Citizens United Against Citizens United
Tuesday 30 March 2010
by: David Swanson, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Sam Ruaat, Leonrw)
Eighty-five percent of Democrats and 76 percent of Republicans tell pollsters when asked that they oppose the Supreme Court's decision in "Citizens United," which lifted limits on corporate political spending. I'm willing to bet that at least those same percentages would tell you the decision violates the US Constitution. And I would bet that if you explained to people that the Citizens United decision was based on the ideas that spending money on elections is speech and that corporations claim the First Amendment right to free speech that was meant for people, the numbers would increase.
Two observations. First, people, Congress, the White House, state governments, corporations, media outlets and the Federal Election Commission are, by and large, treating an unpopular and unconstitutional ruling as the law of the land, even though the ruling itself and others like it make amending the Constitution to fall in line with either the popular will or the obvious meaning of the existing Constitution more difficult - yet still doable and desirable.
Second, if one political party in Washington, no matter which one, moves against the Citizens United ruling, and the other does not, then the followers of those parties across the country will obey the dictates of their rulers exactly as if the polling cited above had never happened. After all, this is what we just witnessed with health care. Every Democrat backed a bill that, just by looking at the text of it, one would have guessed was Republican. And every Republican condemned the bill as communism right on que. Now, anything could happen. The states could lead the way, with voices from both parties, as is beginning. But the likely scenario is, of course, that Democrats in Washington will push minor halfway fixes, and Republicans in Washington will oppose them. So, keep the strength of the polling above in mind, because you will never see the media publish it again.
Meanwhile, the disaster of the Citizens United ruling is continuing to spread. And, for the most part, state governments are working to conform to the disaster. Many states are beginning to push back in minor ways. Montana is pushing back a little more strongly:
"Montana Attorney General Steve Bullock essentially dared opponents to sue the state, vowing to continue enforcing restrictions on corporate political spending that date back to scandals involving mining interests nearly a century ago. Testifying before Congress in February, Bullock said the state's corporate spending limit 'has served us well and never been challenged.'"
Until now.
"A Denver-based conservative group took up Bullock's challenge this month. The Western Tradition Partnership joined with a Montana paint company owner in filing a lawsuit in state court challenging Montana's limits on corporate expenditures as an unconstitutional ban on political speech."
Courts across the country are being called into action. Federal court rulings have decided that there are no limits on corporate spending, but limits still remain on spending by political parties. But those limits will vanish, too, as soon as the case reaches the Supreme Court, also known as these people.
And thanks to the fine work already performed by the Supremes, we may soon see state judges universally cut from the same corporate cloth. And, as an added improvement, the corporations on whom there are already no limits include the health insurance corporations, which will have hundreds of billions of new dollars coming in by mandated purchase of their products.
Still, even with the current imbalance restricting political parties and not corporations, it is the political parties that hold the most influence. The insurance corporations were not able to buy Democratic Congress members away from their party leaders. Nobody votes against war money or anything else, no matter how unpopular, unless their party leaders give them permission.
And yet, when the limits are lifted on parties, the uproar will not match that in response to Citizens United, because very few people will notice that corporate money buys off two parties much more easily than it could buy off 535 independent representatives.

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Comments
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Corporations are the new
Tue, 03/30/2010 - 14:40 — Curtis (not verified)Corporations are the new life form. It is like when single celled organisms formed multicellular organisms. That was a game changer. Thus people take the role of liver cells or such and serve the larger organism - the whole body, which we revere as the corporation and celebrate on Super Bowl Sunday.
If corporations are people,
Tue, 03/30/2010 - 22:52 — Anonymous (not verified)If corporations are people, then they should go to jail when they commit crimes. If the building (like Enron) is big enough, we could just put concertina wire around it and imprison them on site.
BTW, political parties in the US do not have "rulers." It's often hard to tell exactly who are the leaders. The cats just seem to herd themselves.
It's ironic to see that even
Tue, 03/30/2010 - 23:30 — Ken Hall (not verified)It's ironic to see that even conservative voters realize the Citizens United decision was a disaster for democracy. Informed people saw the ideology behind the SC nominees put up by Reagan/Bush/Bush and predicted the kinds of decisions this court handed down. Conservatives bemoaning the decision were the enablers that permitted it to happen, and buckle your seat belts because the pro-corporate five are relatively young and will have many years to wreak their anti-citizen decisions. One big diff between Repubs and Dems has been the stature of the jurists each party has nominated to the high court. Be careful what you wish for, SC nominees should not be political ideologues.
Ken Hall is right.
Thu, 04/01/2010 - 13:40 — Anonymous (not verified)Ken Hall is right. Republicans got rabid pro-corporate activist judges installed because they do whatever the corporations want them to do (and get rewarded handsomely for doing so). There are so many Democrats who are also corporate whores that they allowed this to happen. Anyone who voted for any of these members of Congress voted to make themselves slaves to the corporations, who already control most of the government but will soon control everything.
Few people realize how tragic this is. It is the last nail in the coffin of democracy, and it will mean the downfall of our economy, and eventually of civilization itself. That is because corporations will not let us fight global warming until it is too late.
If we don't reverse this soon, our future is doomed. It's as simple as that. Unfortunately, it doesn't matter how many people are against letting corporations control our government. They already control it to such an extent that only extreme actions on the part of the people has any chance of reversing it. I don't think that is likely to happen.