UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CITIZENS FOR RESPONSIBILITY AND
ETHICS IN WASHINGTON, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v. Case No. 16-cv-2255 (CRC)
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION,
Defendant,
AMERICAN ACTION NETWORK, INC.,
Intervenor Defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is the second in a series of cases involving the Federal Election Commission and its
(non)regulation of American Action Network, Inc. (“AAN”), a self-described “issue-oriented
action tank” that ran nearly $18 million in television advertisements just before the 2010 federal
midterm elections. Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington—a watchdog group
known as “CREW”—contends that AAN’s spending on these ads rendered it a “political
committee” as defined in the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971. And, according to
CREW, because AAN did not register as a political committee during the relevant time period, it
evaded the Act’s recordkeeping and disclosure requirements that apply to those groups.
In 2012, CREW filed an administrative complaint with the Commission to that effect. By
an evenly divided vote, the Commission dismissed CREW’s complaint because a majority of the
Commissioners did not find “reason to believe” that AAN violated the Act. 52 U.S.C. §
30109(a)(2). Specifically, the three controlling Commissioners concluded that AAN did not
qualify as a political committee because it lacked a “major purpose” of nominating or electing a
candidate for federal office, Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 79 (1976). This Court in a previous
decision held that dismissal “contrary to law” because it rested on an erroneous premise
regarding Buckley’s “major purpose” requirement. On remand, the Commission again dismissed
CREW’s complaint in a deadlocked decision.
CREW then filed this suit challenging the Commission’s second dismissal as contrary to
law. Because the Court finds that the Commission’s analysis was inconsistent with the
governing statutes, it will grant summary judgment in favor of CREW and remand this matter to
the Commission.
I. Background
A. Legal Background
The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (“FECA”), as substantially amended in
1974, regulates federal elections in two key ways. First, the law sets monetary limits on
contributions to political parties and candidates. See 52 U.S.C. § 30116. Second, it imposes
disclosure requirements on entities that spend money for the purpose of influencing elections,
even when that spending does not go directly to a candidate’s coffers. See id. § 30104.
This case is about FECA’s disclosure requirements—specifically, those triggered by
spending on political advertisements. In broad terms, these disclosure requirements serve “three
important interests: providing the electorate with relevant information about the candidates and
their supporters; deterring actual corruption and discouraging the use of money for improper
purposes; and facilitating enforcement of the prohibitions in the Act.” McConnell v. FEC, 540
U.S. 93, 121 (2003) (controlling opinion of Stevens & O’Connor, J.J.).
2
Some of FECA’s disclosure requirements are triggered by certain types of
communications. For example, an entity that makes “independent expenditures”—that is, a
communication “expressly advocating the election or defeat of a clearly identified candidate,” 52
U.S.C. § 30101(17)—of over $250 in a calendar year must file a report with the Commission
containing information about itself and its contributors, id. § 30104(c).
FECA also imposes more pervasive disclosure requirements on entities based on their
campaign-related spending patterns. As relevant here, “political committees”—commonly
referred to as “political action committees” or “PACs”—are subject to extensive, ongoing
disclosure requirements. They must appoint a treasurer, keep records with the names and
addresses of contributors, and file regular reports during a general election year with accounting
information, including the amounts spent on contributions and expenditures. Id. §§ 30102–04.
They must also register with the Federal Election Commission or face penalties. Id. §§
30104(a)–(b), 30109(d)(1).
An entity qualifies as a political committee when it satisfies two separate conditions. The
first was imposed by Congress in the text of FECA: the entity must receive or spend more than
$1,000 in a calendar year for the purpose of influencing a federal election. Id. § 30101(4)(A),
(8)(A)(i), (9)(A)(i). 1 The second condition was imposed by the Supreme Court in Buckley v.
Valeo as a narrowing construction of the statutory definition. Under Buckley, political
committees are limited to those “organizations that are under the control of a candidate or the
1
More precisely, FECA defines “political committee” as “any committee, club,
association, or other group of persons which receives contributions aggregating in excess of
$1,000 during a calendar year or which makes expenditures aggregating in excess of $1,000
during a calendar year.” 52 U.S.C. § 30101(4)(A). “Contributions” and “expenditures” are both
restricted to payments made “for the purpose of influencing any election for Federal office.” Id.
§ 30101(8)(A)(i), (9)(A)(i).
3
major purpose of which is the nomination or election of a candidate.” 424 U.S. at 79 (emphasis
added). A broader definition of “political committee,” the Court explained, could raise problems
of vagueness under the First Amendment by threatening the speech of “groups engaged purely in
issue discussion” and not just those engaged in “campaign related” activity. Id.
Several decades after Buckley, Congress in the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002
(“BCRA”) amended FECA to add important new disclosure requirements. BCRA was aimed,
among other targets, at the post-Buckley rise of corporate and union spending on ads that were
nominally related to political issues but were clearly intended to sway voters in upcoming federal
elections. See McConnell, 540 U.S. at 126–32. To capture these “so-called issue ads,” id. at
126, Congress created a new category of communications called “electioneering
communications”—television advertisements that air within 60 days of a federal election, clearly
identify a candidate running for federal office, and target the relevant electorate. 52 U.S.C. §
30104(f)(3)(A)(i). Corporations spending over $10,000 on those communications in a calendar
year must file a statement with the Commission that discloses information about the entity, the
candidates identified in the communications, the recipients of any disbursements, and any donors
who gave over $1,000 toward electioneering communications since the beginning of the
preceding calendar year. Id. § 30104(f)(2); 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9). 2 Ads that qualify as
electioneering communications must also include disclaimers with information like the name of
2
More specifically, FECA requires electioneering communication reports to contain “the
names and addresses of all contributors who contributed an aggregate amount of $1,000 or more
to the person making the disbursement during the period beginning on the first day of the
preceding calendar year and ending on the disclosure date.” 52 U.S.C. § 30104(f)(2)(F). With
respect to corporations like AAN, the Commission by regulation has interpreted the statute’s
reference to such contributors as limited to donations “made for the purpose of furthering
electioneering communications.” 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9) (emphasis added). The D.C. Circuit
has upheld this “purpose requirement” against challenge under the Administrative Procedure
Act. Van Hollen, Jr. v. FEC, 811 F.3d 486, 489–90 (D.C. Cir. 2016).
4
the entity that paid for the ad and whether the ad was authorized by a candidate. 52 U.S.C. §
30120(a); see 11 C.F.R. § 100.11(c)(3).
