W.V. Supreme Court Squashes Publicly Funded Campaigns

Mike Spahr
United Re:public / News Report
Published: Tuesday 11 September 2012
The Court overruled a request for public funds in accordance with their pilot program.
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One of the many possible avenues to transparency would be to promote and institute publicly financed elections. Allen Loughry is a Republican running for one of the three open Supreme Court seats in West Virginia, and requested access to public funds in accordance with West Virginia’s pilot program for publicly funded elections. However, the West Virginia Gazette reports that:

The West Virginia matching fund provision places a “substantial burden on the unfettered political speech of the privately financed candidates” and could not withstand a challenge before the U.S. Supreme Court, based on its rulings in two other cases, state Supreme Court justices said in their ruling denying Loughry’s motion…

…While recognizing that as a laudable goal, the court ruled that the current public financing pilot project could not achieve its intended goal since only one of the four candidates on the ballot, Loughry, is using public financing.

The West Virginia Gazette further reports on the Court ruling that:

The government matching funds serve no other purpose than ‘leveling the playing field’ between one publicly funded candidate and the three privately financed candidates.

The current doctrine is that campaign contributions are considered free speech. Given that,  privately funded candidates that exercise “unfettered political speech” have the capacity to drown out their underfunded opposition. If the sole purpose is to “level the playing field,” then someone who doesn’t have access to those same private funds should, in turn, not be deprived of that same monetary megaphone. Loughry had it right as he argued that:

The pilot project’s goal of strengthening the public’s confidence in the impartiality and integrity of the judiciary is a compelling state interest, but not at the cost of burdening the First Amendment rights of the other candidates in the race.

Rather than applauding the effort of one man to tap into public funding of elections, the WV Supreme Court instead reinforced that the game to play in the current political landscape is a race to the top of the fundraising charts. It’s yet another example of the precedent set by the US Supreme Court’s Citizens United v. FEC decision.

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4 comments on "W.V. Supreme Court Squashes Publicly Funded Campaigns"

BozoAdult

September 12, 2012 3:29am

Corporations are not people and money does not equal free speech.

These notions are absurd. And they have destroyed our democracy.

Ron in NM

September 11, 2012 1:06pm

Well, when you step back and think on it, unless ALL candidates for election are limited to public funding, then public funding can't hope to match the private funding that's sloshing around these days. The taxes of the 99% can't hope to counter the selective largesse of the 1%.

There's no two ways about it. We really need a fair and rational amendment to the Constitution so that its appointed interpreters can't come up with something as scandalous as a Citizens United decision.

The U.S. Supreme Court is going to get a lot of heat and pressure for opening the floodgates the way they did. Too bad about the dissenters, however. They'll have to share in the blame and hatred now directed toward the Supreme Court.

RepubliCult

September 11, 2012 11:45am

Yet another shameful call-out to the power of our Supreme Courtesans in DC, and their heinous decision with Citizens United. Will we need to amend the constitution to fix every appalling decision they make? Well, their behavior over at least the last 12 years screams out for a solution that could help mitigate their ruinous decisions, and return America back to The People: Term Limits for the Top Bench. Term-limiting out the supremes squatting on the court would help reduce the job-longevity of ideologues who inflicted this damage and who will long remain an obstacle to its reversal. Scalia and Thomas have over stayed their welcome, and should be long gone to the golf links, the rubber chicken banquet circuit, or their favorite bilge water think tank. The powerful and positive effect term limits could have upon our country cannot be understated. Had 18 year term limits been in effect in 2000, we'd not have had Rehnquist or O'Connor to tamper with the sanctity of the voting process. And with sweet irony, O'Connor would have had to retire under a democratic president! We all know that was not her wish, and thus she cast the deciding vote that ushered George W Bush into the White House, and all the ensuing havoc he rained upon us.

Jeffrey Hill

September 11, 2012 9:22am

Coal and Mountaintop Removal Strip Mining are Kings in West Virginia, coal miner safety and environmental protection are NOT!!