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opinion | jim Leach

Democracy for sale

Former US representative, a Republican, calls Citizens United a grave error

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Adapted from a speech delivered at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in Cambridge on Oct. 7.

I would like to address what I consider to be the Supreme Court’s second-gravest historical error — the 2010 Citizens United ruling — and how this singular court decision moves American politics in an oligarchic direction.

Having spoken with people in hundreds of venues over the past several years, I have become convinced that America has never been more blessed with extraordinary leadership in almost every field of human endeavor, from business to medicine, from arts to academia. But there is no doubt that it is becoming harder for thoughtful, independent-minded leadership to emerge in the political system.

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As money conflicts have multiplied and ideological cleavages intensified, the will and capacity of representatives of the people to mediate social differences is breaking down. Compromise may have once been the art of politics, but intransigence is the new art of political survival. If a legislator in today’s environment chooses to seek common ground, he or she becomes vulnerable to a primary challenge where participation is low and money games are unforgiving.

When I first ran for public office, the joke was that no smart candidate should ever argue with those who buy ink by the barrel, the press. Today, a not-so-funny corollary is that a smart candidate should never argue with those who buy ads by the bushel. Under the contemporary win-at-all-cost political ethic, the first thing the new breed of political consultants tells their clients is to throw civility out the window. What civility requires — the willingness to consider respectfully the views of others with an understanding that we are all connected and rely on each other — is anathema to those who now manipulate so much of the political process.

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Yet seldom is there only one proper path determinable by one individual or one political party. That is why humility is a valued character trait and why civility is an essential component of civil society. To be clear, civility is not principally about manners. Indeed, on Capitol Hill polite words are sometimes more problematic than raucous ones.

Example: A typical conversation between a lobbyist and legislator walking to and from a vote on the House floor goes like this: “Congressman, as you know, we maxed out for you in the last election and we and our allies sure hope to be able to more than match that support this fall. But please understand that tomorrow a bill of importance to us is coming up on the floor or in your committee and we would sure appreciate your support. And, by the way, how are your wife and kids?” Politely stated, but there is no reference to the common good. Instead, coercively implied is an ongoing, quasi-contractual relationship between an interest group and a public official.

These implicit uncivil contracts can be coercive even if never discussed, because corporate power, newly magnified by the Citizens United decision, can so easily reward a candidate or inflict political retribution. On the assumption, for instance, that politicians have an instinct for political survival, a key component of which is a desire to raise campaign revenues and suppress opponent treasuries, why in a corporatist political system would a politician want to speak up against the drug companies or investment banks if corporate monies can quickly be shoveled into campaigns?

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The Supreme Court has generally been at the forefront of advancing justice and protecting the rule of law. But from time to time our politics and the court have been out of step with our deepest ideals. For almost nine decades after our founders signed the Declaration of Independence affirming that all men are created equal, a number of states sanctioned slavery, and until the Civil War the Supreme Court formally upheld this egregious assault on human dignity.

Brazenly, in Citizens United, the court employed parallel logic to the syllogism embedded in the most repugnant ruling it ever made, the 1857 Dred Scott decision. To justify slavery, the court in Dred Scott defined a class of human beings as private property. To magnify corporate power a century and a half later, it defined a class of private property (corporations) as people. Ironies abound. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the mid-19th century court could see no oppression in an institution that allowed individuals to be bought and sold. In the Citizens United ruling, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the court implied that corporations were somehow oppressed and therefore should be freed to buy political influence and sell opposing candidates down a river of negativity.

How are corporations oppressed? Do corporate leaders not have free speech and the right to give campaign contributions like all other citizens? Have they and the political action committees that they control not already been over-empowered to infuse millions into the political process? Is it an accident that, as the influence of moneyed interests has increased in American politics, the gap between the rich and poor has widened?

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To advance the sophistic argument that more money in campaigns equates to more democracy, the court had to employ a linguistic gyration. It presumed that money is speech and that a corporation is an individual. But where in any dictionary or in any founding documents are these equivalencies made? Money is a medium of exchange, a measure of value, or a means of payment. In politics it can be considered a campaign contribution. It is not “speech” in terms of what any strict constructionist could conceivably believe the First Amendment addresses.

A corporation is an artificial creation of the state which in turn is a creation of the people. To vest with constitutionally protected political rights an inanimate entity makes mockery of our individual-rights heritage. A corporation cannot vote or run for office. The inspiring words of our founders were about free men born with inalienable rights. It is they who speak. It is they who can assemble. It is they who are considered equal amongst each other.

To hold that a corporation is a person with citizenship rights simply doesn’t square with the Declaration of Independence. All men may be created equal in relation to each other, but not necessarily in relation to corporations or, under Citizens United, in relation to how corporations may empower some individuals relative to others. There is great inequality between corporations, no equality of individual and corporate “personhood,” and no equality of individuals when one with many corporate ties may have more capacity to influence decision-making than one with none or just a few.

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Even if we presume corporate money can be construed as “speech,” such speech for many will be coerced rather than free. After all, to tap for political purposes the assets of shareholders or union members, more than a few of whom can be expected to hold different political judgments than management or union stewards, is a “taking” of their assets, a perversion of their “speech,” a diminution of their political rights.

The only way a corporation can in a political sense be analogized to an individual relates to its hierarchical structure. In the corporate world, one decision-maker or, at most, a collective few are accountable for how corporate resources are allocated. Authorizing corporate leaders to distribute shareholder assets — other people’s money — in political campaigns thus empowers small numbers of insiders. There is no escaping the reality that the precept of corporate personhood pushes American politics in an oligarchic direction. Nor is there escaping the only justification for spending corporate assets in campaigns. Money spent on candidates must be considered a good investment for shareholders, a quid pro quo that can be banked. Could it be that the court’s definition of protected “speech” might more accurately be described as influence buying?

