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Political Money: Deregulating American Politics: Selected Writings on Campaign Finance Reform: Hoover Institution Press Publication, cartea 459

Autor Annelise Anderson
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 iun 2000
Current proposals involve increasing the regulation of campaign expenditures, further restricting campaign donations, creating ever-larger bureaucracies, using public funding for federal campaigns, and attempting to limit political speech not only through legislation but also through constitutional amendment. Through articles, Supreme Court decisions, speeches, and op-eds, Political Money challenges the view that current proposals are truly an appropriate public policy approach to campaign finance and argues that controls on campaign expenditures and contributions limit freedom of speech; that controls on the use of such resources smack of censorship; that there is no credible evidence that campaign contributions buy votes; and that more rapid and complete public disclosure is critical.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780817996727
ISBN-10: 0817996729
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Ediția:1st Edition
Editura: Hoover Institution Press
Colecția Hoover Institution Press
Seria Hoover Institution Press Publication


Cuprins

•About the Contributors
•Introduction

•If It's Not Broken . . . or Is It?
•Campaign Finance Regulation: Faulty Assumptions and Undemocratic Consequences
•PACs and Parties
•Liberty of the Press under Socialism
•Why Congress Can't Ban Soft Money
•Campaign Finance Reforms and the Presidential Campaign Contributions of Wealthy Capitalist Families
•Where Are We Now? The Current State of Campaign Finance Law
•Political Money: The New Prohibition
•Partial Dissent/Partial Concurrence of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thomas in the Case of the Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee and Douglas Jones, Treasurer, Petitioner v. Federal Election Commission
•Partial Dissent/Partial Concurrence of Chief Justice Burger in the Case of Buckley v. Valeo
•Supreme Court Reconsiders Contribution Limits
•Attempt to Amend the Constitution
•FEC Announces 1996 Presidential Spending Limits, March 15, 1996
•The Doolittle Bill: Citizen Legislature and Political Freedom Act
•S. 25: Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act
•Enemies of the First Amendment
•The Money Chase
•Campaign Finance Restrictions Violate the Constitution
•The King's Protection
•Making Pols into Crooks
•Shut Up, They Explained
•Campaign Solution: Lift All Contribution Limits
•Let the Sun Shine In
•Campaign Finance Reforms Don't Work
•Price Controls on Democracy
•The Case for Campaign Reform
•The Man Who Ruined Politics
•Sin Masquerading as Virtue
•Deregulating Politics
•Vote against McCain. Wait, Can I Say That?
•Deregulating Campaign Finance: Solution or Chimera?
•Campaigns Starved for Money
•The Case for Campaign Finance Reform
•The Money Gag
•Representative Democracy versus Corporate Democracy: How Soft Money Erodes the Principle of "One Person, One Vote"

•Index

Descriere

In this policy primer on campaign finance reform, options to current rules and regulation are discussed.