USA Today Article, Summarizing Other Campaign Finance Lawsuits, Ignores Unity08 v FEC

USA Today has this article about pending lawsuits on the constitutionality of campaign finance laws. However, the article does not mention Unity08 v Federal Election Commission, which could have an opinion any day now. The issue in that case is whether the FEC was correct or incorrect to tell Unity08 that no one may contribute more than $5,000. Unity08 was formed in 2006, for the purpose of qualifying itself as a party in as many states as possible by 2008. Then, it would have chosen a presidential candidate via an on-line presidential primary. Anyone could sign up to participate in that on-line presidential primary.

The McCain-Feingold law says that national committees (of political parties) can only receive contributions of $30,400 per year. There are 8 national committees recognized by the FEC: Democratic, Republican, Constitution, Green, Libertarian, Natural Law, Reform, Socialist. Before the Unity08 ruling, the assumption was that a new party, which didn’t yet have national committee status, could receive unlimited contributions as long as it didn’t have any connection with any particular federal candidate. But, the FEC ruled that Unity08 is a political committee (even though political committees are defined as groups to help one particular candidate) and that therefore no one could give more than $5,000. The Unity08 pending decision is of the greatest importance to anyone who cares about the ability of a new party to get started. If the FEC decision on Unity08 had been in effect in 1995, Ross Perot could not have launched the Reform Party.

Party for Socialism and Liberation Places Candidate on Ballot for Mayor of Long Beach, California

The Party for Socialism and Liberation has a candidate on the ballot for Mayor of Long Beach, California. She is Stevie Merino. The election is April 13. This site doesn’t normally try to post news about every minor party nominee’s campaign announcement, because it’s outside the scope of this blog and there are other web pages that do a better job of that, especially Independent Political Report and Third Party Daily. However, an exception is being made in this case because the Party for Socialism and Liberation is the newest nationally-organized party in the nation that has run as many as a dozen candidates, and it is interesting to see which races the party chooses to contest.

The Party for Socialism and Liberation ran its first candidates in 2008. In 2009 it had candidates for Mayor of Los Angeles, and for Mayor of New York city.

Mayor Bloomberg Gave $1,200,000 to New York Independence Party Last Fall

The New York Independence Party received contributions of $1,200,000 from New York city Mayor Mike Bloomberg, according to the party’s recent campaign report. See this story, which contains a link to that page of the party’s report. Bloomberg gave $600,000 on October 30, 2009, and another $600,000 on November 2. Thanks to Nancy Hanks of the Hankster for the link.

The McCain-Feingold law makes it illegal for anyone to give more than $28,000 per year to the national committee of a political party. However, the Independence Party of New York is not a nationally-organized party and therefore it is not a national committee.