By Joe TrotterDredd Scott and Citizens United cases have something in common: they were both a challenge against government suppression of natural rights. The validity of the comparison ends there. But apparently not for some legislators and newspaper pundits with axes to grind.
By James HohmannThe National Republican Senatorial Committee is launching a parody web site Thursday that accuses President Barack Obama of hypocrisy for allowing Organizing for Action to sell access to him.
CHICAGO — In the race to replace former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s super PAC followed a simple strategy: Choose a strong anti-gun candidate, attack rivals supported by the National Rifle Association and add in $2.2 million in resources.
By Kate AckleySilver said the event is designed to raise awareness for an American Anti-Corruption Act, for which his group is trying to enlist 1 million “citizen cosponsors” before it pushes for actual introduction in Congress. The idea for the race came from one of the group’s 300,000 members, Silver said.
By Wendy KaminerCampaign-finance reform is a bit like the war on drugs: a decades-long exercise in over-regulation that has exacerbated the problems it was designed to solve.
By Amanda BeckerSome of the more conservative justices on the Supreme Court weren’t shy about assessing their neighbors across the street Wednesday during oral arguments in a closely watched Voting Rights Act case.
Candidates, Politicians and Parties
EDITORIALHyperbole is a familiar ingredient of political debate, and long may it wave. But Mr. Markey should take two aspirin, lie down and he’ll probably feel better. We think reversing Citizens United is a bad idea — tinkering with free speech is always a bad idea — but reversing any court decision is a legitimate, if not always worthy goal. Nevertheless, even if Citizens United is as bad as Mr. Markey says it is, it hardly rises to the evil of slavery. Such racial insensitivity has no place in the debate, circa 2013.
By Kevin CirilliKarl Rove says the 2012 election was a pain in his rear end — but that Republican candidates, not GOP policies, were to blame.
By Tom McGheeU.S. District Judge Philip Brimmer has thrown out a challenge to a state campaign-finance law that allows candidates who have a primary election to receive more money in donations than others.