The Federal Election Commission (“FEC”), an independent agency with six
Commissioners, is responsible for enforcing FECA’s disclosure requirements. See 52 U.S.C. §
30106(b)(1). The Commission has not adopted a rule that further clarifies the meaning of
Buckley’s “major purpose” limitation. Rather, it has taken a case-by-case approach by deciding
whether particular entities have a major purpose of nominating or electing a candidate. See
Shays v. FEC, 511 F. Supp. 2d 19, 30 (D.D.C. 2006). This approach was ultimately upheld by a
fellow judge in this District against challenge under the Administrative Procedure Act. See id.
Any person or entity may file a complaint with the Commission asserting a FECA
violation. 52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(1). If four or more Commissioners find “reason to believe” that
FECA was or will soon be violated, then the Commission must investigate. Id. § 30109(a)(2).
Otherwise, the complaint is dismissed. See id. § 30106(c). In the event of dismissal, the
controlling group of Commissioners—here, those voting against enforcement—must provide a
statement of reasons explaining the dismissal decision. See FEC v. Nat’l Republican Senatorial
Comm. (“NRSC”), 966 F.2d 1471, 1476 (D.C. Cir. 1992). “Any party aggrieved” by an FEC
dismissal decision may petition for this Court’s review. 52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(8)(A). If the
Court finds the statement of reasons to be contrary to law, it can direct the FEC to take action
within 30 days that “conforms with” the Court’s ruling. Id. § 30109(a)(8)(C).
B. Factual and Procedural Background
1. The FEC’s First Dismissal
American Action Network (“AAN”) is a tax-exempt § 501(c)(4) civic organization. Joint
Appendix (“J.A.”) 1490–91 (ECF No. 46). The group’s stated mission is to “create, encourage
5
and promote center-right policies based on the principles of freedom, limited government,
American exceptionalism, and strong national security.” J.A. 1490. To advance that mission,
AAN has sponsored educational activities and grassroots events. But the majority of its
spending throughout the period at issue in this case—July 23, 2009 through June 30, 2011 3—was
on political advertisements. Of its $27.1 million in total spending over that period, just over $4
million was devoted to independent expenditures—i.e., ads expressly advocating for or against a
federal candidate. J.A. 1765. An additional $13.7 million was devoted to electioneering
communications—i.e., ads run near an election that identify a candidate and target the relevant
electorate. Id.
In June 2012, CREW and its then–executive director filed a complaint with the FEC
alleging that AAN’s spending near the 2010 midterms rendered it an unregistered political
committee. J.A. 1480–88. The FEC’s Office of General Counsel reviewed the complaint and
recommended that the Commission investigate it because there was reason to believe that AAN
was indeed a political committee. Id. at 1659. Nevertheless, in June 2014, the Commissioners
deadlocked three-to-three on whether to commence an investigation and, accordingly, the
Commission dismissed CREW’s complaint. Id. at 1689.
The three controlling Commissioners—those voting against investigation—issued a
Statement of Reasons explaining that AAN was not a political committee because it did not have
a major purpose of nominating or electing a federal candidate. J.A. 1690–723. The
Commissioners first explained that, based on AAN’s organizational documents, its official
public statements, and its tax-exempt status, AAN appeared to have a “central organizational
3
This timespan covers AAN’s spending as reported in two of its tax returns: one return
covering July 23, 2009 through June 30, 2010; and the other covering July 1, 2010 through June
30, 2011. J.A. 1490, 1518.
6
purpose” that was “issue-centric” and not focused on electing candidates. Id. at 1706–07. They
then turned to the heart of CREW’s complaint: that AAN’s spending on advertisements rendered
it a political committee. Id. at 1708. In this part of their analysis, the Commissioners relied on a
rigid distinction between “express advocacy” for a candidate—which properly counted toward
an electoral major purpose—and “issue advocacy”—which categorically did not. See id. at
1709–10. In the Commissioners’ view, the Supreme Court had interpreted the First Amendment
to require such a categorical distinction—first in Buckley and more recently in FEC v.
Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. (“WRTL II”), 551 U.S. 449 (2007), which held that a statute
prohibiting corporations from funding electioneering communications could not, consistent with
the First Amendment, be applied to forbid the funding of “genuine issue ads” that are not “the
functional equivalent of express advocacy,” id. at 480–81. 4 See J.A. 1704–05, 1709.
Relying on the dichotomy between express and issue advocacy from WRTL II, the
Commissioners characterized all of AAN’s ads that did not expressly advocate for a candidate
(i.e., its electioneering communications) as “genuine issue advertisements,” the $13.7 million
cost of which could not be counted toward an election-related major purpose. J.A. 1709–10.
They made this determination wholesale, without discussing the content of any individual ad. Id.
The Commissioners also considered AAN’s spending over its lifetime—mid-2009 to mid-
2011—instead of year-to-year and, in total, found that only the $4.1 million that AAN spent on
express advocacy between 2009 and 2011 was aimed to elect a candidate. Id. at 1709. In their
view, because that spending accounted for only 15% of AAN’s total expenses during that period,
4
A few years after WRTL II, the Supreme Court in Citizens United, 558 U.S. 310
(2010), “pulled the plug on this ban once and for all, ruling unconstitutional the prohibition on
corporate- and union-funded ‘express advocacy.’” Van Hollen Jr., 811 F.3d at 490 n.1.
7
the group necessarily lacked a major purpose of nominating or electing a candidate. Id. at 1709–
10, 1716.
CREW filed suit in this Court challenging the FEC’s dismissal of the complaint against
AAN, as well as the dismissal of a similar complaint against another organization, Americans for
Job Security (“AJS”). CREW v. FEC, 209 F. Supp. 3d 77, 80–81 (D.D.C. 2016). CREW
alleged that both dismissals violated FECA. 5 AAN and AJS intervened as additional defendants
and the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Id. at 85.
In a September 2016 decision, this Court held that both dismissals were contrary to law
and remanded them to the Commission for reconsideration. Id. at 95. As the Court explained,
the FEC’s reliance on a hard distinction between express advocacy and issue advocacy depended
on an erroneous premise: that the First Amendment required it to exclude from its consideration
all non-express advocacy in the context of disclosure requirements. Id. at 93. While the
Supreme Court in WRTL II had concededly drawn such a distinction in evaluating a ban on
corporate-sponsored electioneering communications, in McConnell and Citizens United v. FEC,
558 U.S. 310 (2010), it had expressly declined to take that approach in evaluating disclosure
requirements triggered by those communications. Id. at 89–90 (quoting Citizens United, 558
U.S. at 369). And in the wake of those cases, “federal appellate courts ha[d] resoundingly
concluded that WRTL II’s constitutional division between express advocacy and issue speech is
simply inapposite in the disclosure context.” Id. at 90.
