(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2006 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION v. WISCONSIN
RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
No. 06–969. Argued April 25, 2007—Decided June 25, 2007*
Section 203 of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA),
makes it a federal crime for a corporation to use its general treasury
funds to pay for any “electioneering communication,” 2 U. S. C.
§441b(b)(2), which BCRA defines as any broadcast that refers to a
candidate for federal office and is aired within 30 days of a federal
primary election or 60 days of a federal general election in the juris
diction where that candidate is running, §434(f)(3)(A). In McConnell
v. Federal Election Comm’n, 540 U. S. 93, this Court upheld §203
against a First Amendment facial challenge even though the section
encompassed not only campaign speech, or “express advocacy” pro
moting a candidate’s election or defeat, but also “issue advocacy,” or
speech about public issues more generally, that also mentions such a
candidate. The Court concluded there was no overbreadth concern to
the extent the speech in question was the “functional equivalent” of
express advocacy. Id., at 204–205, 206.
On July 26, 2004, appellee Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. (WRTL),
began broadcasting advertisements declaring that a group of Sena
tors was filibustering to delay and block federal judicial nominees
and telling voters to contact Wisconsin Senators Feingold and Kohl to
urge them to oppose the filibuster. WRTL planned to run the ads
throughout August 2004 and finance them with its general treasury
funds. Recognizing, however, that as of August 15, 30 days before
the Wisconsin primary, the ads would be illegal “electioneering com
munication[s]” under BCRA §203, but believing that it nonetheless
——————
* Together with No. 06–970, McCain, United States Senator, et al. v.
Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc., also on appeal from the same court.
2 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Syllabus
had a First Amendment right to broadcast them, WRTL filed suit
against the Federal Election Commission (FEC), seeking declaratory
and injunctive relief and alleging that §203’s prohibition was uncon
stitutional as applied to the three ads in question, as well as any ma
terially similar ads WRTL might run in the future. Just before the
BCRA blackout, the three-judge District Court denied a preliminary
injunction, concluding that McConnell’s reasoning that §203 was not
facially overbroad left no room for such “as-applied” challenges.
WRTL did not run its ads during the blackout period, and the court
subsequently dismissed the complaint. This Court vacated that
judgment, holding that McConnell “did not purport to resolve future
as-applied challenges” to §203. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. v. Fed
eral Election Comm’n (WRTL I), 546 U. S. 410, 412. On remand, the
District Court granted WRTL summary judgment, holding §203 un
constitutional as applied to the three ads. The court first found that
adjudication was not barred by mootness because the controversy
was capable of repetition, yet evading review. On the merits, it con
cluded that the ads were genuine issue ads, not express advocacy or
its “functional equivalent” under McConnell, and held that no com
pelling interest justified BCRA’s regulation of such ads.
Held: The judgment is affirmed.
466 F. Supp. 2d 195, affirmed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE delivered the opinion of the Court with respect
to Parts I and II, concluding that the Court has jurisdiction to decide
these cases. The FEC argues that the cases are moot because the
2004 election has passed and WRTL neither asserts a continuing in
terest in running its ads nor identifies any reason to believe that a
significant dispute over Senate filibusters of judicial nominees will
occur in the foreseeable future. These cases, however, fit comfortably
within the established exception to mootness for disputes capable of
repetition, yet evading review. That exception applies where “(1) the
challenged action is in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior
to cessation or expiration; and (2) there is a reasonable expectation
that the same complaining party will be subject to the same action
again,” Spencer v. Kemna, 523 U. S. 1, 17. Both circumstances are
present here. First, it would be unreasonable to expect that WRTL
could have obtained complete judicial review of its claims in time to
air its ads during the BCRA blackout periods. Indeed, two BCRA
blackout periods have passed during the pendency of this action.
Second, there exists a reasonable expectation that the same “contro
versy” involving the same party will recur: WRTL has credibly
claimed that it plans to run materially similar targeted ads during
future blackout periods, and there is no reason to believe that the
FEC will refrain from prosecuting future BCRA violations. Pp. 7–10.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 3
Syllabus
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, joined by JUSTICE ALITO, concluded that BCRA
§203 is unconstitutional as applied to the ads at issue in these cases.
Pp. 10–29.
1. The speech at issue is not the “functional equivalent” of express
campaign speech. Pp. 10–22.
