There’s been no shortage of ink spilled over the practical impact of last week’s bombshell Supreme Court campaign-finance decision, McCutcheon v. FEC. Depending who you talk to, it portends either the triumph of free speech or the road to oligarchy.
But much less has been written about a notable feature of the decision itself: Parts of Chief Justice John Roberts’ opinion appear to contradict each other.
And that is no anomaly. In several of his most politically-charged decisions — on health care, voting rights, campaign finance — Roberts has embraced what are arguably contradictions, abandoned precedent without explanation, or both.
The question is: why? Roberts is a brilliant man, so these are no mistakes in legal reasoning. Instead, they make it easier for his critics to advance a narrative about the chief justice that first began to circulate after his Obamacare decision: that he’s willing to make unorthodox legal moves, or refrain from following his own reasoning to its endpoint, to shift the law in the direction he’d prefer.
Roberts’ campaign-finance opinion provides the latest fuel for that fire.
In the Supreme Court’s first big campaign-finance case a generation ago, Buckley v. Valeo, the court concluded that Congress may cap how much money an individual can give a candidate because that doesn’t infringe speech rights. Such a limitation, it wrote, “involves little direct restraint on his political communication” because it still “permits the symbolic expression of support evidenced by a contribution.”
That logic underpins the contribution limits that have been part of federal law ever since. And in last week’s opinion in McCutcheon, Roberts professed to reaffirm it: He quoted the sentence above from Buckley and emphasized again and again that the court was not striking down individual contribution caps.
And yet, in the same breath, Roberts rejected the exact same proposition. The Obama administration had defended the aggregate caps in federal campaign-finance law — caps on how much an individual can give to all candidates combined — by arguing that even with the caps “an individual can engage in the ‘symbolic act of contributing’ to as many entities as he wishes.”
That is almost a direct quote from the Buckley decision, and Roberts shot it down. “It is no answer to say that the individual can simply contribute less money to more people,” he wrote, because limiting how much a person can donate to a candidate unconstitutionally “impose[s] a special burden on broader participation in the democratic process.”
As Justice Clarence Thomas pointed out in a concurring opinion, Roberts’ opinion was at war with itself. Thomas expressed palpable frustration that Roberts hadn’t followed his own logic and overruled Buckley altogether. “What the [Roberts opinion] does not recognize,” he wrote, is that its logic “also defeats the reasoning from Buckley on which [Roberts] purports to rely.”
If that was déjà vu for court watchers, it’s because several of Roberts’ past opinions have drawn fire on similar grounds.









