Campaign-finance restrictions: They limit the voice of the people
Dear Editor:
The recent hot topics of American politics -- John Kerry's service in the Vietnam War, whether he lied about it, the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth ads claiming that he lied, and George Bush's reaction to those ads -- seem to have come right out of an alternate dimension. There is, however, a very important issue at stake in the Swift Boat ads controversy, but it has more to do with domestic policy than with foreign wars.
Many Democrat partisans have called upon Bush to denounce the anti-Kerry ads. Republican partisans have cried "censorship!" at the attempt of Kerry supporters to have television stations pull the ads. Just a few months ago, many liberals cried "censorship!" when Bush supporters tried to pressure movie theaters to refuse to screen Michael Moore's anti-war film, Fahrenheit 9-11.
Of course, the attempts by liberals and conservatives to limit the impact of Fahrenheit 9-11 and the Swift Boat ads are not censorship. True censorship involves force, specifically government force, used to prohibit people from speaking, writing, or publishing, under penalties of law. When people boycott or pressure companies to refrain from publishing or broadcasting, by threatening to withhold patronage or to complain loudly in public, such pressure, even though directed to lessen the impact of another's message, is certainly not censorship -- in fact, it is itself an exercise of free speech.
Kerry's supporters have continued calling upon Bush to denounce the ads. Bush's supporters point out that President Bush spoke out against all "soft money" ads produced by independent political groups, called "527s."
Lost throughout all of this is that Bush has essentially called for censorship of an entire class of political advertising. Whereas attempts by frustrated citizens to boycott, discredit, and otherwise limit the impact of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth or Michael Moore cannot be properly called censorship, the president of the United States, in lamenting that a law he signed has not eliminated all 527 ads from television, is advocating censorship, and suggesting the government should more vigorously restrict what private groups are allowed to say on television.
This is an outrage. Several years ago, Bush spoke out against the kind of campaign-finance laws, championed by John McCain, that would limit the free speech of independent groups. He then signed McCain-Feingold, admitting it had unconstitutional provisions, saying that he hoped the Supreme Court would trim those out (a dereliction of constitutional duty if ever there was one). Now he is saying the laws apparently don't go far enough since some of these ads are still being aired.
The Democrats and Republicans do not hesitate to restrict what others can spend on and say in political advertising, because the politicians in power could vote themselves campaign money from the Treasury, even if all independent funding of political advertising were outlawed. With all of these advantages that incumbent politicians and the two major parties wield over concerned citizens outside the political process, campaign-finance reform is no more and no less than censorship of ideas and messages from those without influence in the system. The corruption in politics is caused by much more than campaign donations, and the same politicians who are easily corrupted by outside money cannot be expected to pass any laws that would disrupt the racket they have going. Put simply, campaign-finance restrictions do not threaten the power of the ruling class; they limit the voice of the people.
President Bush and many Republicans used to have the correct position on campaign-finance reform: Political ads are a form of speech protected by the First Amendment, and laws that regulate and restrict them are an affront to freedom of speech. Now that they hold the reins of power in Washington, D.C., they have, not surprisingly, decided to embrace this odious type of censorship. This is bad for an honest political process, bad for liberty, and bad for America.
Anthony Gregory,
policy adviser for The Future of Freedom Foundation,
Fairfax, Va.
www.fff.org