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Guest Column |
Sonia Sotomayor made history Thursday, winning approval from the Senate to become the next Supreme Court justice - and the first Hispanic to sit on the nation's mightiest bench.
Sotomayor's confirmation came despite strong Republican opposition and
on a mostly party line vote of 68-31. But the partisan bickering surrounding
Sotomayor isn't likely to end once she is sworn in on Saturday morning. In
less than a month, the court is scheduled to rehear arguments in a
high-profile campaign finance case that could rewrite rules that restrict
political campaign spending by corporations and unions. And
it just so happens, legal experts say, that issues of campaign finance and
the ongoing struggle to balance free speech rights with the corrupting
effect of big money in politics lie right in Sotomayor's wheelhouse. In
less than a month, the Supreme Court will examine a corporate campaign
finance case involving an anti-Hillary "Her
experience is in both election law and policy, and she could bring a
different perspective," Hasen says. The
Hillary Clinton Movie At
issue in the case, scheduled to be reargued Sept. 9, is whether the Federal
Election Commission violated a conservative advocacy group's free speech
rights when it barred the release of an anti-Hillary
Citizens United, which produced the movie, argued that the tenets
embodied in the 2002 McCain-Feingold campaign finance law suppress political
free speech by barring the use of corporate and union funds for partisan
communications and limiting the time frame in which those partisan
advertisements or broadcasts can be shown. Other
Upcoming Cases
Salazar v. Bruno, oral arguments Oct. 7 At
the center of this case is whether an 8-foot cross erected on federal land
75 years ago as a war memorial and maintained by the government violates the
First Amendment principle of separation of church and state. Lower courts
invalidated a land swap that would have created for the cross an island of
private land in the Mojave National Preserve. Cross supporters argue that
the
Robert Stevens sold a product most find distasteful: videos of illegal
dogfights. But after being convicted of "knowingly selling depictions of
animal cruelty" across state lines and for profit, Stevens won a reversal on
appeal. The videos, the court ruled, were constitutionally protected speech.
The high court will have to decide whether it agrees, or whether the
intentional cruelty depicted is unprotected speech - like child pornography. Stop
the Beach Renourishment v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection,
arguments to be scheduled When
a government entity trucks in sand to build up an eroding shoreline, who
owns the new beach? The issue before the high court is the constitutionality
of The
FEC and a lower court found that the film, funded in part by corporate
donations, violated the law's big money ban as well as a rule that prohibits
"electioneering communications" in the 30 days before a primary for federal
office - in this case, a presidential primary season during which Clinton
was seeking her party's nomination. But
the Supreme Court's decision to have the case reargued suggested that
justices less friendly to corporate campaign spending rules may be using the
movie case to re-examine the broader law, including subsequent high court
decisions that upheld corporate and union money restrictions. "You
always tremble a little bit when something like that happens," says Mary
Wilson, president of the League of Women Voters, which has filed a friend of
the court brief in favor of the FEC's position. "From
our perspective, we are trying to protect our political process from huge
corporate expenditures in candidate elections," she says. "When something's
not decided on the briefs, we wonder, what more do they need to hear on
this?" Big
Changes Afoot? Hasen
is among election law experts who say that the court under Chief Justice
John Roberts' guidance, and since now-retired Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
was replaced by Justice Samuel Alito, has been consistently chipping away at
campaign finance rules.
"They've decided four cases before this one and in each, they either
held a rule unconstitutional, created an exception" or otherwise weakened
the law, Hasen says. A
ruling for Citizens United "would be a significant change in its own right,
and also signal that other campaign finance laws are ripe for challenge,"
Hasen says. But
Steven Shapiro of the American Civil Liberties Union, which, as a nonprofit
corporation, is also barred from paying for advertisements or other
broadcast pieces that support or oppose a candidate, says that predictions
of great changes are overstated. "I
don't think it would be the end of campaign finance legislation as we know
it," says Shapiro, who co-wrote the ACLU's friend of the court brief that
supports Citizens United. "This
is not a challenge to contribution limits, nor is it a challenge to
soft-money limits," he said. "This is about government revocation of core
political speech, regardless of the speaker." In
its brief, the ACLU asserts that McCain-Feingold's broad prohibition on
"electioneering communications" and its ban on corporations' and unions'
paying for such communications violate the First Amendment on its face. The
FEC defines electioneering communications as any broadcast, cable or
satellite communication that refers to a "clearly identified candidate" for
federal office, is publicly distributed shortly before an election for
office that candidate is seeking, and is targeted to voters who will decide
the race. Sotomayor's
Role So
how might the country's newest justice figure in the clearly polarizing
debate? "She
was on the New York City Campaign Finance Board, so she certainly has
familiarity with these kinds of issues,"
Sotomayor was a founding member of the nonpartisan finance board in
1988, and she served until 1992, when she was named a District Court judge.
The board administers the city's public matching campaign funds program,
monitors candidate contribution limits and disclosures, publishes a voter
guide and oversees debates. In
his assessment of Sotomayor's record on campaign finance, Hasen says he
found that her decisions mirror those made by Justice David Souter, the high
court jurist whom she is expected to replace. So
though she brings experience to the issue, her anticipated presence on the
court won't wrest control of the issue from the court's majority
conservative wing. "It's
a very high-profile case, and one about which she is likely to have a strong
opinion," Hasen says. "But whether she can sway the conservatives? I doubt
it."
by: Liz Halloran | Visit article original @ NPR News
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