Prior to Citizens United, the Supreme Court recognized a distinction between issue advocacy with words and issue advocacy with words backed by money. Hence it upheld congressionally established reporting requirements and limits on campaign giving for individuals making campaign contributions. However, in Citizens United it grants corporate persons “supra-man” status: limited transparency requirements and unlimited capacity to spew money into the political system. The court’s law-making judgment cannot be challenged by Congress because an activist 5-to-4 majority has presumptuously held that the moneyed speech powers it has granted corporations are protected by the First Amendment. And, lacking an evidentiary basis and concern for human nature, the majority opinion concluded that corporate political speech does “not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.’’ Really?

The effect: Under a free speech guise, the Supreme Court has authorized masked men to use unlimited resources to rob America of its democratic idealism.

At our country’s founding, property-less people as well as women and slaves were denied the right to vote and there was an original constitutional acceptance that slaves could be considered three-fifths of a person for legislative and Electoral College apportionment. But none of our founders ever advanced the notion that one individual could be several persons and have magnified influence based on control of corporate assets.

The arc of our history that has bent toward justice has suddenly with the Citizens United decision twisted back to that part of our constitutional heritage that was self-evidently unjust. Property considerations have again become accentuated in a key aspect of citizenship, the injustice of which weakens the links between government and the people.

Corporatist politics has several other ramifications of a very different dimension than our founders considered. When our constitutional system was established, the founders assumed that individuals elected to Congress would come from many different backgrounds and that they would be prepared to represent vigorously their state, its interests, and its people. A consequence of court-enhanced corporatist power is the nationalization of local elections. Candidates across the country become indebted to the same corporate groups. Farm-state candidates, for example, increasingly find that their campaign coffers are filled by oil companies on one side and out-of-state unions on the other, causing indebtedness to groups that often do not reflect the same views as the majority of their constituents.

Secondary effects apply to political parties. Because the new financial empowerment under Citizens United is provided to unions as well as corporations, the tendency will be for the Democratic Party to become more like the old, union-dominated Labor Party in Great Britain and the Republican Party less like the pro-environment, anti-trust busting party of Teddy Roosevelt. The irony would remain, however, that corporate power often operates with one troubling bipartisan dimension. Corporations have a tendency to align with those in either party who hold positions that may affect issues of direct concern to their interests. Corporations are thus generally blind to the party affiliation of those they support in legislative committees that have jurisdiction over their interests. Surprising to some, Citizens United thus increases the likelihood that financial interests will increase their donations to both sides of banking oriented committees; commodity groups to both sides of the agriculture committees, etc. Ideology has its place, but power in the commercial sphere supports power in the political domain.

As a candidate who campaigned 17 times for Congress eschewing PAC and out-of-state contributions, I can attest that a tertiary effect of corporate giving is that it diminishes citizen respect for the political system, the desire to vote and even the willingness to engage in the political process by giving small contributions. Over the years, constituents would come up to me and say that they had given a check for $20 or $30 to my campaign that they wouldn’t have sent if I had not refused PAC funds. The public understands that it is of marginal significance to make a modest contribution to a candidate if that candidate receives hundreds of thousands of dollars, sometimes millions, from corporate and union-controlled funds.

It is no accident that corporate muggings occur in American politics. Nor is it an accident that many Americans, from Tea Party advocates to middle-class homeowners to the Occupy Wall Street movement, believe that they are not being listened to, that vested interests hold an improper, behind-the-scenes sway in the political life of our country.

In the wake of the Citizens United ruling, former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor has been speaking out for the need for states which elect their Supreme Court justices to change to a system where governors nominate and legislatures confirm high court nominees. Justice O’Connor sees a conflict of interest problem potentially exploding in states like Texas where huge amounts of corporate money can quickly be marshaled in support or opposition to judicial candidates.

I share Justice O’Connor’s concerns but would add that the goal of advancing equal justice under the law applies just as much to the making and administering of laws as it does to their adjudication in a courtroom. The judiciary should be acutely concerned about lawmaking that empowers deep-pocketed special interests to the detriment of the common good. No judge should be placed in the position of having to uphold patently unfair laws designed to appease corporate power brokers to whom legislators may be indebted. A citizenry simply cannot be expected to have confidence in a judicial system in which the standard becomes equal application of unfair laws. Equal justice requires that the law itself be fair.

Many are familiar with the saying that the public should not look too closely at laws or sausages being made. Law- and sausage-making are different, but the commonality is public concern that the seen and unseen ingredients of each be integrated in as “clean” a manner as possible.

In America, process is our most important product. Our founders recognized human frailty and thus went to great lengths to attempt to erect a system that would be democratic rather than aristocratic or oligarchic. Individuals could be expected to make mistakes but the political system was to be above reproach, capable of evolving in ever-fairer, more equalitarian ways.

Many good people enter politics only to find that the system causes the low road to become the one most traveled. The low road is traveled because it is the shortest path to office and justified because other contenders generally stampede alongside, though increasingly far from the center stripe. If a candidate chooses a less-conflicted route where few travel, the likelihood is that candidate will come up short.

Speech is at issue from two perspectives. At one end, uncivil speech must be protected by the courts, but filtered by the public; at the other, moneyed “speech” must not be allowed to weaken the voices of the people. The Constitution begins “We the people. . .” not “We the corporations. . .”


Former US Representative Jim Leach of Iowa is chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities .