Transcript Citizens

Citizens United
Bus 303 – Group R:
Luke Genereux, Elvin Li, Selma Duric, Jiajun
Liang, Thera Chow, Jennifer Gutzmann
Today’s Presentation
Laws
Involved
Citizens
United
Ethical
Issues
Alternatives
Electioneering Communication S441B
• Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA)
• Corporations and unions cannot spend their money
on election-related communications which promote
or put down a candidate.
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This includes broadcast, cable, or satellite communications
It refers to a specific candidate running for federal office
It is within 30 days of election time
It is publicly distributed
1st Amendment
• Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or
abridging the freedom of speech, or of
the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of
grievances.
Overview
• Citizens United released a
documentary critical of Hillary Clinton
– Available as video-on-demand
• They wouldn’t come across it channel surfing
– Non-profit
– It was to be shown within 30 days of
elections
• Citizens United argued that this ban
should not apply to their documentary,
as it would be unconstitutional.
Citizens United
• Citizens United first argued on narrower grounds
that S441B might not even apply
– The documentary was not an “electioneering
communication”
– Therefore, applying the rules prohibiting this speech
would be unconstitutional
– The documentary does not explicitly solicit votes
against Hillary Clinton
– S441B should not apply to these video-on-demand movies,
and should have an exception for non-profit corporate
speech funded by individuals
Citizens United
– Citizens United is largely (but not completely) funded
by individual donations. Therefore, they’re not using
private corporate expenditures.
• Citizens United then argued on broader grounds
– Government (FEC) is violating the 1st amendment rights
of corporations to free speech
• To resolve the case, they were looking to the
ruling about suppression of speech
– the holding in Austin v. Michigan Chamber of
Commerce
Verdict
• S441B is overruled, so corporate individual
expenditures can’t be limited
• (a) the constitution said that government
would not ban speech, but 441B is a ban
on speech.
• (b) the courts recognize that the first
amendment applies to corporations
So corporations are not vastly different
from individuals under the law and
morality?
Implications
• You can’t fine or jail an individual (or association of
individuals) for engaging in political speech, but 441B
would let the government fine or jail individuals in
association with corporations.
• The government’s reasoning is flawed.
• All the reasons and problems point to abandoning 441B. It
is no longer up-to-date, and there are many ways around it.
Stakeholders
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Citizens United
General Public
Government
FEC
Hillary Clinton
Ethical Issues
• How does this affect the right to free speech?
• Should it apply consistently to corporations
the same as individuals, or should different
types of corporations and situations should
have different rules?
• What are the boundaries on speech prior to
an election?
Ethical Issues
• Utilitarain Approach: a particular action is
right or wrong based upon the consequences
of the action
• Deontological Approach: actions are morally
right or wrong independent of consequences
(rule-based)
Ethical Issues
• Moral Pluralism and the Law:
A diversity of moral principles of what is
“right” or “wrong”
Should we equate the legal
with the ethical?
Our Evaluation of Alternatives
1) Get rid of 441B and support the Supreme
Court Decision
2) Keep 441B and limit the rights of
corporations
3) Revise 441B to make it more clear, up-todate, and all-encompassing
Choice of Alternative
Uphold S441B – Limit Expenditure
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Questions? Comments?