Former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens told senators Wednesday that the laws governing money in politics need a fundamental overhaul to ensure that the voices of voters aren’t drowned out by a flood of dollars from wealthy donors.
Appearing before the Senate Rules Committee, Stevens, a liberal who retired from the high court in 2010, took aim at several fundamental tenets of the courts’ approach to campaign finance laws: that stopping corruption is the only justification for campaign finance laws; that Congress has the right only to limit campaign donations, not campaign spending; and that money counts as speech.
Wednesday’s hearing, convened by Sen. Angus King, an Independent from Maine who sides with Democrats, was designed to look into the impact of the Supreme Court’s recent McCutcheon ruling, which struck down limits on total aggregate campaign contributions.
Chief Justice John Roberts’ ruling in the McCutcheon case rested in part on the premise, established in past cases including Citizens United in 2010, that campaign finance rules can only be justified if they’re narrowly tailored to stop outright corruption.
Stevens, 94 but still vigorous and sharp, called that stance “fundamentally wrong.”
“Creating a level playing field justifies regulating campaign speech,” Stevens argued, comparing campaign finance laws to the rules governing an athletic contest.
The goal, Stevens said, is to give candidates “an equal opportunity to persuade citizens to vote for them.”
But in what he called his most important point, Stevens challenged a far-reaching holding in a 1976 case, Buckley v. Valeo, which established that campaign finance laws can only regulate donations to campaigns, not spending by campaigns.
Stevens called this the “central error” in the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on campaign finance issues. “Unlimited campaign expenditures impair the process of democratic self-government,” he said, “and create a risk that successful candidates will pay more attention to the interests of non-voters who provided them with money than to the interests of voters who elected them.”









