Friday, January 22, 2010

The Government Should Have Less Power to Tax and Spend, Not More Power to Regulate Speech

Yesterday, The Hill asked various pundits and politicos to respond to the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling. The Big Question (as their periodic feature is called) was, “Will corporate money change campaigns?” You can read my response here.

Today, that same newspaper invited me to blog some further thoughts on the Citizens United decision. Here’s what I wrote:

Critics of yesterday’s decision say the sky of American democracy is falling. Supporters—including myself—say it’s a great day for the republic and a vindication of the freedom of speech. How can this be? Are nonprofit think tanks and advocacy groups like my own Cato Institute, the ACLU, the NRA, and many other odd bedfellows who supported Citizens United all in the pockets of Wall Street, Big Oil, insurance companies, and others that President Obama assails as corrupting our politics? Leaving aside the issue of why the politician who got more of his campaign funding from Goldman Sachs than any other source would be going after the very industries that most support him, the asymmetry in this debate rests on the myth that money is an evil in the political system, and that therefore the American people want so-called campaign finance reform to “clean up” government.

Money is no more an evil in politics than it is in life generally. Some people may not like mud-slinging attack ads, but some people also don’t like SUVs, the Super Bowl, the Jay Leno Show, and many other things that people spend money on—including donations to Cato, the ACLU, the NRA, etc. The problem with money in politics isn’t the money, but rather the politics. So long as the government is powerful enough to dole out tax breaks, subsidies, stimulus funds, regulations, earmarks, and a whole host of other goodies (and baddies), those that stand to benefit (and lose) will spend money on the political process. The way to get rid of this behavior and spending—which is constitutionally protected in a whole host of ways: freedom of speech, freedom of association, the right to petition the government for redress of grievances, etc.—is to reduce the government’s power to affect so many people’s lives and transform economic incentives for businesses big and small. Reduce the size of government and K Street will melt away.

Finally, as my colleague Roger Pilon points out, 26 states have minimal campaign finance laws, with no evidence that those states have more corruption—or a more unequal “political playing field”—than states that strictly regulate. And that’s because the real reason we have campaign finance regulations—the dirty little secret behind the whole convoluted regime—is that it’s an incumbency protection racket. From the so-called “millionaire’s amendment” that the Supreme Court struck down in 2008 to the limits on corporate and union advocacy that the Court struck down yesterday, McCain-Feingold and all other campaign finance legislation—passed by self-interested politicians—is designed to make it harder for challengers. After-all, incumbents have the benefit of name recognition, taxpayer-funded travel to and around their home districts and states, taxpayer-funded campaign literature disguised as informational flyers touting all the great things a congressman is doing, and a host of other advantages.

The First Amendment is not a “loophole” for big business and those of us who want freer speech—without bureaucrats deciding who gets to speak when and how much—are not corporate shills. Free speech is the very foundation of our democracy, and we are stronger today for the Citizens United decision.

CP: Cato's blog

1 comment:

Richard said...

The difference between attack ads and SUVs/Super Bowl/Jay Leno is that political ads have a tangible effect on voting behaviour and then elected officials, which will noticeably affect *my* life. If I choose not to watch sports or political satire, I am no worse off for it. SUVs are a grey area; I would contend that they pollute the environment, in which I have a stake, so I would accept some regulation in that area.

McCain-Feingold did not dent the advantage of incumbency. Before it passed, something like 90% of all House members were relected each cycle. McCain-Feingold was intended to even the playing field between challengers and the incumbent. After all, big donors like corporations and unions tend to support the incumbent rather than a challenger simply because the challenger is unproven material. See the NRA's policy of favouring the incumbent even when the challenger has the same views.

If you truly want freer speech, you would consider addressing the following problem. Say I want to make a political statement on TV. There's no way I can get screen time because there is a rerun of American Idol that the network can show to earn more profit. However, a billionaire can outbid broadcast TV and commercials to be heard. By virtue of having more money than me, that person has more opportunity to speak. What this translates to in politics is a competition over who has the most money. If money can buy speech, is speech really free?

To be sure, I'm not picking on just big business. My own state of California has been ruined by union money. The teacher's union spent millions on an advertising campaign to convince voters to approve an initiative to allocate a certain minimum of the state's general funds to education. The results are the highest paid teachers in the US and a bankrupt state. Some may argue that voters made had free will in voting, but is it really free when they're subject to so much pressure caused by union money?