5
CREW initially brought a claim under the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”). This
Court dismissed that claim on the ground that FECA provided CREW with an “adequate
remedy” and therefore precluded review of the FEC’s determination under the APA. CREW v.
FEC, 164 F. Supp. 3d 113, 120 (D.D.C. 2015).
8
This Court nevertheless declined to adopt CREW’s proposed rule that, to comply with
FECA, the Commission must treat all electioneering communications as indicative of an
election-related major purpose. As the Court explained:
CREW’s citations to legislative history, past FEC precedent, and court precedent
certainly support the conclusion that many or even most electioneering
communications indicate a campaign-related purpose. Indeed, it blinks reality to
conclude that many of the ads considered by the Commissioners in this case were
not designed to influence the election or defeat of a particular candidate in an
ongoing race. However, particularly given the FEC’s judicially approved case-by-
case approach to adjudicating political committee status, the Court will refrain from
replacing the Commissioners’ bright-line rule with one of its own.
Id. at 93 (citations omitted).
2. The FEC’s Second Dismissal
On remand, the FEC again divided three-to-three and dismissed CREW’s complaint
against AAN. J.A. 1763. The controlling Commissioners’ Statement of Reasons acknowledged
that, in light of this Court’s decision, it could no longer categorically exclude AAN’s
electioneering communications from its major-purpose calculation. Id. at 1767–68. Rather, the
Commissioners explained that they would proceed ad-by-ad and weigh several factors in
deciding whether each electioneering communication should count toward an election-related
major purpose. These factors included (1) the extent to which the ad’s language focuses on
“elections, voting, political parties,” and the like; (2) “the extent to which the ad focuses on
issues important to the group or merely the candidates referenced in the ad”; (3) the context of
the ad (but “only to the extent necessary . . . to understand better the message being conveyed”);
and (4) whether the ad “contains a call to action and, if so, whether the call relates to the . . .
issue agenda or, rather, to the election or defeat of federal candidates.” Id. at 1768.
Before they turned to each ad, the Commissioners explained that all of the ads ran in a
time period that—while admittedly near the federal midterm elections—also preceded an
9
anticipated “lame duck” congressional session. J.A. 1768–70. During that session, Congress
was expected to “consider several pieces of major legislation, many involving policy issues of
great importance to AAN” like “Bush-era tax cuts, federal spending, health care, and energy.”
Id. at 1769. And, as the Commission noted, Congress did ultimately convene a lame duck
session in December 2010 and considered some of those issues. Id. at 1769–70.
“With that context in mind,” the controlling Commissioners then evaluated AAN’s
twenty electioneering communications. J.A. 1770. They concluded that four of the ads indicated
an election-related major purpose: those titled “Bucket,”6 “New Hampshire,” 7 “Order,” 8 and
“Extreme.” 9 Id. at 1779. “Order” and “Extreme,” for example, sought to criticize two
Democratic congressional candidates—Mike Oliverio and Annie Kuster, respectively—by
linking them with Nancy Pelosi in unfavorable ways. Id. at 1778. As the Commissioners
6
“We send tax money to Washington and what does Russ Feingold do with it? Eight
hundred billion dollars for the jobless stimulus. Two point five million for a healthcare plan that
hurts seniors. A budget that forces us to borrow nine million dollars. And when he had a chance
at reform, he voted against the Balanced Budget Amendment. Russ Feingold and our money.
What a mess. [Superimposed text: Russ Feingold, What a mess.]” J.A. 1773.
7
“Winter’s here soon. Guess Congressman Hodes has never spent nights sleepless,
unable to pay utility bills. Why else would he vote for the cap-and-trade tax? Raise electric
rates by ninety percent? Increase gas to four dollars? Cost us another two million jobs? Kelly
Ayotte would stop the cap-and-trade tax. Cold.” J.A. 1777.
8
“[On screen text:] If Nancy Pelosi gave an order . . . would you follow it? Mike
Oliverio would. Oliverio says he would support Pelosi in Washington. After all, Oliverio voted
himself a 33% pay raise. Oliverio voted for higher taxes. Even on gas. And Oliverio won't
repeal Obama’s $500 billion Medicare cuts. So what will Mike Oliverio do in Washington?
Whatever Nancy Pelosi tells him to.” J.A. 1778.
9
“[On screen text:] Nancy Pelosi is not extreme. Compared to Annie Kuster. Kuster
supported the trillion dollar government Healthcare takeover. But says it didn’t go far enough.
$525 billion in new taxes for government Healthcare. Now, Kuster wants $700 billion in higher
taxes on families and businesses. And $846 billion in job killing taxes for cap and trade. Nancy
Pelosi is not extreme. Compared to Annie Kuster.” J.A. 1778.
10
explained, “[n]either ad contains a call to action, nor do they focus on changing the voting
behavior or policy stances of the named individuals.” Id. Thus, in their view, those ads were
best understood as aiming to defeat reelection of the named representatives.
On the other hand, the Commissioners found that AAN’s sixteen other electioneering
communications did not evince an election-related purpose. Conceding that these ads were
critical of the incumbent representatives they identified, the Commissioners focused on the fact
that each ad instructed viewers to call the representative and urge him to change his vote on a
political issue, if not an actual pending bill. See id. at 1770–79. For example, the
Commissioners declined to count the cost of an ad titled “Quit Critz,” which accused then-
Pennsylvania representative Mark Critz of supporting “the Obama-Pelosi agenda that’s left us
fourteen trillion in debt.” J.A. 1770. The ad concluded with an exhortation to “[t]ell
Congressman Critz that Pennsylvania families need tax relief this November, not more
government,” and it superimposed text that instructed viewers to call Representative Critz and
tell him to vote “Yes on H.R. 4746,” the House tax-cut bill introduced earlier that year. Id. In
evaluating that ad and several similar to it, 10 the Commissioners explained that the ads’
references to “November” were “best understood as a reference to the time period in which the
10
For example, another tax-related ad titled “Wallpaper”:
Congressman Kurt Schrader is wallpapering Washington with our tax money.
Schrader spent nearly eight hundred billion on the wasteful stimulus that created
few jobs but allowed big executive bonuses. He threw nearly a trillion at Pelosi’s
health care takeover and voted to raise the national debt to over fourteen trillion.
