» This Story:Read +| Comments

Justices Assail 'Millionaires' Amendment'

Whether Majority Will Junk Measure Is Not Yet Clear

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
By Robert Barnes
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 23, 2008

The conservative justices on the Supreme Court yesterday all seemed to find something not to like about the McCain-Feingold campaign finance act's "Millionaires' Amendment," which provides special fundraising opportunities to congressional candidates who run against wealthy opponents.

This Story

But it was unclear at the end of a lively hour-long oral argument whether a majority of the entire court disliked it enough to junk the whole thing, or if there was a way to keep the essential elements and prune the parts deemed especially objectionable.

Congress's stated goal in the 2002 legislation, known formally as the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, was to combat the perception that wealthy, self-financed candidates could "buy" a congressional seat. For example, if a House candidate spends $350,000 or more of his own money, his opponents are allowed to accept campaign contributions in excess of contribution limits, and to receive additional help from their political parties.

New York industrialist Jack Davis, a Democrat who spent millions of dollars on two unsuccessful congressional attempts and is ready to spend $3 million on another, is challenging the law. He says it violates his First and Fifth Amendment rights and protects incumbents by discouraging wealthy challengers.

He had a vocal and inexhaustible supporter in Justice Antonin Scalia. Scalia, a longtime opponent of the campaign finance act, said that bringing a sense of fairness to elections is neither Congress's role nor something it should be trusted to do.

"The campaign finance regimes we've approved up to now, the significant limitations, have had an anti-corruption rationale," Scalia said. "The only purpose of this is to level the playing field. And I am deeply suspicious of allowing elections to be conducted under a regime whereby Congress levels the playing field. That seems to be very dangerous."

Scalia mocked the idea that the incumbents in Congress are dedicated to competitive races. Perhaps, he speculated, "the millionaires have already been elected and are now pulling up the ladder after them."

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg pointed out that, of 110 congressional candidates since the law's enactment entitled to additional fundraising because of a wealthy opponent, only six were incumbents.

Additionally, Ginsburg said Davis's contention that his First Amendment rights were impaired by giving his opponent the opportunity to raise more money made no sense. "The end result of this scheme is that there will be more, not less, speech because the non-affluent opponent will now have money to spend that he didn't have before," Ginsburg said.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. seemed to agree. "There is no restriction whatsoever on the wealthier candidate," Roberts said. "He can spend as much of his money as he wants."

But Davis's attorney Andrew D. Herman, who said having Congress decide how to make races competitive was "like saying that we're going to trust basketball players to call their own out-of-bounds plays,'' seemed to have more success with his argument that his client and other self-financed candidates were treated unfairly.

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy said he found it "a particular vice" of the amendment that it allows the opponent of a self-financing candidate to have greater ties and to receive more money from his political party. "It puts this statute in the position of preferring one kind of speech over another. And we simply do not do that," Kennedy said.


CONTINUED     1        >


» This Story:Read +| Comments

More on the Supreme Court

[The Supreme Court]

The Supreme Court

Full coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court, including key cases and nominations to the nation's highest court.

[Guantanamo Prison]

Guantanamo Prison

Full coverage of the U.S. prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, including Supreme Court rulings over its legality.

© 2008 The Washington Post Company