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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: First On Nancy Pelosi’s Agenda: Attacking Free Expression I have zero interest in financially supporting any politician, much less ones I find morally unpalatable. Yet Democrats want to force me, and every other American taxpayer, to contribute, as a matter of public policy, to the campaigns of candidates we disagree with. Believe it or not, this might be an even more dangerous assault on free expression than unpleasant tweets directed at CNN anchors. One of Nancy Pelosis first projects as new speaker of the House will be passing a government overhaul of campaign-finance and ethics rules that will, among other things, expand voting rights. One of the new bills specifics are still cloudy reportedly allocates a pool of taxpayer money to match small-dollar donations 6-to-1, as a way of encouraging grass-roots campaigning, according to The Wall Street Journal. The package, fortunately, wont pass the Senate. But government-financed campaigns empowering the state to allocate money to preferred donors and dissuading non-preferred donors has been something of a hobbyhorse in progressive circles. Setting aside the many constitutional concerns, the recent abuses by the Internal Revenue Service when tasked with regulating political speech demonstrate just how easy it is for bureaucrats to manipulate rules meant to govern speech. These are rules that shouldnt exist, period. Some big cities have already begun handing out tax-funded democracy vouchers. In other words, politicians have passed legislation that subsidizes the speech of people who will, for the most part, support them. Its quite the racket. Pelosi wants to take this corruption national. Reducing the power of special interests in Washington is always a popular issue with voters. The problem, of course, is that every voter considers another group a special interest. While as a political notion campaign-finance reform remains popular with Americans, specific campaign-finance reform legislation is always about inhibiting someones speech. What many Americans dont seem to accept, particularly partisans, is that not voting or participating in our political process is also a matter of free expression. Theres nothing, after all, in the Constitution about the state encouraging grass-roots activism. There is no amendment that calls on us to treat the First Amendment rights of Michael Bloomberg any differently than we do the grandmother who foolishly sends her Social Security check to Bernie Sanders. The word fairness isnt mentioned a single time in the entire document. There is something about abridging freedom of speech. And money is speech. This fact has been codified by the Supreme Court. Writing is speech. Speaking is speech. Speaking anonymously is speech. Joining a group of other Americans to petition the government is also speech. Yet Democrats will also include a provision in their package that would make tax-exempt 501(c)(4) charitable groups disclose donors whove given $10,000 or more during an election cycle. As Ive written elsewhere, this obsession with eliminating anonymity is also a transparent attempt to chill speech and undermine minority opinions. (As an aside, the medias incessant use of the euphemism good-government groups in describing special interest groups that campaign to limit dark money is itself a political bias. Theres no evidence that good government is contingent on handing over donor information to activists or that asking the IRS permission to petition the state engenders better governance. These groups do for good government what the Patriot Act did for patriotism and the Affordable Care Act did for affordability.) Now, you might recall that one of the central criticisms Democrats leveled at the Citizens United free speech decision was that corporate funding would force employees and shareholders to support issues and candidates against their will. This was facile claim since, in the private sector, workers and shareholders are free to associate with companies that comport to their politics. At the same time, however, Democrats are perfectly comfortable impelling taxpayers to contribute to campaigns. Liberals simultaneously bitterly complain about the Supreme Courts Janus decision, which finally stopped public-sector unions from coercing workers to pay agency fees to fund their political activities. This is because, for all their hysterics over Donald Trumps rhetoric, Democrats are fully engaged in attempting to control political speech. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Horse (#0)
This is no surprise these Dims want to reign in our freedom of speech. It is a European-style hate speech program. Maybe they should try to get the American Nazi Party not to display Swastikas. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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