Now Congress wants to raise taxes. Call Congressman Schrader. Tell him to vote
for a tax cut this November to stop wallpapering Washington with our tax dollars.
[Superimposed text: “Call Congressman Schrader this November. Vote to cut
taxes. Yes on H.R. 4746. (202) 224–3121.”]
J.A. 1771.
11
lame-duck session would commence” instead of a reference to the November midterm election,
and that “the express point of [their] criticism” was “to marshal public sentiment to persuade the
officeholders to alter their voting stances.” J.A. 1772.
Combining AAN’s spending on the four election-related ads with the $4.1 million it spent
on express advocacy yielded a sum of $5.97 million, or 22% of AAN’s total spending between
mid-2009 and mid-2011. J.A. 1779. The Commissioners ran an alternative calculation by
adding the cost of an ad called “Read This” 11—which they considered issue-focused but close to
the line—and by counting AAN’s spending over only the most recent year in question (mid-2010
to mid-2011). Id. Under that approach, “the amount of spending that indicate[d] a purpose to
nominate or elect federal candidates would constitute less than 28% of [AAN’s] total spending in
that time period.” Id. As a result, the Commissioners concluded that AAN did not have the
requisite major purpose of nominating or electing a candidate, and they therefore voted to
dismiss CREW’s complaint against AAN. 12 Id. at 1779–80.
Soon thereafter, CREW filed a motion for an order to show cause why the FEC’s
dismissal on remand did not contravene this Court’s prior decision. Pls.’ Mot. Show Cause, No.
14-cv-1419 (Nov. 14, 2016) (ECF No. 57). The Court denied the motion. Memo. Op. & Order,
id. (Apr. 6, 2017) (ECF No. 74). To the extent that CREW’s motion relied on new legal
11
“[On screen text:] Rick Boucher wants to keep you in the dark. About his Washington
Cap and Trade deal. Boucher sided with Nancy Pelosi. For billions in new energy taxes. That
will kill thousands of Virginia jobs. But Rick Boucher didn’t just vote for Cap and Trade. The
Siena Club called Boucher the “linchpin” of the entire deal. Call Rick Boucher. [Phone number
at top of screen.] Tell him no more deals.” J.A. 1777.
12
The three Commissioners who voted to investigate AAN issued their own statement of
reasons, in which they excoriated the controlling Commissioners for “ignor[ing] the court’s
ruling and the plain language of the ads that objectively criticized candidates in the weeks
preceding the 2010 elections.” J.A. 1785.
12
arguments—for example, that the Commissioners relied on a misreading of McConnell—the
Court explained that those new arguments were “properly taken up in a separate suit.” Id. at 5.
The Court further found that nothing in the Commissioners’ dismissal violated the letter of its
prior decision:
[T]he Court never ordered the FEC to reach a particular result, or to consider any
particular ad—or any proportion of electioneering communications—election-
related. Instead, the Court directed the FEC to reconsider its decision without
“exclud[ing] from its [major purpose] consideration all non-express advocacy.”
The FEC did just that.
Id. at 6 (citation omitted).
CREW then filed this suit against the FEC. AAN and AJS again intervened as
defendants. The parties stipulated to dismissal of the claims against AJS, and thus all that
remains is the allegation that the FEC’s dismissal of the complaint against AAN was contrary to
law. The parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment are now ripe.
II. Legal Standards
Where a party challenges an FEC dismissal decision, this Court will grant summary
judgment to the challenger only if the agency’s decision was “contrary to law,” 52 U.S.C.
§ 30109(a)(8)(C), meaning either that “the FEC dismissed the complaint as a result of an
impermissible interpretation of [FECA],” or that “the FEC’s dismissal of the complaint, under a
permissible interpretation of the statute, was arbitrary or capricious, or an abuse of discretion.”
Orloski v. FEC, 795 F.2d 156, 161 (D.C. Cir. 1986). This same standard of review applies to all
FEC decisions, whether they be unanimous or determined by tie vote. In re Sealed Case, 223
F.3d 775, 779 (D.C. Cir. 2000). This is because the Commissioners voting for dismissal
“constitute a controlling group for purposes of the decision,” and so their statement of reasons
“necessarily states the agency’s reasons for acting as it did.” NRSC, 966 F.2d at 1476.
13
In evaluating whether a group has an election-related major purpose, the Commission is
construing the term “political committee” as it appears in FECA—a statute that the Commission
is charged with enforcing. The Court thus reviews the Commission’s determination of whether
an entity is a political committee using the framework set forth in Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural
Resources Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837 (1984). See, e.g., Orloski, 795 F.2d at 161–62. Under
Chevron, the Court at “Step 1” must use “traditional tools of statutory interpretation” to decide
“whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue.” 467 U.S. at 842–43 &
n.9; see also Pharm. Research & Mfrs. Of Am. v. Thompson, 251 F.3d 219, 224 (D.C. Cir. 2001)
(examining “text, structure, purpose, and legislative history”). If so, then Congress’s resolution
must be given legal effect no matter what the agency says to the contrary. Chevron, 467 U.S. at
843. If, on the other hand, the statute is silent or ambiguous on an issue, the Court proceeds to
“Step 2” and decides whether the agency’s resolution of the issue was “a reasonable policy
choice for the agency to make.” Id. at 845. While the Court’s review at Step 1 is plenary, at
Step 2 it is “highly deferential.” Nat’l Rifle Ass’n of Am., Inc. v. Reno, 216 F.3d 122, 137 (D.C.
Cir. 2000).
This Court also reviews whether the FEC’s dismissal was “arbitrary or capricious, or an
abuse of discretion.” Orloski, 795 F.2d at 161. This standard largely overlaps with Chevron
Step 2; the same core question is whether the agency analyzed the problem reasonably. See
Pharm. Research & Mfrs. of Am. v. FTC, 790 F.3d 198, 209 (D.C. Cir. 2015). The Court will
hold an FEC decision unlawful if it “entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the
problem,” it “offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before [it],”
or “is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency
14
expertise.” Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Autom. Ins. Co., 463
U.S. 29, 43 (1983).
