Blog Post

Letter to the Editor: “Court decisions could harm democracy”

The Worcester Telegram ran our joint letter to the editor with MASSPIRG on McCutcheon v. FEC today in response to this op-ed.

Contrary to the editorial “Free speech blues” (Telegram & Gazette, Oct 11), the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. FEC and its likely decision in McCutcheon v. FEC, diminish Americans’ right to free speech and undermine our constitutional system of government.

We can debate court decisions, election statistics, and campaign contribution data, but the fact is the vast majority of people in Massachusetts and the country cannot afford to contribute tens of thousands of dollars to multiple candidates each year, and they’re disgusted by a system that allows a very few to do that.

At issue in McCutcheon are aggregate contribution limits, which cap contributions to political parties and candidates at $123,200. If the Court strikes down these limits (previously upheld as constitutional on multiple occasions) candidates and party leaders could solicit contributions of $3.6 million from one individual.

The aggregate limits serve at least two important functions. First, they prevent corruption by severing the direct link between big donors and officeholders. A few ultra-rich individuals financing political campaigns influences the policies the winning candidate will and will not pursue as well as who will run in the first place.

Second, the limits defend the dwindling political influence of the more than 99 percent of Americans who cannot afford a $3.6 million political contribution, let alone a $123,200 one.

Make no mistake; McCutcheon’s challenge is about further corrupting and distorting representative democracy by amplifying the voices of a select few and diluting the rights of the vast majority.

PAM WILMOT, Executive Director, Common Cause Massachusetts

JANET DOMENITZ, Executive Director, MASSPIRG

Read the letter here.

Close

Close

Hello! It looks like you're joining us from {state}.

Want to see what's happening in your state?

Go to Common Cause {state}