| Roundtable:
Impacts of Campaign Finance Reform on the 2004 Election
Much has been written in political communication journals
about the role of money in politics, the impact of so-called
"soft money" on the integrity of the campaign process,
and the growing number of "issue ads." In December,
the Supreme Court upheld key provisions of the Bi-Partisan
Campaign Reform Act of 2002 in the McConnell v. Federal
Election Commission decision, just as the 2004 presidential
primary season was beginning to heat up. We thought we'd take
this opportunity to ask some scholars interested in campaign
advertising and campaign finance to speculate about the impact
of the BCRA reforms on electoral politics.
Each of our contributors offered a distinct perspective on
the issue. Clifford Jones and Lynda Lee Kaid offer an overview
of the complex new regulations. Erika Falk focuses on the
impact the regulations will have on "sham" and "pure"
issue ads. Stephen Ansolabehere and Shanto Iyengar explain
how the new regulations are likely to affect the competitive
structure of elections.
Here's what they had to say:
Clifford A. Jones, Levin College of Law,
University of Florida
Lynda Lee Kaid, Professor & Senior Associate Dean, College
of Journalism & Communications, University of Florida
"A primary purpose of the BCRA was to eliminate the use
of so-called "soft money" ....Congress sought to
force political parties to choose between making potentially
unlimited advertising expenditures independently of its candidates
or making coordinated expenditures which could be treated
as contributions and limited in amount. However, the Court
in McConnell (2003) struck down these provisions...[T]he
BCRA's more direct bans on soft money have so far survived
constitutional scrutiny....There is currently a lively debate
in the legal community on whether other types of groups, such
as '527' organizations, may collect and spend soft money which
is not coordinated with candidates or parties." [Full
article]
Erika Falk, Washington Research Director,
Annenberg Public Policy Center, Washington, DC
"[F]or much of the last decade [there were] two
types of issue ads: those that advocate for or against the
election or defeat of a candidate (albeit implicitly), usually
referred to as sham or candidate-centered issue
ads, and those that seek to mobilize constituents, policy
makers, or regulators in support of or in opposition to legislation
or regulatory policy, called legislation-centered
or pure issue ads. The passage of the BCRA...signaled
the beginning of a new legal understanding of “campaign
communication,” and if one used the same logic of the
past, an issue ad. In other words, the new law, by defining
de jure what must be paid for with hard money, de
facto also distinguishes issue from candidate ads."
[Full article]
Stephen Ansolabehere, Elting R. Morison
Professor of Political Science, MIT
Shanto Iyengar, Henry and Norman Chandler Professor in Communication,
Stanford University
"The BiPartisan Campaign Reform Act – BCRA....eliminated
'soft money' [and] regulated 'issue ads'– advertisements
aired by corporations, union and other organizations that
may feature a federal candidate but do not expressly advocate
election of that candidate....Neither one of these reforms,
we feel, will be of much consequence for the overall levels
of political spending and advertising or the general tenor
of political campaigns in the United States. However, they
will restrict the scope of campaigns to the candidates contesting
an election." [Full
article]
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