III. Analysis
CREW contends that the controlling Commissioners’ analysis on remand rested on legal
errors—some repeated and some new. It first claims that the Commissioners “fabricated” a
multifactor test that allowed it to disregard nearly all of AAN’s electioneering advertisements, in
violation of this Court’s prior decision. Pls.’ Mot. Summ J. at 22. More fundamentally, says
CREW, the Commission’s dismissal rested on a misinterpretation of Buckley and McConnell
because it invoked those cases as a reason to exclude electioneering communications from its
major purpose analysis. Id. at 28–33. In CREW’s view, those cases require just the opposite
“because every electioneering communication, by reason of its being an electioneering
communication, is ‘specifically intended to affect election results.’” Pls.’ Reply at 13–14
(quoting McConnell, 540 U.S. at 127). Finally, CREW argues that the Commission’s analysis
was arbitrary and capricious because it ignored contextual evidence highly relevant to the ads’
purpose and instead “cherry picked information” in order to “excus[e] AAN from political
reporting.” Pls.’ Mot. Summ. J. at 41.
As the Court explained in denying CREW’s motion for a show-cause order, the
controlling Commissioners did not repeat their mistake of drawing a bright line between express
and issue advocacy. The Court nevertheless finds legal error in the Commission’s approach to
analyzing AAN’s status as a political committee. While the controlling Commissioners did not
categorically refuse to count AAN’s electioneering advertisements as indicative of an election-
related major purpose, the Commissioners used a multifactor test that started from a blank slate
in considering the content of each ad, with no apparent regard for the highly relevant fact that
15
each ad fell cleanly within Congress’s definition of an “electioneering communication.” In the
Court’s view, that approach violates the unambiguous directive of Congress—made clear in the
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002—that electioneering communications presumptively
have an election-related purpose. In turn, to the extent that the Commission considers an entity’s
spending in assessing its major purpose, it must presumptively treat spending on electioneering
ads as indicating a purpose of nominating or electing a candidate.
A. In FECA and BCRA, Congress Made Clear that Electioneering Ads Presumptively
Have a Purpose of Nominating or Electing a Federal Candidate
To understand the Court’s conclusion, begin with the plain text of FECA. Its definition
of “political committee” is unambiguously broad: it covers any entity that receives or spends
over $1,000 within one calendar year for the purpose of influencing an election. If this is all the
Court had to go on—and if it could disregard Buckley’s constitutional concerns—it would
conclude that AAN is a political committee under the clear terms of FECA, and therefore that the
Commission was bound to determine as much. See Akins v. FEC, 101 F.3d 731, 740 (D.C. Cir.
1996) (en banc) (with respect to the definition of “political committee,” “it cannot be[]
contended that the statutory language itself is ambiguous” (emphasis added)), vacated on other
grounds, 524 U.S. 11 (1998).
Of course, after Buckley the Commission is not free to rely on this broad statutory
definition alone. The question, then, is how the Supreme Court’s imposition of the major
purpose requirement changes things. Here, the context of Buckley’s holding is important. The
Buckley Court faced a wide-ranging constitutional challenge to FECA after it was amended in
1974. Before reaching the Act’s disclosure requirements, the Court first confronted the Act’s
$1,000 annual limit on expenditures “relative to a clearly identified candidate during a calendar
year.” 424 U.S. at 39. The Court attempted to narrow this language to avoid vagueness
16
problems under the First Amendment by construing it “to apply only to expenditures for
communications that in express terms advocate the election or defeat of a clearly identified
candidate for federal office.” Id. at 44. Even with that narrowing construction, however, the
Court found the provision invalid because the government’s purported interest “in preventing
corruption and the appearance of corruption” did not support such a broad speech restriction. Id.
at 45.
By contrast, the Court upheld several of FECA’s disclosure requirements. But it imposed
narrowing constructions on those requirements to avoid problems of vagueness and overbreadth
under the First Amendment. For the disclosure requirements triggered by independent
expenditures, the Court worried that the Act’s definition of “expenditure”—which required only
a purpose of “influencing” an election or nomination—could be read to cover “both issue
discussion and advocacy of a political result.” Id. at 79. So “[t]o insure that the reach of the
[provision] is not impermissibly broad,” the Court construed the term “expenditure” “to reach
only funds used for communications that expressly advocate the election or defeat of a clearly
identified candidate.” Id. at 80. This meant that, to trigger the Act’s disclosure requirements, a
communication would need to contain “express words of advocacy of election or defeat, such as
‘vote for,’ ‘elect,’ ‘support,’ ‘cast your ballot for,’ ‘Smith for Congress,’ ‘vote against,’ ‘defeat,’
[or] ‘reject,’” Id. at 44 n.52; see id. at 80 & n.108. These expressions have since been called
Buckley’s “magic words.” McConnell, 540 U.S. at 126.
The Buckley Court then reached a similar conclusion with respect to disclosure
requirements triggered by “political committee” status. As the Court explained:
The general requirement that “political committees” and candidates disclose their
expenditures could raise similar vagueness problems, for “political committee” is
defined only in terms of amount of annual “contributions” and “expenditures,” and
could be interpreted to reach groups engaged purely in issue discussion. The lower
17
courts have construed the words “political committee” more narrowly. To fulfill
the purposes of the Act they need only encompass organizations that are under the
control of a candidate or the major purpose of which is the nomination or election
of a candidate.
424 U.S. at 79. Thus, the “major purpose” requirement was born.
Absent any congressional action in the decades since Buckley, this Court might find it
unclear whether ads (1) mentioning candidates and (2) airing near elections but (3) not using
Buckley’s “magic words” should count toward an election-related major purpose. But in passing
the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (“BCRA”), Congress unambiguously expressed its
will on this issue and foreclosed the approach that the Commission took here.
In BCRA, Congress sought to mitigate two perceived problems with federal election
financing that were prompted (at least in part) by Buckley. Title I of the Act was “Congress’
effort to plug the soft-money loophole”—that is, the ability to have money contributed to state
and local political parties effectively channeled to national parties while evading FECA’s
contribution limits and disclosure requirements. McConnell, 540 U.S. at 133. Title II, the
provision relevant here, aimed to stem the tide of advertisements nominally targeted at issues but
airing near elections—a tide that swelled after Buckley. Id. at 122. Specifically, “[a]s a result of
[Buckley’s] strict reading of the statute, the use or omission of ‘magic words’ such as ‘Elect John
Smith’ or ‘Vote Against Jane Doe’ marked a bright statutory line separating ‘express advocacy’
from ‘issue advocacy.’” Id. at 126. Yet, in Congress’s view, those “two categories of
advertisements proved functionally identical in important respects. Both were used to advocate
the election or defeat of clearly identified federal candidates, even though the so-called issue ads
eschewed the use of magic words.” Id. And, far more than a theoretical problem, the collapsed
distinction between express advocacy and issue advocacy allowed entities—mostly corporations
and unions—to spend “hundreds of millions of dollars” on ads leading up to elections that “were
18
unregulated under FECA.” Id. at 127–28. “Moreover, though ostensibly independent of the
candidates, the ads were often actually coordinated with, and controlled by, the campaigns.” Id.
at 131. The Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs conducted “an extensive investigation
into the campaign practices in the 1996 federal elections” and—while divided along party lines
regarding some of these practices—agreed that the proliferation of so-called issue ads was a
serious problem. Id. at 129.
