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In reply to the discussion: Pic Of The Moment: How Much Impact Do Ordinary Citizens Have On America's Policy-Making Process? [View all]adirondacker
(2,921 posts)"Experts say latest challenge could further erode contribution limits
by
Deirdre Fulton, staff writer
Republican lawmakers hoping to rake in more campaign cash from Wall Street are challenging a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rule that limits the amount of money financiers can give to governors and state officials.
Last week, the state Republican committees of New York and Tennessee filed a lawsuit aimed at repealing a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rule that limits the campaign contributions that can be made by investment advisers on Wall Street to political candidates. The rule is designed to prevent Wall Street from using campaign donations as a form of bribery against state officials who rely on these financial institutions to manage their investments.
Observers predict this could be the Supreme Court's next big campaign finance case. A lawyer for the plaintiffs said this year's McCutcheon decision which struck down the aggregate limit on individual contributions to federal candidates, national political parties, and political action committees laid the legal groundwork for the SEC challenge. Indeed, the brief cites both McCutcheon and Citizens United in its argument, calling to mind warnings that dominoes are falling as the Supreme Court moves toward eliminating all limits on campaign spending.
That suit is ripe and its next in the target, Shaun McCutcheon, the plaintiff in the McCutcheon case, told Politico on Tuesday. There is a natural sequence of these cases. They have to go through the courts in the right order and at the right rate, and I believe thats happening."
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"I can probably count on one hand the number of Americans outside downtown Manhattan who think Wall Street needs more influence in politics."
Adam Smith, Public Campaign
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2014/08/14/gop-seeks-further-weaken-campaign-finance-laws