Writers who embrace the legislation, sponsored by Republican John McCain of Arizona and Democrat Russell Feingold of Wisconsin, are threatening the very First Amendment rights they claim to defend. The latest incarnation of the senators’ bill is quite simply an appalling assault on fundamental rights of free expression.
Very few in the press or in Congress have focused clearly on the way the bill virtually bans think tanks, advocacy organizations and corporations from debating political issues. In fact, it reduces the First Amendment to scrap. Its legal jargon is thick, and its complexities are difficult to unsnarl. But its provisions are positively diabolical in their implications for public discourse.
One provision defines whether political spending (including “anything of value provided … for the purpose of influencing a federal election”) has been “coordinated with a candidate.” That’s a very big deal. “Coordinated” spending is absolutely forbidden for nonprofit, issue-oriented groups as well as for unions and corporations.
So if your motive is to exclude certain organizations from doing anything that might have an impact on an election, what do you do? Why, you toss everything but the kitchen sink into the “coordinated” category. And that’s just what the McCain-Feingold legislation does. Under the newest version of the bill, “coordinated” expenditures are cleverly defined.
First, spending “pursuant to any general or particular understanding with a candidate” is defined as coordinated. That’s obfuscatory prose, to be sure. But it very probably covers such things as questionnaires and pledges mailed to candidates by advocacy groups if the candidate knows that his or her answers will be publicized. (Isn’t that the whole point?)
Second, “dissemination, distribution or republication … of any … form of campaign material prepared by a candidate” is also defined as coordinated. An advocacy group could easily fall on the wrong side of that definition if it distributes an article written by a candidate and there’s a chance that he might distribute the same article to potential voters.