In response, BCRA created a new category of political communications called
“electioneering communications.” The statute’s definition of these communications “replace[d]
the narrowing construction of FECA’s disclosure provisions adopted by this Court in Buckley”
by providing three clear criteria that triggered regulation. Id. at 189. Instead of covering only
“communications expressly advocating the election or defeat of particular candidates,” the new
disclosure requirements covered ads that (1) referenced to a candidate for federal office, (2) ran
within 60 days of a federal election, and (3) targeted the relevant electorate. And the Act
imposed disclosure requirements on entities who funded those communications. Id. at 190–91.
This legislative history leaves little doubt that Congress saw electioneering
communications as generally aimed at swaying voters. The Supreme Court relied heavily on this
history in McConnell, where it upheld BCRA’s disclosure requirements against First
Amendment challenge. 540 U.S. at 189–202 (controlling opinion of Stevens & O’Connor, JJ.).
The Court’s reasons for doing so further suggest that electioneering communications
presumptively have an electioneering purpose. In rejecting the argument that BCRA’s definition
of “electioneering communications” was unconstitutionally vague and overbroad, the Court
explained that Buckley’s distinction between express and issue advocacy “was the product of
statutory interpretation rather than a constitutional command.” Id. at 192. In the Court’s view,
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BCRA’s definition of electioneering communications created no similar issues of vagueness or
overbreadth—its requirements were “easily understood and objectively determinable.” Id. at
194. Moreover, putting aside Buckley and starting from first principles, the Court explained that
the notion of “a rigid barrier between express advocacy and so-called issue advocacy” could not
be “squared with [its] longstanding recognition that the presence or absence of magic words [i.e.,
“vote for Jane Doe” or “vote Jane Doe out of office”] cannot meaningfully distinguish
electioneering speech from a true issue ad.” Id. at 193. As evidenced by their timing, their
identification of a specific candidate, and their targeting of the relevant electorate, it was clear
that electioneering communications—magic words or not—“were specifically intended to affect
election results.” Id. at 127. In short, the Supreme Court’s reading of BCRA corroborates that
Congress deemed electioneering communications as paradigmatically aimed at swaying voters. 13
Even ignoring all of this legislative history and Supreme Court analysis, Congress’s
intent regarding these ads is manifest in its very choice of labelling them “electioneering
communications.” Instead of using a neutral term like “communications made near federal
elections,” Congress chose a label that by its plain meaning deems the ads to “take part actively
and energetically in a campaign to be elected to public office.” Electioneer, Oxford Dictionary
of English 565 (3d ed. 2010); see also Electioneer, American Heritage Dictionary (5th ed. 2018)
(“To work actively for a candidate or political party.”). Congress’s terms, like its statutory
13
While McConnell was a fractured decision, a majority of the Justices voted to uphold
the disclosure requirements for the reasons stated in the controlling opinion written by Justices
Stevens and O’Connor. See 540 U.S. at 201 (opinion of Stevens & O’Connor, J.J., joined by
Souter, Ginsburg & Breyer, J.J.); see also id. at 286 n.*, 321 (opinion of Kennedy, J., joined by
Rehnquist, C.J., and Scalia, J.) (voting to uphold the relevant disclosure provisions). And all but
one of the Justices in Citizens United relied on the same rationale in rejecting a challenge to
BCRA’s electioneering-related disclosure requirements as applied to certain political ads. 558
U.S. at 368–69; id. at 396 (Stevens, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
20
headings, surely “supply clues” about its intent. Yates v. United States, 135 S. Ct. 1074, 1083
(2015); see also, e.g., Trainmen v. Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Co., 331 U.S. 519, 528–29 (1947)
(explaining that “the title of a statute and the heading of a section” are “tools available for the
resolution of a doubt”). Here, the clue is hardly subtle: Why would Congress call something an
“electioneering communication” if that thing did not generally have a “purpose to nominate or
elect a candidate,” in the sense meant by Buckley?
It is true that BCRA did not touch the text of FECA’s definition of “political committee.”
But a later congressional act can inform the meaning of an earlier one and, importantly here, can
clarify existing ambiguities. “At the time a statute is enacted, it may have a range of plausible
meanings,” but “subsequent acts can shape or focus those meanings. . . . This is particularly so
where the scope of the earlier statute is broad but the subsequent statutes more specifically
address the topic at hand.” FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 143
(2000); see also United States v. Estate of Romani, 523 U.S. 517, 530–31 (1998) (“[A] specific
policy embodied in a later federal statute should control our construction of the priority statute,
even though it had not been expressly amended.”). Here, by declaring that (by and large)
electioneering communications have an inherent purpose of influencing a federal election,
Congress has clarified that the broad term “political committee”—even after Buckley—should
presumptively include organizations that are primarily in the business of funding electioneering
communications.
Why only “presumptively”? Despite the foregoing evidence of Congress’s intent
regarding electioneering ads, the Court is not convinced that Congress intended to categorically
foreclose the Commission from declining to treat a particular electioneering ad as supporting an
election-related major purpose. In rejecting a facial challenge to BCRA’s electioneering
21
restrictions, McConnell recognized that some ads falling within BCRA’s definition of
“electioneering advertisements” may not have a true “electioneering purpose,” even if “the vast
majority of ads clearly had such a purpose.” 540 U.S. at 206 (“The precise percentage of issue
ads that clearly identified a candidate and were aired during those relatively brief preelection
timespans but had no electioneering purpose is a matter of dispute between the parties and
among the judges on the District Court [below].”).
In other words, Congress seems to have left open a small interpretive gap after BCRA:
one that allows the Commission, using its case-by-case approach, to deem an extraordinary
“electioneering communication” as lacking an election-related purpose. The following ad, for
example, would seem to fall within the letter of BCRA’s definition: It runs 60 days before a
midterm election; it does not mention the election or even indirectly reference it (e.g., by
cabining the message’s timeframe to “this November”); the meat of the ad discusses the
substance of a proposed bill; the ad urges the viewer to call a named incumbent representative
and request that she vote for the bill; but it does not make any reference to the incumbent’s prior
voting history or otherwise criticize her. See 52 U.S.C. § 30104(f)(3)(A). That might be the sort
of electioneering communication that could, under the Commission’s case-by-case approach,
properly be deemed lacking an election-related purpose under Buckley despite meeting BCRA’s
definition of “electioneering communication.”