(a) Appellants are wrong in arguing that WRTL has the burden
of demonstrating that §203 is unconstitutional. Because §203 bur
dens political speech, it is subject to strict scrutiny, see, e.g., McCon
nell, supra, at 205, under which the Government must prove that ap
plying BCRA to WRTL’s ads furthers a compelling governmental
interest and is narrowly tailored to achieve that interest, see First
Nat. Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U. S. 765, 786. Given that
McConnell, supra, at 206, already ruled that BCRA survives strict
scrutiny to the extent it regulates express advocacy or its functional
equivalent, the FEC’s burden is not onerous insofar as these ads fit
this description. Pp. 10–11.
(b) Contrary to the FEC’s contention, McConnell, 540 U. S., at
205–206, did not establish an intent-and-effect test for determining if
a particular ad is the functional equivalent of express advocacy. In
deed, McConnell did not adopt any test for future as-applied chal
lenges, but simply grounded its analysis in the evidentiary record,
which included two key studies that separated ads based on whether
they were intended to, or had the effect of, supporting candidates for
federal office. Id., at 308–309. More importantly, Buckley v. Valeo,
424 U. S. 1, 14, 43–44, rejected an intent-and-effect test for distin
guishing between discussions of issues and candidates, and McCon
nell did not purport to overrule Buckley on this point—or even ad
dress what Buckley had to say on the subject. Pp. 11–15.
(c) Because WRTL’s ads may reasonably be interpreted as some
thing other than an appeal to vote for or against a specific candidate,
they are not the functional equivalent of express advocacy, and there
fore fall outside McConnell’s scope. To safeguard freedom of speech
on public issues, the proper standard for an as-applied challenge to
BCRA §203 must be objective, focusing on the communication’s sub
stance rather than on amorphous considerations of intent and effect.
See Buckley, supra, at 43–44. It must entail minimal if any discov
ery, to allow parties to resolve disputes quickly without chilling
speech through the threat of burdensome litigation. See Virginia v.
Hicks, 539 U. S. 113, 119. And it must eschew “the open-ended
rough-and-tumble of factors,” which “invit[es] complex argument in a
trial court and a virtually inevitable appeal.” Jerome B. Grubart, Inc.
v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., 513 U. S. 527, 547. In short, it
must give the benefit of any doubt to protecting rather than stifling
speech. See New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254, 269–270.
4 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Syllabus
In light of these considerations, a court should find that an ad is the
functional equivalent of express advocacy only if the ad is susceptible
of no reasonable interpretation other than as an appeal to vote for or
against a specific candidate. WRTL’s three ads are plainly not the
functional equivalent of express advocacy under this test. First, their
content is consistent with that of a genuine issue ad: They focus and
take a position on a legislative issue and exhort the public to adopt
that position and to contact public officials with respect to the matter.
Second, their content lacks indicia of express advocacy: They do not
mention an election, candidacy, political party, or challenger; and
they take no position on a candidate’s character, qualifications, or
fitness for office. Pp. 15–22.
2. Because WRTL’s ads are not express advocacy or its functional
equivalent, and because appellants identify no interest sufficiently
compelling to justify burdening WRTL’s speech, BCRA §203 is uncon
stitutional as applied to the ads. The section can be constitutionally
applied only if it is narrowly tailored to further a compelling interest.
E.g., McConnell, supra, at 205. None of the interests that might jus
tify regulating WRTL’s ads are sufficiently compelling. Although the
Court has long recognized “the governmental interest in preventing
corruption and the appearance of corruption” in election campaigns,
Buckley, 424 U. S., at 45, it has invoked this interest as a reason for
upholding contribution limits, id., at 26–27, and suggested that it
might also justify limits on electioneering expenditures posing the
same dangers as large contributions, id., at 45. McConnell arguably
applied this interest to ads that were the “functional equivalent” of
express advocacy. See 540 U. S., at 204–206. But to justify regula
tion of WRTL’s ads, this interest must be stretched yet another step
to ads that are not the functional equivalent of express advocacy. Is
sue ads like WRTL’s are not equivalent to contributions, and the cor
ruption interest cannot justify regulating them. A second possible
compelling interest lies in addressing “the corrosive and distorting ef
fects of immense aggregations of wealth that are accumulated with
the help of the corporate form and that have little or no correlation to
the public’s support for the corporation’s political ideas.” Austin v.
