With Referendum, Massachusetts Could Lead The Way In Overturning Citizens United

A demonstrator holds a sign outside the US Chamber of Commerce during a rally against the Supreme Court's decision five years ago in favor of Citizens United, which allows private citizens and corporations to make un... A demonstrator holds a sign outside the US Chamber of Commerce during a rally against the Supreme Court's decision five years ago in favor of Citizens United, which allows private citizens and corporations to make unlimited donations for political campaigns, in Washington,DC on January 21, 2015. AFP PHOTO/NICHOLAS KAMM (Photo credit should read NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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BOSTON (AP) — Voters in Massachusetts could give an important boost to a movement seeking to amend the U.S. Constitution to restore some limits on corporations’ political spending.

Voters on Tuesday are being asked to create a special state commission charged with weighing potential constitutional amendments that would overturn the Citizens United decision, which helped open the door to allowing businesses, unions and nonprofits to spend unlimited amounts to influence elections.

The question is part of a wider multistate effort to undo the 2010 Supreme Court ruling.

American Promise, the national organization behind the effort to reverse Citizens United, said 19 states have already signaled their support for similar amendments, most through resolutions approved by legislatures. Voters in four states — Colorado and Montana in 2012 and California and Washington in 2016 — also approved questions aimed at nixing the court ruling.

The voters in those states essentially instructed their congressional delegations to support an amendment overturning Citizens United, without offer specific language. In Massachusetts, which doesn’t allow statewide advisory questions, the referendum would take the step of creating a citizens commission to research the issue and suggest possible amendments.

The goal is to guarantee everyone has an equal shot at getting the ear of lawmakers — something he said the current political system fails to do, said Ben Gubits, political director for American Promise.

“It’s been a long trend in our democracy working for the folks that make large campaign contributions — wealthy individuals, corporations and some unions — while the rest of the average citizens don’t have a voice,” he said.

The call to overturn Citizens United has bipartisan support, Gubits said. His group counts members of both parties on its advisory council, which includes former Wyoming U.S. Sen. Alan Simpson, a Republican, and former Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis, the Democratic nominee for president in 1988, he said. Massachusetts Republican Gov. Charlie Baker and Democratic U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren have said they will vote for the question.

The group disputes that laws limiting political spending violate the First Amendment, Gubits said, arguing money doesn’t equal speech.

Not everyone agrees.

Paul Craney, spokesman for the conservative-leaning Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance, said the ballot question is wrong-headed.

“Is money speech?” he said. “Absolutely.”

But increasingly, Craney said, money isn’t the only way to amplify one’s voice.

“A lot of people out there have a big following on social media that can communicate with a lot of people, and it costs them nothing,” he said. “So more and more you’re starting to see that money is not the only way to have speech.”

The Citizens United ruling helped make it easier for corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts of money trying to persuade voters to cast their ballots for or against a candidate. While the ruling did not lift the ban on companies and unions giving money directly to candidates for federal office, it let them spend money trying to influence voters as long as the money was not being spent in coordination with a campaign.

Many groups have ramped up their political spending without publicly disclosing the sources of their money by forming “dark money” groups classified as social welfare organizations by the IRS. They can advocate for or against a candidate, run phone banks and donate to so-called super PACs. The nonprofit Center for Responsive Politics has tallied about $133 million spent so far this election cycle with no disclosure of donors, compared with about $177 million spent in 2014’s midterms.

The question would instruct the newly formed commission to recommend potential constitutional amendments to establish that corporations do not have the same constitutional rights as human beings and that campaign contributions and expenditures may be regulated.

Any resident of Massachusetts who is a U.S. resident could apply to serve on the 15-member, unpaid commission. The governor, secretary of the commonwealth, attorney general, House speaker and Senate president would each appoint three members.

Letting politicians appoint members is a problem, Craney said.

“Whenever you empower elected officials or politicians to regulate the public speech, the First Amendment is under attack,” he said.

The main task of the commission would be to release a report that would take a look at the impact of political spending in Massachusetts and any limitations on the state’s ability to regulate corporations and other entities in light of the Citizens United ruling.

The question also gives the commission the task of making recommendations for possible constitutional amendments and suggesting ways to advance those proposed amendments.

The proposed law would take effect Jan. 1, 2019. The commission’s first report would be due by the end of December and would be delivered to Congress and the president.

The group is hoping new amendment could be added to the Constitution by 2026, Gubits said — a process that would require its approval by two-thirds of the U.S. House and Senate and ratification by three-fourths of the states, 38 in all.

“We passed 12 amendments in the 20th century alone,” he said. “This isn’t something that we used to do just back when people wore powdered wigs.”

There have been just 27 amendments added to the Constitution — including the first 10, the Bill of Rights, ratified in 1791.

___

For AP’s complete coverage of the U.S. midterm elections: http://apne.ws/APPolitics

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  1. Equating money with speech is certainly a debatable proposition. But the real problem is equating corporations with people.

    Corporations should have no Constitutional rights. They are creations of the State, with no existence beyond what State statute provides. If a State decided to abolish all corporations tomorrow, they shouldn’t be able to object to it on the basis that they were being deprived of their free speech rights, nor that they were being subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.

  2. The biggest step we can start to take to leaving the world a better place after us is to end the result of citizens united treating corporations like citizens.

    They aren’t. The ruling has caused damage to our country like a rapidly spreading cancer. It needs to be fixed.

    Without doing this, so much positive we do with a blue wave can be reversed with a flood of millions and millions of dollars that have been conveniently gifted to corporations recently.

  3. “As soon as a corporation gets a mammogram or has to undergo radiation treatments I’ll consider it a person.”
    — Randi Rhodes, regarding Citizens United, paraphrased


    Two other important changes we need is the public funding of all elections, from dog catcher to President of the United States, and the reimposition of the Equal Time rule.

  4. Corporations were viewed as untrustworthy and capable of doing great harm at the beginning of this country, mainly due to the actions of British corporations. Initially, they were only allowed to form for a specific purpose and then were disbanded when that was accomplished. I don’t know if we need to go that far but this BS of corporations having the same constitutional rights as people needs to be blocked permanently and the only way to do that is with an amendment. I think it should be more far-reaching than just elections and corporations that have been shown to do harm to the public should be broken up or disbanded.

  5. John Roberts is the ultimate extreme traitor as he is the guy who sold us out to big money. If any real justice in the USA existed, he’d have been executed for treason by now.

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