Contribution limits are monetary restrictions on the amount an individual or group can donate to a political actor – usually a candidate, political party, or political action committee. The Supreme Court first allowed limits on contributions in Buckley v. Valeo. The Court’s ruling acknowledged that contribution limits were a restriction on First Amendment activity, but allowed them on the theory…
In 2004, Governor Jim Rowland of Connecticut resigned in the midst of scandal. He was accused of accepting lavish gifts and political contributions from state government ...
CCP study on the effect of contribution limits on Philadelphia's 2007 mayoral race.
In a recent Washington Post op-ed, Robert J. Samuelson considers whether public opinion is to blame for the problems in ...
All too frequently, regulation is a scale that balances the arbitrary against the vague. Decreasing one tips the scale towards the other. According to ...
The "electioneering communications" provisions of the McCain-Feingold law kick into place today. This means no union or corporate money may be used to finance ...
North Carolina Governor Mike Easley has been busy. On July 23, 2006, he signed into law H.B. 1845, which prohibits the personal use of ...
DO CAMPAIGN FINANCE REGULATIONS affect how citizens view their government? This question is both theoretically important and policy-relevant. A central argument for more restrictive campaign finance laws at ...
Many "reform" organizations are claiming that Congress is going to open a "loophole" in campaign finance law by allowing leadership PACs to make unlimited ...
Michael Malbin, President of the Campaign Finance Institute, responds in part to my comments on CFI's study of non-profits' election activity. And I respond ...
One week after The Hill reports that 527 legislation is in trouble on the Hill, IRS reports show that the ...