Michigan Chamber of Commerce, 494 U. S. 652, 660. McConnell held
that this interest justifies regulating the “functional equivalent” of
campaign speech, 540 U. S., at 205–206. This interest cannot be ex
tended further to apply to genuine issue ads like WRTL’s, see, e.g.,
id., at 206, n. 88, because doing so would call into question this
Court’s holdings that the corporate identity of a speaker does not
strip corporations of all free speech rights. WRTL I reinforced the va
lidity of this point by holding §203 susceptible to as-applied chal
lenges. 546 U. S., at 411–412. Pp. 23–28.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 5
Syllabus
3. These cases present no occasion to revisit McConnell’s holding
that a corporation’s express advocacy of a candidate or his opponent
shortly before an election may be prohibited, along with the func
tional equivalent of such express advocacy. But when it comes to de
fining what speech qualifies as the functional equivalent of express
advocacy subject to such a ban—the question here—the Court should
give the benefit of the doubt to speech, not censorship. Pp. 28–29.
JUSTICE SCALIA, joined by JUSTICE KENNEDY and JUSTICE THOMAS,
agreed that the Court has jurisdiction in these cases and concurred in
the Court’s judgment because he would overrule that part of McCon
nell v. Federal Election Comm’n, 540 U. S. 93, upholding §203(a) of
the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA). Pp. 4–23.
1. The pertinent case law begins with Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1,
in which the Court held, inter alia, that a federal limitation on cam
paign expenditures not made in coordination with a candidate’s cam
paign (contained in the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971
(FECA)) was unconstitutional, id., at 39–51. In light of vagueness
concerns, the Court narrowly construed the independent-expenditure
provision to cover only express advocacy of the election or defeat of a
clearly identified candidate for federal office by use of such magic
words “as ‘vote for,’ ‘elect,’ . . . ‘vote against,’ ‘defeat,’ ‘reject.’ ” Id., at
44, and n. 52. This narrowing construction excluded so-called “issue
advocacy” referring to a clearly identified candidate’s position on an
issue, but not expressly advocating his election or defeat. Even as
narrowly construed, however, the Court struck the provision down.
Id., at 45–46. Despite Buckley, some argued that independent ex
penditures by corporations should be treated differently. A post-
Buckley case, First Nat. Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U. S. 765,
776–777, struck down, on First Amendment grounds, a state statute
prohibiting corporations from spending money in connection with a
referendum. The Court strayed far from these principles, however, in
Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce, 494 U. S. 652, upholding
state restrictions on corporations’ independent expenditures in sup
port of, or in opposition to, candidates for state office, id., at 654–655.
Austin was wrongly decided, but at least it was limited to express ad
vocacy. Nonexpress advocacy was presumed to remain protected un
der Buckley and Bellotti, even when engaged in by corporations, until
McConnell. McConnell held, inter alia, that the compelling govern
mental interest supporting restrictions on corporate expenditures for
express advocacy—i.e., Austin’s perceived “corrosive and distorting ef
fects of immense aggregations of [corporate] wealth,” 540 U. S., at
205—also justified extending those restrictions to ads run during the
BCRA blackout period “to the extent . . . [they] are the functional
equivalent of express advocacy,” id., at 206 (emphasis added).
6 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Syllabus
McConnell upheld BCRA §203(a) against a facial challenge. Subse
quently, in Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. v. Federal Election Comm’n,
546 U. S. 410, 411–412, the Court held that McConnell did not fore
close as-applied challenges to §203. Pp. 4–10.
2. McConnell’s holding concerning §203 was wrong. The answer to
whether WRTL meets the standard for prevailing in an as-applied
challenge requires the Court to articulate the standard. The most
obvious standard is McConnell’s, which asks whether an ad is the
“functional equivalent of express advocacy,” 540 U. S., at 206. The
fundamental and inescapable problem with this test, with the princi
pal opinion’s susceptible-of-no-other-reasonable-interpretation stan
dard, and with other similar tests is that each is impermissibly vague
and thus ineffective to vindicate the fundamental First Amendment
rights at issue. Buckley itself compelled the conclusion that such
tests fall short when it narrowed the statutory language there at is
sue to cover only advertising that used the magic words of express
advocacy. 424 U. S., at 43–44. The only plausible explanation for
Buckley’s “highly strained” reading of FECA, McConnell, supra, at
280, is that the Court there eschewed narrowing constructions that
would have been more faithful to FECA’s text and more effective at
capturing campaign speech because those tests were all too vague. If
Buckley foreclosed such vagueness in a statutory test, it also must
foreclose such vagueness in an as-applied test. Yet any clear rule
that would protect all genuine issue ads would cover such a substan
tial number of ads prohibited by §203 that §203 would be rendered
substantially overbroad. Thus, McConnell (which presupposed the
availability of as-applied challenges) was mistaken. Pp. 10–18.
