Will the Corporate Supremes Now Dance on Democracy's Corpse?
The Four Courtsmen of the Apocalypse are poised to finally bury American democracy in corporate money. The most powerful institution in human history---the global corporation---may soon take definitive possession of our electoral process.
It could happen very soon.
While America agonizes over health care, energy and war, Justices John Roberts, Antonin Scalia, Sam Alito and Clarence Thomas could make it all moot. They may now have the fifth Supreme Court vote they need to open the final floodgates on corporate spending in political campaigns.
In short, the Court may be poised to shred a century of judicial and legislative attempts to preserve even a semblance of restraint on how Big Money buys laws and legal decisions. The ensuing tsunami of corporate cash could turn every election hence into a series of virtual slave auctions, with victory guaranteed only to those candidates who most effectively grovel at the feet of the best-heeled lobbyists.
Not that this is so different from what we have now. The barriers against cash dominating our elections have already proven amazingly ineffective.
But a century ago, corporations were barred from directly contributing to political campaigns. The courts have upheld many of the key requirements.
Meanwhile the barons of Big Money have metastasized into all-powerful electoral juggernauts. The sum total of all these laws, right up to the recently riddled McCain-Feingold mandates, has been to force the corporations to hire a few extra lawyers, accountants and talk show bloviators to run interference for them.
Even that may be too much for the Court's corporate core. John Roberts's Supremes may now be fast-tracking a decision on CITIZENS UNITED v. FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, centered on a corporate-financed campaign film attacking Hillary Clinton. According to the Washington Post's account of oral arguments, "a majority of the court seemed impatient with an increasingly complicated federal scheme intended to curb the role of corporations, unions and special interest groups in elections."
Former solicitor general Theodore B. Olson, who in 2000 "persuaded" the Court to stop a recount of votes in Florida and put George W. Bush in the White House, said such laws "smothered" the First Amendment and "criminalized" free speech.
The conservative Gang of Four has already been joined by Anthony Kennedy, the Court's swing voter, in signaling the likely overturn of two previous decisions upholding laws that ban direct corporate spending in elections.
When he was confirmed as the Court's Chief, Roberts promised Congress he would be loathe to overturn major legal precedents. But the signals of betrayal now seem so clear that Senators John McCain and Russell Feingold have issued personal statements warning Roberts that a radical assault on campaign finance laws would be considered a breach of faith with the Congress that confirmed him.
Liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg did assert during oral arguments that "a corporation, after all, is not endowed by its creator with inalienable rights."
But since the 1880s the courts have generally granted corporations human rights with no human responsibilities. Thom Hartmann (UNEQUAL PROTECTION) and Ted Nace (GANGS OF AMERICA) have shown with infuriating detail how corporate lawyers twisted the 14th Amendment, designed to protect the rights of freed slaves, into a legal weapon used to bludgeon the democratic process into submission.
Civil libertarians like Floyd Abrams and the American Civil Liberties Union have somehow argued that depriving these mega-conglomerations of cash and greed their "right" to buy elections might somehow impinge on the First Amendment.
But the contradiction between human rights and corporate power is at the core of the cancer now killing our democracy. As early as 1815 Thomas Jefferson joined Tom Paine in warning against the power of "the moneyed aristocracy." In 1863 sometime railroad lawyer Abraham Lincoln compared the evils of corporate power with those of slavery. By the late 1870s Rutherford B. Hayes, himself the beneficiary of a stolen election, mourned a government "of, by and for the corporations."
The original US corporations---there were six at the time of the Revolution---were chartered by the states, and restricted as to what kinds of business they might do and where. After the Civil War, those restrictions were erased. As Richard Grossman and the Project on Corporate Law & Democracy have shown, the elastic nature of the corporate charter has birthed a mutant institution whose unrestrained money and power has transformed the planet.
Simply put, globalized corporations, operating solely for profit, have become the most dominant institutions in human history, transcending ancient emperors, feudal lords, monarchs, dictators and even the church in their wealth, reach and ability to dominate all avenues of economic and cultural life.
The Roberts Court now seems intent on disposing of the feeble, flimsy McCain-Feingold campaign finance law as well as the 1990 AUSTIN decision that upheld a state law barring corporations from spending to defeat a specific candidate.
Scalia, Kennedy and Thomas all voted to overturn McCain-Feingold in 2003, and nobody doubts Roberts and Alito will join them now. The only question seems centered on how broad the erasure will be. This, after all, is a "conservative" wing whose intellectual leader, Antonin Scalia, recently argued that wrongly convicted citizens can be put to death even if new evidence confirms their innocence.
