FROM THE ARCHIVE
JUNE 26, 2001 By a vote of 5 to 4, the Supreme Court on Monday upheld "hard money" limits on campaign spending. Rejecting arguments made by the Colorado Republican Party, the Court said hard money limits are necessary to prevent wealthy donors from exerting unfair influence over political candidates. The Court said the limits do not infringe on free-speech rights. Democrats hailed the ruling because Republicans typically raise more hard money. While soft money was not at issue, supporters of campaign finance reform also took the ruling as positive. The decision was split along liberal-conservative lines with Justice Sandra Day O'Connor part of the liberal group. Get the Decision FEC v. Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee:
Syllabus | Opinion | Dissent Get the Story:
Court Backs Limits on Campaign Spending (The Washington Post 6/26)
Supreme Court's Ruling A Boost for Democrats (The Washington Post 6/26)
Justices Uphold Curbs on Coordinated Political Spending (The New York Times 6/26)
You may have to register to read New York Times stories. If you do not wish to register, login with username indianz.com and password indianz.com. Related Stories:
Tribes urged to spend politically (4/10)
Politicians rush to raise funds (4/3)
Senate passes campaign reform bill (4/3)
Campaign reform faces vote today (4/2)
Campaign finance near final vote (3/30)
Hard money donations boosted (3/29)
Senate defeats campaign spending changes (3/28)
Independent political ads would be limited (3/27)
Campaign finance bill amended again (3/22)
'Anti-Cantwell' amendment approved (3/21)
Campaign finance debate begins (3/20)
Senate gears up for historic debate (3/19)
Hard money campaign spending upheld
Facebook TwitterJUNE 26, 2001 By a vote of 5 to 4, the Supreme Court on Monday upheld "hard money" limits on campaign spending. Rejecting arguments made by the Colorado Republican Party, the Court said hard money limits are necessary to prevent wealthy donors from exerting unfair influence over political candidates. The Court said the limits do not infringe on free-speech rights. Democrats hailed the ruling because Republicans typically raise more hard money. While soft money was not at issue, supporters of campaign finance reform also took the ruling as positive. The decision was split along liberal-conservative lines with Justice Sandra Day O'Connor part of the liberal group. Get the Decision FEC v. Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee:
Syllabus | Opinion | Dissent Get the Story:
Court Backs Limits on Campaign Spending (The Washington Post 6/26)
Supreme Court's Ruling A Boost for Democrats (The Washington Post 6/26)
Justices Uphold Curbs on Coordinated Political Spending (The New York Times 6/26)
You may have to register to read New York Times stories. If you do not wish to register, login with username indianz.com and password indianz.com. Related Stories:
Tribes urged to spend politically (4/10)
Politicians rush to raise funds (4/3)
Senate passes campaign reform bill (4/3)
Campaign reform faces vote today (4/2)
Campaign finance near final vote (3/30)
Hard money donations boosted (3/29)
Senate defeats campaign spending changes (3/28)
Independent political ads would be limited (3/27)
Campaign finance bill amended again (3/22)
'Anti-Cantwell' amendment approved (3/21)
Campaign finance debate begins (3/20)
Senate gears up for historic debate (3/19)
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