But the Court expects such an ad to be a rare exception. Congress has made a judgment
that run-of-the-mill electioneering communications have the purpose of influencing an election;
22
an ad meeting the statutory definition of an electioneering communication generally indicates a
purpose of nominating or electing a candidate.
B. The Commission’s Analysis Did Not Give Effect to Congress’s Clear Intent
The controlling Commissioners’ multifactor analysis ignores Congress’s expressed intent
regarding electioneering advertisements. The very first sentence of their multifactor test speaks
volumes: “In evaluating major purpose, our starting point is the language of the communication
itself.” J.A. 1767. Starting with the language of a political ad might be justifiable if the ad aired
nowhere near a federal election, or if it did not mention a candidate. But, as just explained, when
it comes to electioneering communications Congress has already determined that they are
presumptively designed to influence elections. The remainder of the Commission’s test in no
way accounts for that fact:
[W]e look at the ad’s specific language for references to candidacies, elections,
voting, political parties, or other indicia that the costs of the ad should be counted
towards a determination that the organization’s major purpose is to nominate or
elect candidates. We also examine the extent to which the ad focuses on issues
important to the group or merely on the candidates referenced in the ad.
Additionally, we consider information beyond the content of the ad only to the
extent necessary to provide context to understand better the message being
conveyed. Finally, we ascertain whether the communication contains a call to
action and, if so, whether the call relates to the speaker's issue agenda or, rather, to
the election or defeat of federal candidates.
J.A. 1767–68. The Commission may be permitted to use these or similar factors in assessing
whether an electioneering ad overcomes the presumption that it is aimed to elect a candidate.
But engaging in a holistic, de novo review of the ad based on those factors allows the
Commission to treat run-of-the-mill electioneering ads—those highly critical of a candidate’s
positions but lacking the “magic words” directing viewers to vote him out of office—as not
23
indicating an electioneering purpose. That framework cannot be squared with Congress’s views
on the issue.
Indeed, the controlling Commissioners’ analysis of AAN’s ads in this case is strong
evidence that their multifactor approach, if anything, builds in a presumption that runs in the
opposite direction of what Congress intended—i.e., that it tilts the balance in favor of finding
that electioneering communications do not have an electioneering purpose. Take the ad titled
“Skype,” which identified Congresswoman Dina Titus, a Democrat from Nevada who was
narrowly defeated in her 2010 reelection bid:
Person l: Hey, what’s up?
Person 2: Hey. You have to check out the article I just sent you. Apparently
convicted rapists can get Viagra paid for by the new health care bill.
Person 1: Are you serious?
Person 2: Yep. I mean, Viagra for rapists? With my tax dollars? And
Congresswoman Titus voted for it.
Person 1: Titus voted for it?
Person 2: Yep. I mean, what is going on in Washington?
Person 1: In November, we need to tell Titus to repeal it. [Superimposed text:
“Tell Congresswoman Titus to vote for repeal in November. Vote Yes on H.R.
4903. (202) 225-3252.”]
J.A. 1776.
The controlling Commissioners did not find that this ad (nor any others mentioning
healthcare) had an election-related purpose. “The criticisms contained in the ads,” they
explained, “are couched in terms of past votes taken by the named officeholder and are
accompanied by calls to action designed to influence the officeholders’ votes in the lame-duck
session.” J.A. 1776. Seriously? Is it really plausible that the attack on Titus’s past vote for the
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Affordable Care Act—for supplying “Viagra to rapists” no less—was designed to mobilize
Titus’s constituents to change her view on the Obama Administration’s signature legislative
initiative, rather than to oust her from office for casting that vote? And would a sophisticated
organization like AAN conceivably invest millions of dollars on ads in an effort to get the
Democratic-controlled House that had just passed the Act to turn around and repeal it only
months later? Perhaps the ad could be charitably read as having a dual purpose—maybe some
viewers would indeed be motivated to call Titus and tell her to vote for a healthcare repeal bill if
it came up in the anticipated lame-duck session. (That turned out to be a big “if”—the
Commission cites no evidence, and the Court is aware of none, that the House actually
considered a repeal bill during the December lame-duck session.) But surely the primary
purpose of this ad was to convince viewers to vote against Titus. Indeed, the ad is awfully close
to the hypothetical posed by the Supreme Court in McConnell to highlight the illusory distinction
between express advocacy and issue advocacy: An ad that, instead of urging viewers to “vote
against Jane Doe,” “condemned Jane Doe’s record on a particular issue before exhorting viewers
to ‘call Jane Doe and tell her what you think.’” 540 U.S. at 127 (quoting 251 F. Supp. 2d 176,
304 (D.D.C. 2003) (Henderson, J., concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part)).
That the Commissioners readily characterized “Skype” and similar ads as unrelated to elections
demonstrates the mismatch between their framework and Congress’s understanding of
electioneering ads. Their approach in fact flirts with a reverse “magic words” test:
electioneering communications that harangue a candidate are exempt so long as they instruct the
viewer to “call” her representative rather than to “vote against” him.
None of the Commission’s arguments in favor of its approach are availing. As it did
when justifying its first dismissal, the Commission cites WRTL II, which (again) found that
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spending on electioneering communications could be restricted only if the ads were, as an
objective matter, “the functional equivalent of express advocacy,” id. at 469. Relying on that
case, the Commission insists that even if it may not apply a categorical rule that turns on whether
the ad contains express advocacy (or the functional equivalent), it may consider whether the ad
resembles express advocacy in deciding whether it has an election-related purpose. FEC’s Mot.
Summ. J. at 40 (“[The Court’s] determination did not preclude Commissioners from analyzing
AAN’s communications by reference to their content, consistent with the Supreme Court’s
analysis in WRTL, when considering whether the ads were electoral in nature.”). That’s true so
far as it goes: the Commission is not outright forbidden from considering the content of an
electioneering communication. But because of BCRA, that consideration must follow a strong
presumption that an electioneering communication indicates a purpose of electing a candidate.
More fundamentally, the Commission continues to overread WRTL II for the idea that
the primary goal in evaluating AAN’s ads should be to determine whether the ads’ content bears
“indicia of express advocacy.” FEC’s Mot. Summ. J. at 39 (quoting WRTL II, 551 U.S. at 470).