3. Stare decisis would not prevent the Court from overruling
McConnell’s §203 holding. This Court’s “considered practice” is not to
apply that principle “as rigidly in constitutional as in nonconstitu
tional cases,” Glidden Co. v. Zdanok, 370 U. S. 530, 543, and it has
not hesitated to overrule a decision offensive to the First Amendment
that was decided just a few years earlier, see West Virginia Bd. of Ed.
v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624, 642. Pp. 19–22.
ROBERTS, C. J., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered
the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I and II, in which SCALIA,
KENNEDY, THOMAS, and ALITO, JJ., joined, and an opinion with respect
to Parts III and IV, in which ALITO, J., joined. ALITO, J., filed a concur
ring opinion. SCALIA, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and concur
ring in the judgment, in which KENNEDY and THOMAS, JJ., joined.
SOUTER, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which STEVENS, GINSBURG, and
BREYER, JJ., joined.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 1
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 06–969 and 06–970
_________________
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, APPELLANT
06–969 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN, ET AL., APPELLANTS
06–970 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
ON APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
[June 25, 2007]
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS announced the judgment of the
Court and delivered the opinion of the Court with respect
to Parts I and II, and an opinion with respect to Parts III
and IV, in which JUSTICE ALITO joins.
Section 203 of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of
2002 (BCRA), 116 Stat. 91, 2 U. S. C. §441b(b)(2) (2000
ed., Supp. IV), makes it a federal crime for any corporation
to broadcast, shortly before an election, any communica
tion that names a federal candidate for elected office and
is targeted to the electorate. In McConnell v. Federal
Election Comm’n, 540 U. S. 93 (2003), this Court consid
ered whether §203 was facially overbroad under the First
Amendment because it captured within its reach not only
campaign speech, or “express advocacy,” but also speech
about public issues more generally, or “issue advocacy,”
that mentions a candidate for federal office. The Court
2 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
concluded that there was no overbreadth concern to the
extent the speech in question was the “functional equiva
lent” of express campaign speech. Id., at 204–205, 206.
On the other hand, the Court “assume[d]” that the inter
ests it had found to “justify the regulation of campaign
speech might not apply to the regulation of genuine issue
ads.” Id., at 206, n. 88. The Court nonetheless deter
mined that §203 was not facially overbroad. Even assum
ing §203 “inhibit[ed] some constitutionally protected cor
porate and union speech,” the Court concluded that those
challenging the law on its face had failed to carry their
“heavy burden” of establishing that all enforcement of the
law should therefore be prohibited. Id., at 207.
Last Term, we reversed a lower court ruling, arising in
the same litigation before us now, that our decision in
McConnell left “no room” for as-applied challenges to §203.
App. to Juris. Statement 52a. We held on the contrary
that “[i]n upholding §203 against a facial challenge, we did
not purport to resolve future as-applied challenges.”
Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. v. Federal Election Comm’n,
546 U. S. 410, 411–412 (2006) (per curiam) (WRTL I).
We now confront such an as-applied challenge. Resolv
ing it requires us first to determine whether the speech at
issue is the “functional equivalent” of speech expressly
advocating the election or defeat of a candidate for federal
office, or instead a “genuine issue a[d].” McConnell, supra,
at 206, and n. 88. We have long recognized that the dis
tinction between campaign advocacy and issue advocacy
“may often dissolve in practical application. Candidates,
especially incumbents, are intimately tied to public issues
involving legislative proposals and governmental actions.”
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1, 42 (1976) (per curiam). Our
development of the law in this area requires us, however,
to draw such a line, because we have recognized that the
interests held to justify the regulation of campaign speech
and its “functional equivalent” “might not apply” to the
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 3
Opinion of the Court
regulation of issue advocacy. McConnell, supra, at 206,
and n. 88.
In drawing that line, the First Amendment requires us
to err on the side of protecting political speech rather than
suppressing it. We conclude that the speech at issue in
this as-applied challenge is not the “functional equivalent”
of express campaign speech. We further conclude that the
interests held to justify restricting corporate campaign
speech or its functional equivalent do not justify restrict
ing issue advocacy, and accordingly we hold that BCRA
§203 is unconstitutional as applied to the advertisements
at issue in these cases.
