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Other Issues
Campaign Finance Reform
While the issue of campaign finance reform barely registers in public opinion polls, many politicians and the media tell us reform is critical to the future of democracy in America. However, it is clear
that they believe this is true only insofar as we accept the version of reform demanded by these same politicians and the media — public financing, contribution and expenditure limits, and an end
to all independent expenditures. This version of reform will have little impact other than to stifle political debate and to further corrupt our political system. Instead, serious reformers should accomplish
the effective liberation of campaigns and elections from arbitrary limits on the flow of money, information, and access.
Some critics of North Carolina’s current finance system say that both wealthy individuals and political action committees (PACs) exercise too much influence over candidates. Other critics, however,
argue that the current system, by limiting individual contributions, forces candidates to spend too much time fundraising rather than discussing issues and makes PACs a more important source of campaign
funds than they should be. They also contend that restricting private financing of campaigns is a violation of freedom of speech.

The Problem With Contribution Limits
The essential difficulty with current campaign finance laws is that they distort the political process. They give incumbents an electoral advantage and divert their attention from the execution of their
constitutional duties in favor of an undue concentration on the need to finance future campaigns. Additionally, they discourage the average citizen, who often feels disenfranchised, from his responsibility
to develop an informed base of knowledge with respect to what government is either authorized or able to do effectively.
Direct spending and contribution limits on campaigns are morally questionable and constitutionally suspect. Despite the U.S. Supreme Court’s January 2000 Nixon v. Shrink Missouri Government
PAC ruling — in which it upheld the Buckley v. Valeo contribution limits and refused to adjust the $1,000 campaign contribution limit for inflation — the highest court in the land should
not be issuing edicts restricting the ability of American citizens to politically express themselves. This is the principal protection intended by the First Amendment. There are also more practical objections
to any such limitation on financial support for a candidate. The real questions are: Do we wish to have an unelected judiciary determining the nature and extent of the political speech upon which our elections
depend? And should such arbitrary restrictions append short of extensive and thorough public debate?
In essence, neither contributions to nor expenditures by political candidates or campaigns should be subject to any limits whatsoever. Unlimited financing and broadcasting of political speech is critical
to the health of a free republic. So long as full and immediate disclosure is mandated and, in its absence, commensurately and severely punished, there is simply no logical or justifiable case to be made
for anything less than unlimited, voluntary, and private campaign financing by free citizens in a free nation or state. Nonetheless, candidates must be held fully accountable for both the nature and use
of whatever contributions they receive.
The Problem With Expenditure Limits
Campaign expenditure limits are as unacceptable as contribution limits. There are two aspects to this issue. While the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that campaign expenditure limits are unconstitutional
this remains a double-barreled issue because there are two schools of thought tied directly to the issue of public financing of campaigns. If one accepts the constitutionality or even moral probity of some
form of public financing does this leave the system open to the further distortions of limited, publicly financed campaigns competing against unlimited, privately funded campaigns? And, if that is the case,
is it truly a problem?
If a candidate accepts public funding for a campaign he accepts a limit on expenditures and a ban on private funding. There may be an argument for imposing such limits only if a candidate accepts public
funding of his campaign. The issue is whether taxpayer funding is constitutionally acceptable. The public funding of campaigns is an issue largely driven by two perceptions: 1) that too much money is spent
on campaigns and 2) this money corrupts our politics. Aside from the moral issue of forcing taxpayers to pay for the promotion of ideas and candidates they may vehemently oppose, the actual dollar expenditures
of political campaigns in America and North Carolina, although growing over time, are relatively small.
Candidates for federal office spent approximately $3 billion in 2000. This amounts to about one-eighth of what Americans spend annually on cosmetics. Americans spend more on Nike shoes, lipstick, and
personal fitness trainers than on all local, state, and federal elections combined. In North Carolina, expenditures in legislative campaigns have increased significantly in percentage terms — the
$15 million spent in 2000 was three times the total spending in 1994. Yet the numbers remain relatively small, an average of $88,000 per race in 2000.
Total contributions to state parties and campaigns remain a tiny percentage of business revenues or personal wealth. Nationally, campaign spending represents only about .05 percent of the gross domestic
product. To suggest that too much money is raised and spent to elect public officials who set the law and have such immense power over our economy and our lives is to suggest that dispensable consumer products
are more important than electing the people who make our laws.
Campaign contributions fund events, mailings, television ads, and other forms of communication. The right of an individual to spend his or her own money to communicate a political message to voters is
indistinguishable from that individual’s right to participate in political debate. Such contributions are simply an exercise in First Amendment rights. What’s more, statutory limits on contributions
or their replacement with taxpayer financing would only lead to more independent expenditures by individuals or interest groups on behalf of their favorite candidates and causes — an activity that
is itself clearly protected by the Constitution.
There are two reasons politicians must spend so much time raising money. One is that government is far too powerful and so private interests vie for political influence to a far greater degree than they
would if government were to stay within its constitutional confines. More often than not, donors financially support and vote for politicians to the best of their ability based on the degree to which they
already agree with the particular candidate(s) they support. Donors are interested in increasing access and in bringing attention to those matters which most concern them. This is also true of most voters.
The question is how to most effectively address the concern that people believe politicians are corrupted by the process and that voters are somehow excluded from any true influence.
Goal
To ensure that all North Carolinians have the full protection of the First Amendment for their participation in the political process as well as the maximum amount of timely information possible about
the financing of political campaigns.
Recommendations
- Policymakers should replace the existing campaign finance regime with a system allowing unlimited donations and requiring full, immediate disclosure of the amounts and sources of all gifts.
- Public officials worried about the corrupting influence of campaign contributions should work diligently to decrease the reach and authority of government at all levels so that so-called “special
interests” will no longer feel required to curry favor with legislators and executive branch officials.
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