The Republican National Committee will join Alabama resident Shaun McCutcheon in a challenge to campaign finance laws that limit the amount of money individuals can contribute within an election cycle that will be heard by the Supreme Court in the next term, starting in October.
The plaintiffs aregue in favor of removing caps on contributions to federal candidates, political parties, and political action committees.
While the $2,600 cap on donations to an individual candidate is not being challenged, opponents worry that removing the federal limits on individuals donating $46,200 to political candidates and $70,800 to political committees per election cycle could allow a donor to have overwhelming influence on the outcome of an election.
“The practical effect of a decision striking down the aggregate limits would be to render those individual contribution limits effectively meaningless because office holders could solicit upwards of one million dollar contributions,” Adam Skaggs, senior counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law told msnbc.com. “Technically those contributions would be divided, but the practical effect is that party committees would easily be able to transfer funds back and support the candidate doing the soliciting.”