I
Prior to BCRA, corporations were free under federal law
to use independent expenditures to engage in political
speech so long as that speech did not expressly advocate
the election or defeat of a clearly identified federal candi
date. See Federal Election Comm’n v. Massachusetts
Citizens for Life, Inc., 479 U. S. 238, 249 (1986) (MCFL);
Buckley, supra, at 44–45; 2 U. S. C. §§441b(a), (b)(2) (2000
ed. and Supp. IV).
BCRA significantly cut back on corporations’ ability to
engage in political speech. BCRA §203, at issue in these
cases, makes it a crime for any labor union or incorporated
entity—whether the United Steelworkers, the American
Civil Liberties Union, or General Motors—to use its gen
eral treasury funds to pay for any “electioneering commu
nication.” §441b(b)(2) (2000 ed., Supp. IV). BCRA’s defi
nition of “electioneering communication” is clear and
expansive. It encompasses any broadcast, cable, or satel
lite communication that refers to a candidate for federal
office and that is aired within 30 days of a federal primary
election or 60 days of a federal general election in the
jurisdiction in which that candidate is running for office.
4 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of the Court
§434(f)(3)(A).1
Appellee Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. (WRTL), is a
nonprofit, nonstock, ideological advocacy corporation
recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as tax exempt
under §501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code. On July
26, 2004, as part of what it calls a “grassroots lobbying
campaign,” Brief for Appellee 8, WRTL began broadcast
ing a radio advertisement entitled “Wedding.” The tran
script of “Wedding” reads as follows:
“ ‘PASTOR: And who gives this woman to be mar
ried to this man?
“ ‘BRIDE’S FATHER: Well, as father of the bride, I
certainly could. But instead, I’d like to share a few
tips on how to properly install drywall. Now you put
the drywall up . . .
“ ‘VOICE-OVER: Sometimes it’s just not fair to de
lay an important decision.
“ ‘But in Washington it’s happening. A group of
Senators is using the filibuster delay tactic to block
federal judicial nominees from a simple “yes” or “no”
vote. So qualified candidates don’t get a chance to
——————
1 Subparagraph (A) provides:
“(i) The term ‘electioneering communication’ means any broadcast,
cable, or satellite communication which—
“(I) refers to a clearly identified candidate for Federal office;
“(II) is made within—
“(aa) 60 days before a general, special, or runoff election for the office
sought by the candidate; or
“(bb) 30 days before a primary or preference election, or a convention
or caucus of a political party that has authority to nominate a candi
date, for the office sought by the candidate; and
“(III) in the case of a communication which refers to a candidate for
an office other than President or Vice President, is targeted to the
relevant electorate.” 2 U. S. C. §434(f)(3)(A) (2000 ed., Supp. IV).
Subsection (B) defines exceptions to “electioneering communication” not
relevant to this litigation. Subsection (C) defines the term “targeted to
the relevant electorate.”
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 5
Opinion of the Court
serve.
“ ‘It’s politics at work, causing gridlock and backing
up some of our courts to a state of emergency.
“ ‘Contact Senators Feingold and Kohl and tell them
to oppose the filibuster.
“ ‘Visit: BeFair.org
“ ‘Paid for by Wisconsin Right to Life (befair.org),
which is responsible for the content of this advertising
and not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s
committee.’ ” 466 F. Supp. 2d 195, 198, n. 3 (DC
2006).
On the same day, WRTL aired a similar radio ad entitled
“Loan.”2 It had also invested treasury funds in producing
a television ad entitled “Waiting,”3 which is similar in
——————
2 The radio script for “Loan” differs from “Wedding” only in its lead-in.
“Loan” begins:
“ ‘LOAN OFFICER: Welcome Mr. and Mrs. Shulman. We’ve reviewed
your loan application, along with your credit report, the appraisal on
the house, the inspections, and well . . .
“ ‘COUPLE: Yes, yes . . . we’re listening.
“ ‘OFFICER: Well, it all reminds me of a time I went fishing with my
father. We were on the Wolf River Waupaca . . .
“ ‘VOICE-OVER: Sometimes it’s just not fair to delay an important
decision.
“ ‘But in Washington it’s happening. . . .’ ” 466 F. Supp. 2d, at 198,
n. 4.
The remainder of the script is identical to “Wedding.”
3 In “Waiting,” the images on the television ad depict a “ ‘middle-aged
man being as productive as possible while his professional life is in
limbo.’ ” Id., at 198, n. 5. The man reads the morning paper, polishes
his shoes, scans through his Rolodex, and does other similar activities.