Should our worst fears be realized, the torrent of cash into the electoral process could sweep all else before it. With five corporations controlling the major media and all members of the courts, Congress and the Executive at the mercy of corporate largess, who will heed the people?
"We don't put our First Amendment rights in the hands of Federal Election Commission bureaucrats," said Roberts said in the oral arguments.
Instead he may put ALL our rights in the hands of a board room barony whose global reach and financial dominance are without precedent.
At this point, only an irreversible ban on ALL private campaign money---corporate or otherwise---might save the ability of our common citizenry to be heard. Those small pockets where public financing and enforceable restrictions have been tried DO work.
A rewrite of all corporate charters must ban political activity and demand strict accountability for what they do to their workers, the natural environment and the common good.
It was the property of the world's first global corporation---the East India Tea Company---that our revolutionary ancestors pitched into Boston Harbor. Without a revolution to now obliterate corporate personhood and the "right" to buy elections, we might just as well throw in the illusion of a free government.
This imminent, much-feared Court decision on campaign finance is likely to make the issue of corporate money versus real democracy as clear as it's ever been.
Likewise the consequences.
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32 Comments so far
Show Allif corporations can pass a mammography and colonosotapy then
they can be called human until such time they need to controlled
or as grover norqiust liked to say about government hold them
under water till they stop breathing. i myself like the second
option much more!the only thing that can stop this from going any
further is a nation wide revolt. it seem the ingredients are
slowly coming to a boil and then the meal shall serve.
remember no violence he will get hurt and it drags us down
to the cro magnums who run this country. while we are on the
subject of bribes did anyone see david serota's piece on
nancy pelosi? she is having a fundraiser at the
top lobbyists home on 9/26 pac (donation is 4k single
person 2500 dollars) and after this event she is going
to drop the single payer option. this is getting to
hard to bear. we voted for obama and got otomma. van jones
was the real guy for us. we need van because he's a visionary
and doesn't give a damn about corps. before you call me
racist for the tom comment i play music in nyc. most of
my peers are black and they feel devastated by obama turning
his back on them after they worked for him. the betrayal
they are feeling is tough to handle because their dreams
have been shattered and they thought that he was going to
change america. and now they call him tom.what he did to them was even worse as he is the first elected afro american
president. it makes me want to cry when i see their pain!
hopefully they'll come out to the street and march too!
At least we'll be able to honestly and accurately name our new political parties.
We'll have the Banking, War and Money Laundering Party. (A "BWML" will appear after the candidate's name replacing the "R").
And we'll have have the Insurance, Hospital and Pharmaceutical Party (IHPP will replace the "D").
I'll be voting for the "ACPC" party candidate: Anti-Corporate Pro-Constitution.
"Liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg did assert during oral arguments that "a corporation, after all, is not endowed by its creator with inalienable rights."
Not only is a corporation NOT endowed with inalienable rights but the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Caperton v. Massey Coal, held that "elected judges must step aside from cases when large campaign contributions from interested parties create the appearance of bias."
Does this logic not apply to Congressmen and Senators who actually make the laws in this country? Are we to believe, after many of them have gone to jail on various criminal charges associated with kickbacks from big-money, that they are now beyond taking money for legislative favor?
What a joke!
harvey wasserman---
thanks for all the great comments.
bottom line: a corporation is not a human being. it does not warrant human rights, certainly without human responsibilities attached.
the profit motive is not sufficient to justify protection from bankruptcy laws. corporations must be held accountable---by CHARTER---to the environment, their workers and society at large.
all corporate donations/bribes to campaigns must be banned. individual contributions must be very small or not at all.
this will be hard to win---on a par, let's say, with defeating the British in 1776. But it can/must be done......no nukes/for solartopia....
harvey wasserman---
thanks for all the great comments.
bottom line: a corporation is not a human being. it does not warrant human rights, certainly without human responsibilities attached.
the profit motive is not sufficient to justify protection from bankruptcy laws. corporations must be held accountable---by CHARTER---to the environment, their workers and society at large.
all corporate donations/bribes to campaigns must be banned. individual contributions must be very small or not at all.
this will be hard to win---on a par, let's say, with defeating the British in 1776. But it can/must be done......no nukes/for solartopia....
thank you for your article and response.
I always wonder, someone in your position, are you aware of Sudbury Valley Schools?
They are an inspiring democratically run school, k-12th graders.
