RNLA Co-Chair John Ryder has
a new article in the Daily Caller that points out the truth and consequences
of the left’s description of Citizens
United. Citizens United, when you
get down to it, is about whether you can make a movie critical of a Presidential
candidate. (Does anyone really think
that the left would make as big a deal over Citizen United if it was a movie
critical of Donald Trump instead of Hillary Clinton?)
More importantly, the article goes into how the left uses
their mischaracterization of Citizen
United to attack free speech and regulate politics on the local level.
In 2016, Multnomah County, Oregon, passed, and voters approved, a measure which created contribution limits, expenditure limits, registration requirements, and disclosure requirements for spending related to county races. The expenditure limits provide that individuals and entities may only spend money if the money was collected subject to the contribution limits.. . .
The primary problem with this misguided effort restricting constitutional rights of political speech is that it ignores not only Citizens United but also 40 years of settled campaign finance case law.
The Oregon case is interesting because it is also clearly unconstitutional
under Oregon law. As Ryder notes:
Putting aside federal constitutional law, Oregon Supreme Court decisions prohibit both expenditure and contribution limitations under the Constitution of Oregon because “political contributions constitute expression.” Because of these decisions, Oregon is one of the few states that does not impose contribution limits on either individuals or entities.
From campus to political speech restrictions, the left's continued efforts to limit the First Amendment are troubling and need to be
fought. Political speech is not something new discovered in Citizens United but rather a bedrock of our founding in the Constitution.
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