The television script for this ad reads:
“ ‘VOICE-OVER: There are a lot of judicial nominees out there who
can’t go to work. Their careers are put on hold because a group of
Senators is filibustering—blocking qualified nominees from a simple
“yes” or “no” vote.
“ ‘It’s politics at work and it’s causing gridlock. . . .’ ” Ibid.
The remainder of the script is virtually identical to “Wedding.”
6 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of the Court
substance and format to “Wedding” and “Loan.”
WRTL planned on running “Wedding,” “Waiting,” and
“Loan” throughout August 2004 and financing the ads
with funds from its general treasury. It recognized, how
ever, that as of August 15, 30 days prior to the Wisconsin
primary, the ads would be illegal “electioneering commu
nication[s]” under BCRA §203.
Believing that it nonetheless possessed a First Amend
ment right to broadcast these ads, WRTL filed suit against
the Federal Election Commission (FEC) on July 28, 2004,
seeking declaratory and injunctive relief before a three-
judge District Court. See note following 2 U. S. C. §437h
(2000 ed., Supp. IV); 28 U. S. C. §2284. WRTL alleged
that BCRA’s prohibition on the use of corporate treasury
funds for “electioneering communication[s]” as defined in
the Act is unconstitutional as applied to “Wedding,”
“Loan,” and “Waiting,” as well as any materially similar
ads it might seek to run in the future.
Just before the BCRA blackout period was to begin, the
District Court denied a preliminary injunction, concluding
that “the reasoning of the McConnell Court leaves no room
for the kind of ‘as applied’ challenge WRTL propounds
before us.” App. to Juris. Statement 52a. In response to
this ruling, WRTL did not run its ads during the blackout
period. The District Court subsequently dismissed
WRTL’s complaint. See id., at 47a–48a (“WRTL’s ‘as
applied’ challenge to BCRA [§203] is foreclosed by the
Supreme Court’s decision in McConnell”). On appeal, we
vacated the District Court’s judgment, holding that
McConnell “did not purport to resolve future as-applied
challenges” to BCRA §203, and remanded “for the District
Court to consider the merits of WRTL’s as-applied chal
lenge in the first instance.” WRTL I, 546 U. S., at 412.
On remand, after allowing four Members of Congress to
intervene as defendants, the three-judge District Court
granted summary judgment for WRTL, holding BCRA
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 7
Opinion of the Court
§203 unconstitutional as applied to the three advertise
ments WRTL planned to run during the 2004 blackout
period. The District Court first found adjudication of the
dispute not barred by mootness because the controversy
was “ ‘capable of repetition, yet evading review.’ ” 466
F. Supp. 2d, at 202. Turning to the merits, the court
began by noting that under McConnell, BCRA could con
stitutionally proscribe “express advocacy”—defined as ads
that expressly advocate the election or defeat of a candi
date for federal office—and the “functional equivalent” of
such advocacy. 466 F. Supp. 2d, at 204. Stating that it
was limiting its inquiry to “language within the four cor
ners” of the ads, id., at 207, the District Court concluded
that the ads were not express advocacy or its functional
equivalent, but instead “genuine issue ads.” Id., at 205–
208. Then, reaching a question “left open in McConnell,”
the court held that no compelling interest justified BCRA’s
regulation of genuine issue ads such as those WRTL
sought to run. Id., at 208–210.
One judge dissented, contending that the majority’s
“plain facial analysis of the text in WRTL’s 2004 adver
tisements” ignored “the context in which the text was
developed.” Id., at 210 (opinion of Roberts, J.). In that
judge’s view, a contextual analysis of the ads revealed
“deep factual rifts between the parties concerning the
purpose and intended effects of the ads” such that neither
side was entitled to summary judgment. Id., at 210, 211.
The FEC and intervenors filed separate notices of ap
peal and jurisdictional statements. We consolidated the
two appeals and set the matter for briefing and argument,
postponing further consideration of jurisdiction to the
hearing on the merits. 549 U. S. ___ (2007).
II
Article III’s “case-or-controversy requirement subsists
through all stages of federal judicial proceedings . . . . [I]t
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is not enough that a dispute was very much alive when
suit was filed.” Lewis v. Continental Bank Corp., 494 U. S.
472, 477 (1990). Based on these principles, the FEC ar
gues (though the intervenors do not) that these cases are
moot because the 2004 election has passed and WRTL
“does not assert any continuing interest in running [its
three] advertisements, nor does it identify any reason to
believe that a significant dispute over Senate filibusters of
judicial nominees will occur in the foreseeable future.”