If you haven't heard of them, would you please check them out at www.sudval.org
living in this haunting and daunting reality, i continue to find hope and inspiration in their educational model.
What if our revolution included a vision of children growing up, practicing democracy?
I've dug into the SUdbury model - it's an unrecognized powerkeg for democracy!!
Check it out. Check it out. Really dig in for some amazing stuff.
TALK TO DAN GREENBERG, one of the founders!
Honestly, if you could get Bill Mollison (permaculture), Dan Greenberg (Sudbury Valley), and Sally Fallon (Weston Price Foundation) and you altogether in one place, surely, surely, the world would be a better place.
(please invite me - I'd even get in an airplane to come!)
At least, a damn fine visions would come out of it.
Thank you.
Given that the DOLLAR is equated to Free Speech.
Paying taxes if a violation of your right to Free Speech.
If there is a roll-back in favor of corporate money, it should be the final straw that breaks the camel's back.
It should be followed by courageous massive non-violent civil disobedience in every corner of the U.S. Otherwise, shame on the American people and prepare to be a serf.
I must agree with the first poster. The United States has never been a democracy; it was intended to be a republic and was constituted that way by writers of the constitution. There is not one mention or use of the word "democracy" in the constitution. The constitution does have some features that are suggestive of democracy, but the intent of the framers was to exclude many people from directly making public decisions. A republic may be a monarchy, an oligarchy, a plutocracy, an aristocracy, or some other form of outright dictatorship; it may recognize the supposedly God-given right to own private property, or it may provide for the general welfare. That being said, democracy is still a legitimate aspiration for people wanting to make governmental laws and decisions directly, in the form of direct participation in the making of laws. Still, how do we know who is good, virtuous, and wise, and would also have the public good as her, his, and their chief aspiration? The vote can be used to put in a good government or a bad government. Voting may be democratic, or undemocratic, or indifferent.
For corporations to run the main levers of power is not a good thing, but the govt. has always been most partial to the wealthiest citizens.
Personally, I hope that the Supreme Court may rule against corporate money as free speech. I may not like what I get to see.
So true,let's change that.What can be done if the court protects corporate dominance of the government?General strike? peace
I do not know of any other democracy in which a panel of judges, appointed for life, can overrule laws passed by the legislature. This archaic institution resembles the British House of Lords, which once exerted actual power, but has now been reduced to an almost completely ceremonial function. The same process must occur with the Supreme Court, and the sooner, the better.
"Liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg did assert during oral arguments that "a corporation, after all, is not endowed by its creator with inalienable rights."
True; but the fascist parasites in power with deep pockets will ignore this fact.
I don't understand.
Numerous people on this site demand that corporations act like responsible citizens and yet you also argue that that should be denied all the rights that citizens are given.
I didn't know you were a fan of taxation without repersentation...
Rupert Murdoch prevailed in a decision of a Florida Court that decided there were no Constitutional restraints against lying, deceitful broadcasts. Rupert was of course estatic.
When a court gives the green light to scum like Murdoch to lie with impunity to the American people you know that things have reached critical mass.
Scalia, Thomas and Alito should have been asked for their resignations as soon as Obama was elected. Appointing Bush Junior to the presidency was a crime unprecedented in American presidential history, and those justices who installed the half wit should have been booted the Hell out of the Justice Building as soon as Obama was sworn in.
America R.I.P.
Sioux Rose
MARINER: I agree. It was the ultimate "quid pro quo" inside job. And then just as conveniently Bush got to appoint all the lower court judges, getting his henchmen to make sure they would all march lockstep like good authoritarians, rewrite the rules of torture to make it appear legal by extension, and grant him decider title as the penultimate unitary executive. How the ship of state ever crashed on such amoral rocks with nary an outburst from the citizenry still stuns me. 911 was used for a great many things, holding a population hostage (from truth) being one of them.
I recently viewed Oliver Stone's film, "W" and while I think the characterization of Bush was excellent, Stone went along with the 911 official story (unlike him, I would think); and made of Daddy Bush, an elegant statesman, caring father, honorable politician. Guess it all comes down to where he got funding (?)
"In short, the Court may be poised to shred a century of judicial and legislative attempts to preserve even a semblance of restraint on how Big Money buys laws and legal decisions. "
"semblance"
"1 a : outward and often specious appearance or show"
We're trying to preserve a "semblance of restraint"?
Jim Shea
Perhaps we should have a Constitutional Amendment that limits campaign contributions in any election to registered voters in that election and a limit of $10 per voter.
