]al[ism] fails in more ways than just being UN-sustainable. The Government (i.e. 'Guns') become the livelihood-factor in everyone's lives and real wealth gains cease to be a priority.
The only human asset a monopoly of 'Guns' has to offer is to ensure Individual Liberty and Justice for all.
This is good news! Not only does it confirm that the panic itself was misguided. It also confirms that not all left-leaning academics are toeing the left-wing, lock-step narrative in their research. But the deeper concern about corporate power and influence still remains. The article highlights that BOTH sides on important social issues have major funding. One issue that never seems to be addressed is that corporations should not even be chartered by government in the first place. There should be no special protections from liability by the owners (i.e. stockholders) against damages caused by the corporation beyond what individual business owners have. Capital formation, which was an issue in the early days of the newly founded United States, has not been a legitimate issue at any time in the last hundred and seventy years!
Mr. Olson overlooks the Catholic Majority on the Supreme Court purchased by Billionaire Leonard Leo.
To me, the obvious question is this: if you are going to limit the amount individuals, corporations, unions, and nonprofits can contribute to somebody's election, why not limit the amount from the entities that have done the *real* damage to American political life, namely the Republican and Democratic parties?