Brief for Appellant FEC 21.
As the District Court concluded, however, these cases fit
comfortably within the established exception to mootness
for disputes capable of repetition, yet evading review. See
Los Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U. S. 95, 109 (1983); Southern
Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC, 219 U. S. 498, 515 (1911).
The exception applies where “(1) the challenged action is
in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to cessa
tion or expiration; and (2) there is a reasonable expecta
tion that the same complaining party will be subject to the
same action again.” Spencer v. Kemna, 523 U. S. 1, 17
(1998) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
Both circumstances are present here.
As the District Court found, it would be “entirely unrea
sonable . . . to expect that [WRTL] could have obtained
complete judicial review of its claims in time for it to air
its ads” during the BCRA blackout periods. 466 F. Supp.
2d, at 202. The FEC contends that the 2-year window
between elections provides ample time for parties to liti
gate their rights before each BCRA blackout period. But
groups like WRTL cannot predict what issues will be
matters of public concern during a future blackout period.
In these cases, WRTL had no way of knowing well in
advance that it would want to run ads on judicial filibus
ters during the BCRA blackout period. In any event,
despite BCRA’s command that the cases be expedited “to
the greatest possible extent,” §403(a)(4), 116 Stat. 113,
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 9
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note following 2 U. S. C. §437h (2000 ed., Supp. IV), two
BCRA blackout periods have come and gone during the
pendency of this action. “[A] decision allowing the desired
expenditures would be an empty gesture unless it afforded
appellants sufficient opportunity prior to the election date
to communicate their views effectively.” First Nat. Bank
of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U. S. 765, 774 (1978).
The second prong of the “capable of repetition” exception
requires a “ ‘reasonable expectation’ ” or a “ ‘demonstrated
probability’ ” that “the same controversy will recur involv
ing the same complaining party.” Murphy v. Hunt, 455
U. S. 478, 482 (1982) (per curiam). Our cases find the
same controversy sufficiently likely to recur when a party
has a reasonable expectation that it “will again be sub
jected to the alleged illegality,” Lyons, supra, at 109, or
“will be subject to the threat of prosecution” under the
challenged law, Bellotti, supra, at 774–775 (citing
Weinstein v. Bradford, 423 U. S. 147, 149 (1975) (per
curiam)). The FEC argues that in order to prove likely
recurrence of the same controversy, WRTL must establish
that it will run ads in the future sharing all “the charac
teristics that the district court deemed legally relevant.”
Brief for Appellant FEC 23.
The FEC asks for too much. We have recognized that
the “ ‘capable of repetition, yet evading review’ doctrine, in
the context of election cases, is appropriate when there are
‘as applied’ challenges as well as in the more typical case
involving only facial attacks.” Storer v. Brown, 415 U. S.
724, 737, n. 8 (1974). Requiring repetition of every “le
gally relevant” characteristic of an as-applied challenge—
down to the last detail—would effectively overrule this
statement by making this exception unavailable for virtu
ally all as-applied challenges. History repeats itself, but
not at the level of specificity demanded by the FEC. Here,
WRTL credibly claimed that it planned on running “ ‘ma
terially similar’ ” future targeted broadcast ads mentioning
10 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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a candidate within the blackout period, 466 F. Supp. 2d, at
197, and there is no reason to believe that the FEC will
“refrain from prosecuting violations” of BCRA, Bellotti,
supra, at 775. Under the circumstances, particularly
where WRTL sought another preliminary injunction based
on an ad it planned to run during the 2006 blackout pe
riod, see 466 F. Supp. 2d, at 203, n. 15, we hold that there
exists a reasonable expectation that the same controversy
involving the same party will recur. We have jurisdiction
to decide these cases.
III
WRTL rightly concedes that its ads are prohibited by
BCRA §203. Each ad clearly identifies Senator Feingold,
who was running (unopposed) in the Wisconsin Democ
ratic primary on September 14, 2004, and each ad would
have been “targeted to the relevant electorate,” see 2
U. S. C. §434(f)(3)(C) (2000 ed., Supp. IV), during the
BCRA blackout period. WRTL further concedes that its
ads do not fit under any of BCRA’s exceptions to the term
“electioneering communication.” See §434(f)(3)(B). The
only question, then, is whether it is consistent with the
First Amendment for BCRA §203 to prohibit WRTL from
running these three ads.