Lincoln Steffens said it long ago: "Campaign contributions are worse than bribes because they are legal."
Will the Corporate Supremes Now Dance on Democracy's Corpse?
They've been dancing on our heads and our graves for years now. Choreography by Vlad The Impaler.
Of course they will rule in favor of corporate money. It is a part of the elitist plan to bury the middle class. Stone by stone they are dismantling every protection and enabling every assault on the American People possible. Stone by stone our democracy has been dismantled. We are losing individual rights, and national sovereignty. In it's place a world government and a world bank will be established to better and more efficiently enable world government run by economic elites. A world police state will ultimately emerge resulting in more mass killings than the world has ever seen through the practice of eugenics whereby ten percent of the lowest economic class will be rendered sterile and eventually killed. A master race will emerge and as history so clearly shows will destroy itself from the inside as it faces revolution on the outside.
There are peaceful paths to positive change that must be instituted individually immediately. The near-term collapse will be followed either by the above violent scenario or peaceful economic change designed to weaken the elites. You know the drill, just do it.
it may be cost effective to have the corporations controlling the vote
in fact, we could just skip the charade called "the election" and have them appoint their boy right off the hop
if we do that immediatley we won't have to watch the mitt romney family vacation film coming in the next elelction
It seems to be the third rail of discussion of this new "corporate" majority on the Court to leave everything "swinging" around Justice Kennedy and avoid any concern for the vote of the Court's newest member. Since Sotomayor was given a pass during her confirmation hearings on anything of substance about her "ideological" views (she's pragmatic you know, BHO said her nomination was more about biography than ideology), we really don't know but we really don't have to ask for now because our constitution won't fall before the end of the year when the Clinton decision is to be announced (unless they duck the constitutional question). How do we live with such uncertainty, when we have it within our means to "vet" court candidates in terms of how they are likely to vote on constitutional issues? Has democracy already died before the Court actually signs the death certificate?
The Supreme Court's function has ALWAYS been to prevent the people from ruling, to keep the oligarchy in power. The little episode between 1954-1980 was an accident that the oligarchy will never again permit.
Vincent Bugliosi, commenting Judge Ito in the SImpson case, said that lawyers and politicians are the two least respect professionals in the US, but judges are ranked among the most respected, but they are nothing but lawyers who are also politicians.
A CORP. REPUBLIC is what we are with an Oligrachy or is that an OIL-grachy?
Bad corporate this, bad corporate that - ya know what's gotten way lost?
Let's say I'm a Senator. Corporation X offers me a million bucks to vote against Law Y.
All I have to do is say no thank you. You know, like Ron Paul (R-Texas) has done for over 20 years, i.e...
Can't knock Corporation X for trying, right? So what? It's the f@#king greedy, corrupt elected 'representative' who is ultimately the problem.
If your rep can't just say no to bribes, boot him and find a "Ron Paul," because with a majority of them kind in Congress, Big Everything will frankly no longer be able to own the place.
Re frank1569 September 14th, 2009 2:42 pm, who advises,
"Let's say I'm a Senator. Corporation X offers me a million bucks to vote against Law Y.
All I have to do is say no thank you."
The offer of a million bucks to Senator Frank is the carrot. If he says no, Corp X applies the stick, by offering the million to Senator Frank's opponent (primary or general election matters not, Frank gets the message).
Putting this on the individual leaves a corrupt and corrupting system intact, no? I'm actually hopeful that the decision we fear SCOTUS will reach will finally wake enough people up to the rigged game we're in.
That's good advice, but inadequate.
Voters may be lied to easily as long as one can afford to spread the lie. Look how many voted for 0bama and donated time and money believing that he was in some way liberal, progressive, populist, eco-friendly, or humane.
Laws will never eliminate bribery because people bribe illegally. But we need a system wherein candidates have some chance of winning without accepting bribes. That means we cannot have private money pay for election publicity.
Until then, we will have honest people, but not in office.
frank: in a banana republic its called a bribe - here is fascist america we call it a "contribution"
"contributions" have turned the health care debate from single payer to corporate cash cow
the "contributions" are not giveaways - they are investments...
The elitist RATS (Roberts Alito Thomas Scalia) are just eating the last piece of cheese. It's been many years since we had a democracy.
Sucks to be us...
Nice succinct Spartan comment.So now what Tom ? peace
Too little too late. Whatever was left of American democracy has already been buried in corporate cash a long time ago. We're just busy "bringing that democracy" to whatever country we wanna plunder from for resources or labor.
Never was any democracy in the US to dance on.