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Judicial Watch Fights for Free Speech in Supreme Court Filing: Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission
FEC's Decision to Ban Broadcast of Hillary Clinton Documentary During Election Season Violates First Amendment
| Source: Judicial Watch
WASHINGTON, DC--(Marketwire - August 3, 2009) - Judicial Watch, the public interest group
that investigates and prosecutes government corruption, announced today
that it has filed an amicus curiae brief in support of free speech in the
United States Supreme Court in Citizens United v. Federal Election
Commission.
In its brief, filed on July 30, Judicial Watch argues that the Federal
Election Commission's decision to ban (under McCain-Feingold) the broadcast
of a Citizens United documentary about Hillary Clinton during the
presidential election season violated the First Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution. The Supreme Court, which took the unusual step of ordering
special oral arguments in the lawsuit on September 9, will now decide
whether to overturn two High Court precedents (Austin v. Michigan Chamber
of Commerce and McConnell v. Federal Election Commission) that restrict
corporate speech.
Judicial Watch's brief, which can be read on its Internet site,
www.judicialwatch.org, advanced four principle arguments:
1. Political Speech Is at the Heart of the First Amendment and Is Entitled
to the Broadest Protection: The [Supreme] Court...was solicitous to protect
political speech not only as a matter of individual liberty, and not only
because it was the intention of the Framers, but because political speech
is crucial to the survival of our representative government and its system
of ordered liberty. This principle, in turn, presupposes that First
Amendment protection of political speech is the precondition of all other
freedoms protected by the Constitution.
2. Unlike Contributions to Candidates, Independent Expenditures, Which Are
Not Coordinated with a Candidate or Campaign, Do Not Pose a Danger of
Corruption or its Appearance: In essence, because as a nation we value
free speech so highly, our government is permitted to regulate it only
where the government's interest is compelling and only to the extent
absolutely necessary to achieve that interest... Independent
expenditures... are not coordinated with a candidate or campaign [and] do
not pose a danger of corruption or its appearance. This is because a
candidate does not necessarily benefit from (and may well even be harmed
by) an expenditure that is made independently of his campaign.
3. This Court Has Consistently Invalidated Legislative Attempts at Limiting
or Restricting Corporate Expenditures as Violative of First Amendment Free
Speech: Clearly, this Court has consistently held that independent
expenditures are protected speech which require the broadest protection by
the First Amendment. This Court has also consistently invalidated
legislative attempts at limiting or restricting corporate expenditures as
violative of First Amendment free speech because the government's interest
in preventing corruption and the appearance thereof is inapplicable to
independent expenditures, as there is no threat of a political quid pro quo
with this type of core independent political expression.
4. Austin and McConnell Deviated from Established Precedent, And, as a
Result, Should Be Overruled by this Court: In Austin, the Court addressed
a state statute that prohibited corporations from using "corporate treasury
funds for independent expenditures in support of, or in opposition to, any
candidate in elections for state office"... The Court did not find that the
state had proven the existence of quid pro quo corruption or its
appearance, "the only legitimate and compelling government interes[t] thus
far identified for restricting campaign finances," NCPAC, 470 U.S. at 496,
497, but invented a new species of corruption: "the corrosive and
distorting effects of immense aggregations of wealth that are accumulated
with the help of the corporate form and that have little or no correlation
to the public's support for the corporation's political ideas." Austin, 494
U.S. at 654.
In McConnell, the Court upheld against a First Amendment challenge
Congress' amendment of the FECA provision prohibiting corporate independent
expenditures... In short, McConnell suppresses speech that this Court has
unambiguously held cannot be suppressed. It "compounds the error made in
Austin... and silences political speech central to the civic discourse that
sustains and informs our democratic processes." McConnell, 540 U.S. at 323
(Kennedy, J., Rehnquist, C. J., and Scalia, J., dissenting).
"McCain-Feingold violates the First Amendment by preventing watchdog groups
organized as corporations from using their own money independently to talk
about politicians and public policy issues. As it relates to Judicial
Watch, this law could prevent us from telling the truth about corrupt
politicians close to an election," stated Judicial Watch President Tom
Fitton.
Visit www.JudicialWatch.org to read Judicial Watch's Supreme Court Amicus
Curiae Brief in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.