{"title":"Chill Out: A Qualified Defense of Campaign Finance Disclosure Laws in the Internet Age","authors":"Richard L. Hasen","doi":"10.2139/SSRN.1948313","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Everywhere you look, campaign finance disclosure laws are under attack. Disclosure has been opposed by the National Organization for Marriage, Senate and House Republicans (including Senator McConnell, who used to call for no limits and full disclosure), Republican members of the Federal Election Commission, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. But attacks on disclosure have come not only from the right. Members of the academy, including Bill McGeveran, Richard Briffault, Lloyd Mayer, and Bruce Cain. have criticized disclosure laws. In this short Essay, I offer a qualified defense of government-mandated disclosure, one which recognizes the concerns of these prominent academics but also sees much of the anti-disclosure rhetoric of the Chamber and others as overblown and unsupported - offered disingenuously with the intention to create a fully deregulated campaign finance system in which large amounts of secret money flow in an attempt to curry favor with politicians but avoid public scrutiny. To the contrary, disclosure laws remain one of the few remaining constitutional levers to further the public interest through campaign finance law.Even in the Internet age, in which the costs of obtaining campaign finance data about small-scale contributions by individual donors often have fallen to near zero, there is virtually no record of harassment of donors outside the context of the most hot button social issue of gay marriage - and even there, much of the evidence is weak. In the face of evidence of a real threat of serious harassment, courts should freely grant exemptions from campaign finance laws. Even absent proof of harassment, Congress and state legislatures should modify their disclosure laws to protect the informational privacy of those individuals who use modest means to express symbolic support for candidates or ballot measures. But major players in the electoral process generally should not be able to shield their identities under a pretextual appeal to the prevention of “harassment” because of the important government interests in preventing corruption and providing valuable information to voters which are furthered by mandated disclosure. It is no surprise that the Internet has been primarily responsible for the loss of informational privacy in the campaign finance disclosure context. Perhaps more surprisingly, the Internet is at least indirectly responsible for strengthening the two primary government interests supporting mandatory disclosure. The rise of the Internet was a prime force in the unraveling of the older campaign finance regime, and the subsequent emergence of new campaign finance organizations such as “Super PACs” which raise the danger of the corruption of elected officials dramatically. Disclosure laws may not be the best tool to police the potential for corruption from these new or supercharged campaign finance vehicles. Nonetheless, disclosure laws are much better than nothing in ferreting out when an elected official might act to benefit her supporters rather than act in the public interest.As for the information interest, campaign finance data, especially when included on the face of campaign advertising, provides an important heuristic cue helping busy voters decide how to vote. Such data assist voters who face Internet-driven information overload and a variety of potentially misleading campaign ads seeking to mask the identity of those behind campaigns and campaign advertising.","PeriodicalId":83111,"journal":{"name":"The Journal of law & politics","volume":"18 1","pages":"557"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2011-10-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"12","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Journal of law & politics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/SSRN.1948313","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 12
Abstract