WRTL II focused narrowly on an electioneering communication’s content, to the exclusion of
“contextual factors” like the ad’s timing, for a particular reason: the First Amendment demanded
an objective, narrowly tailored standard for bans on speech. 551 U.S. at 473; see id. at 469–70
(examining whether ad’s content had “indicia of express advocacy”). But, again, McConnell and
Citizens United v. FEC—the latter of which came after WRTL II—foreclose any argument that
in the disclosure setting the First Amendment requires that a regulated communication contain
the functional equivalent of express advocacy. See also Independence Institute v. FEC, 216 F.
Supp. 3d 176, 193 (D.D.C. 2016) (Millett, J.) (in rejecting a constitutional challenge to the donor
disclosure requirement as applied to a particular electioneering communication, explaining that
26
the challenger’s “proposed constitutional exception for ‘genuine’ issue advocacy is entirely
unworkable as a constitutional rule”). In other words, the Supreme Court has seen no problem
with disclosure requirements triggered solely by an electioneering communication’s context: its
timing, its reference to a candidate, and its viewership. And Congress’s view, made plain in
BCRA, is that the presence of those contextual factors inherently suggests an election-related
purpose.
The Commission falls back on Buckley. In the Commission’s view, the fact that Buckley
read FECA to avoid regulating “groups engaged purely in issue discussion,” 424 U.S. at 79,
means that the Commission must evaluate the content of an entity’s political ads to determine
whether the ads are, in fact, “issue discussion.” But again, Congress in BCRA cabined some of
the Commission’s discretion by defining a subset of political ads—electioneering
communications—that by definition are related to federal elections. After BCRA, the
Commission cannot review electioneering communications de novo to determine whether they
qualify as pure issue discussion. The statute emphatically placed electioneering advertisements
on the election-related side of Buckley’s line, and the Commission must pay heed to that
placement when evaluating the major purpose of an entity that spends money on electioneering
communications.
Finally, the Commission emphasizes this Court’s prior refusal to impose a bright-line
rule—one that would require it to count all electioneering communications toward an election-
related major purpose. According to the Commission, that refusal implicitly endorsed its
approach to electioneering communications. FEC’s Mot. Summ. J. at 36. Not so. To be sure,
the Court continues to believe that an inflexible rule would be incompatible with the FEC’s
recognized power to resolve major-purpose questions on a case-by-case basis. Such a rule would
27
also conflict with the Supreme Court’s recognition in McConnell that some “issue ads” might
really be just that, even if run near elections. That does not mean, though, that the Commission
has unfettered discretion to judge electioneering ads. Rather, FECA and BCRA make clear that
Congress intended to foreclose the Commission from applying a major-purpose framework that
does not, at a minimum, presumptively consider spending on electioneering ads as indicating an
election-related major purpose.14 The Commission may in special circumstances conclude that
an electioneering ad does not have such a purpose. But given Congress’s recognition that the
“vast majority” of electioneering ads have the purpose of electing a candidate, the Commission’s
exclusion of electioneering ads from its major-purpose analysis should be the rare exception, not
the rule. McConnell, 540 U.S. at 206; see also CREW, 209 F. Supp. 3d at 93 (“[I]t blinks reality
to conclude that many of the ads considered by the Commissioners in this case were not designed
to influence the election or defeat of a particular candidate in an ongoing race.”).
Having found a legal error in the Commissioners’ approach, the appropriate remedy here
is to remand this matter to the Commission. The Court appreciates that the Commission may, on
remand, yet again exclude from its analysis some of the ads that it previously excluded. But
because the controlling Commissioners did not begin with a presumption that an electioneering
ad evinces an election-related purpose, the Court is not so confident that they would reach the
14
This is not to say that spending on advertisements is the sole relevant factor in
determining an entity’s major purpose. The point here is that to the extent that spending on
advertising is relevant—and surely it is to some degree—the Commission must account for
spending in a way that reflects an electioneering ad’s presumptive purpose of affecting an
upcoming election.
28
same outcome on remand to warrant affirming their decision under the principle of “harmless
error.”15
IV. Conclusion
The Court recognizes that the Commission, like all executive agencies, must comply with
directives from the two other branches of government—directives that sometimes push the
agency in opposite directions. The problem here is that the FEC has equated two directives that
are plainly unequal in their relevance to the issue at hand. Congress decades ago laid down a
clear, broad definition of the term “political committee” in FECA that would obviously capture
AAN; the Supreme Court in Buckley then cabined that definition in a way that requires the
Commission to conduct a major purpose analysis. But Congress later clarified, through BCRA,
that it viewed the vast majority of electioneering communications as corroborating a purpose of
electing candidates to federal office. And while the Supreme Court in several cases has struck
down other aspects of FECA and BCRA, it has never suggested that its constitutional concerns
apply in the realm of disclosure requirements. Indeed, the Supreme Court has now twice
reaffirmed that there is no constitutional distinction between issue-based and express advocacy in
the disclosure context. Absent such a distinction, FECA and BCRA require the agency to
presume that spending on electioneering communications contributes to a “major purpose” of
15
Because the Administrative Procedure Act instructs courts to take “due account . . . of
the rule of prejudicial error,” 5 U.S.C. § 706, courts reviewing agency action under that Act will
not remand to the agency if “the agency’s mistake did not affect the outcome.” PDK Labs., Inc.
v. DEA, 362 F.3d 786, 799 (D.C. Cir. 2004). Though FECA contains no express requirement of
prejudice, courts have invoked the principle in reviewing an FEC decision. See, e.g., Level the
Playing Field v. FEC, 232 F. Supp. 3d 130, 142–43 (D.D.C. 2017). The Court therefore assumes
that, in theory, a harmless legal error would not require remanding this case to the Commission.
29
nominating or electing a candidate for federal office, and, in turn, to presume that such spending
supports designating an entity as a “political committee” under FECA.
Because the Commission failed to apply those presumptions, its dismissal of CREW’s
complaints against AAN was “contrary to law.” The Court, accordingly, will grant CREW’s
motion for summary judgment, deny the FEC’s and AAN’s cross-motions, and direct the
Commission to conform with this declaration within 30 days. 52 U.S.C. § 30109(a)(8)(C). If the
FEC does not timely conform with the Court’s declaration, CREW may bring “a civil action to
remedy the violation involved in the original complaint.” Id. A separate Order accompanies this
Memorandum Opinion.
CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER
United States District Judge
Date: March 20, 2018
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