Everywhere you look, campaign finance disclosure laws are under attack. Disclosure has been opposed by the National Organization for Marriage, Senate and House Republicans (including Senator McConnell, who used to call for no limits and full disclosure), Republican members of the Federal Election Commission, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. But attacks on disclosure have come not only from the right. Members of the academy, including Bill McGeveran, Richard Briffault, Lloyd Mayer, and Bruce Cain. have criticized disclosure laws. In this short Essay, I offer a qualified defense of government-mandated disclosure, one which recognizes the concerns of these prominent academics but also sees much of the anti-disclosure rhetoric of the Chamber and others as overblown and unsupported - offered disingenuously with the intention to create a fully deregulated campaign finance system in which large amounts of secret money flow in an attempt to curry favor with politicians but avoid public scrutiny. To the contrary, disclosure laws remain one of the few remaining constitutional levers to further the public interest through campaign finance law.Even in the Internet age, in which the costs of obtaining campaign finance data about small-scale contributions by individual donors often have fallen to near zero, there is virtually no record of harassment of donors outside the context of the most hot button social issue of gay marriage - and even there, much of the evidence is weak. In the face of evidence of a real threat of serious harassment, courts should freely grant exemptions from campaign finance laws. Even absent proof of harassment, Congress and state legislatures should modify their disclosure laws to protect the informational privacy of those individuals who use modest means to express symbolic support for candidates or ballot measures. But major players in the electoral process generally should not be able to shield their identities under a pretextual appeal to the prevention of “harassment” because of the important government interests in preventing corruption and providing valuable information to voters which are furthered by mandated disclosure. It is no surprise that the Internet has been primarily responsible for the loss of informational privacy in the campaign finance disclosure context. Perhaps more surprisingly, the Internet is at least indirectly responsible for strengthening the two primary government interests supporting mandatory disclosure. The rise of the Internet was a prime force in the unraveling of the older campaign finance regime, and the subsequent emergence of new campaign finance organizations such as “Super PACs” which raise the danger of the corruption of elected officials dramatically. Disclosure laws may not be the best tool to police the potential for corruption from these new or supercharged campaign finance vehicles. Nonetheless, disclosure laws are much better than nothing in ferreting out when an elected official might act to benefit her supporters rather than act in the public interest.As for the information interest, campaign finance data, especially when included on the face of campaign advertising, provides an important heuristic cue helping busy voters decide how to vote. Such data assist voters who face Internet-driven information overload and a variety of potentially misleading campaign ads seeking to mask the identity of those behind campaigns and campaign advertising.
放眼望去,到处都是竞选资金披露法受到攻击的地方。全国婚姻组织(National Organization for Marriage)、参众两院共和党人(包括参议员麦康奈尔,他曾呼吁不限制和全面披露)、联邦选举委员会(Federal Election Commission)的共和党成员和美国商会(U.S. Chamber of Commerce)都反对公开。但对信息披露的攻击并不仅仅来自右翼。学院成员包括比尔·麦克吉弗伦、理查德·布里法特、劳埃德·梅尔和布鲁斯·凯恩。批评信息披露法。在这篇短文中,我为政府强制披露提供了一个有资格的辩护,我承认这些著名学者的担忧,但也看到商会和其他人的许多反披露言论被夸大了,没有得到支持——他们不诚实地提出意图建立一个完全放松管制的竞选资金体系,在这个体系中,大量的秘密资金流动,试图迎合政客,但避免公众监督。相反,信息披露法仍然是为数不多的通过竞选财务法促进公共利益的宪法杠杆之一。即使在互联网时代,获取个人小额捐款的竞选财务数据的成本往往降至接近于零,但在同性恋婚姻这一最热门的社会问题背景下,几乎没有任何骚扰捐赠者的记录——即使在那里,许多证据也很薄弱。面对严重骚扰的真实威胁的证据,法院应该自由地给予豁免,不受竞选财务法的约束。即使没有骚扰的证据,国会和州立法机构也应该修改他们的信息披露法,以保护那些使用适度手段表达对候选人或投票措施象征性支持的个人的信息隐私。但是,选举过程中的主要参与者一般不应该以防止“骚扰”为借口来掩盖自己的身份,因为政府在防止腐败和向选民提供有价值的信息方面有着重要的利益,而强制性的信息公开进一步促进了这些利益。毫无疑问,在竞选资金披露的背景下,互联网对信息隐私的丧失负有主要责任。也许更令人惊讶的是,互联网至少间接地加强了政府支持强制披露的两大主要利益。互联网的兴起是瓦解旧的竞选资金制度的主要力量,随后出现了新的竞选资金组织,如“超级政治行动委员会”,这极大地提高了当选官员腐败的危险。信息披露法可能不是最好的工具,以监督这些新的或增压的竞选资金工具可能产生的腐败。尽管如此,在发现当选官员可能为其支持者谋私利而非为公众利益行事时,信息披露法总比什么都没有好。在信息兴趣方面,竞选财务数据,特别是在竞选广告中,提供了一个重要的启发式线索,帮助忙碌的选民决定如何投票。这些数据有助于选民面对互联网驱动的信息过载和各种可能具有误导性的竞选广告,这些广告试图掩盖竞选活动和竞选广告背后的身份。