A
Appellants contend that WRTL should be required to
demonstrate that BCRA is unconstitutional as applied to
the ads. Reply Brief for Appellant Sen. John McCain et al.
in No. 06–970, p. 5, n. 4; Brief for Appellant FEC 34. After
all, appellants reason, McConnell already held that BCRA
§203 was facially valid. These cases, however, present the
separate question whether §203 may constitutionally be
applied to these specific ads. Because BCRA §203 burdens
political speech, it is subject to strict scrutiny. See
McConnell, 540 U. S., at 205; Austin v. Michigan Chamber
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 11
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Opinion R the Court
of Commerce, 494 U. S. 652, 658 (1990); MCFL, 479 U. S.,
at 252 (plurality opinion); Bellotti, supra, at 786; Buckley,
424 U. S., at 44–45. Under strict scrutiny, the Govern
ment must prove that applying BCRA to WRTL’s ads
furthers a compelling interest and is narrowly tailored to
achieve that interest. See Bellotti, supra, at 786 (“Espe
cially where, as here, a prohibition is directed at speech
itself, and the speech is intimately related to the process of
governing, . . . ‘the burden is on the government to show
the existence of [a compelling] interest’ ” (footnote omit
ted)).
The strict scrutiny analysis is, of course, informed by
our precedents. This Court has already ruled that BCRA
survives strict scrutiny to the extent it regulates express
advocacy or its functional equivalent. McConnell, supra,
at 206. So to the extent the ads in these cases fit this
description, the FEC’s burden is not onerous; all it need do
is point to McConnell and explain why it applies here. If,
on the other hand, WRTL’s ads are not express advocacy
or its equivalent, the Government’s task is more formida
ble. It must then demonstrate that banning such ads
during the blackout periods is narrowly tailored to serve a
compelling interest. No precedent of this Court has yet
reached that conclusion.
B
The FEC, intervenors, and the dissent below contend
that McConnell already established the constitutional test
for determining if an ad is the functional equivalent of
express advocacy: whether the ad is intended to influence
elections and has that effect. See, e.g., 466 F. Supp. 2d, at
214 (opinion of Roberts, J.). Here is the relevant portion of
our opinion in McConnell:
“[P]laintiffs argue that the justifications that ade
quately support the regulation of express advocacy do
not apply to significant quantities of speech encom
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passed by the definition of electioneering communica
tions.
“This argument fails to the extent that the issue ads
broadcast during the 30- and 60-day periods preceding
federal primary and general elections are the func
tional equivalent of express advocacy. The justifica
tions for the regulation of express advocacy apply
equally to ads aired during those periods if the ads are
intended to influence the voters’ decisions and have
that effect.” 540 U. S., at 205–206.
WRTL and the District Court majority, on the other
hand, claim that McConnell did not adopt any test as the
standard for future as-applied challenges. We agree.
McConnell’s analysis was grounded in the evidentiary
record before the Court. Two key studies in the McConnell
record constituted “the central piece of evidence mar
shaled by defenders of BCRA’s electioneering communica
tion provisions in support of their constitutional validity.”
McConnell v. FEC, 251 F. Supp. 2d 176, 307, 308 (DC
2003) (opinion of Henderson, J.) (internal quotation marks
and brackets omitted). Those studies asked “student
coders” to separate ads based on whether the students
thought the “purpose” of the ad was “to provide informa
tion about or urge action on a bill or issue,” or “to generate
support or opposition for a particular candidate.” Id., at
308–309 (internal quotation marks omitted; emphasis
deleted); see Brief for Appellee 38. The studies concluded
“ ‘that BCRA’s definition of Electioneering Communica
tions accurately captures those ads that have the purpose
or effect of supporting candidates for election to office.”
Ibid. (emphasis in original).
When the McConnell Court considered the possible
facial overbreadth of §203, it looked to the studies in the
record analyzing ads broadcast during the blackout peri
ods, and those studies had classified the ads in terms of
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intent and effect. The Court’s assessment was accordingly
phrased in the same terms, which the Court regarded as
sufficient to conclude, on the record before it, that the
plaintiffs had not “carried their heavy burden of proving”
that §203 was facially overbroad and could not be enforced
in any circumstances. 540 U. S., at 207. The Court did
not explain that it was adopting a particular test for de
termining what constituted the “functional equivalent” of
express advocacy. The fact that the student coders who
helped develop the evidentiary record before the Court in
McConnell looked to intent and effect in doing so, and that
the Court dealt with the record on that basis in deciding
the facial overbreadth claim, neither compels nor warrants
accepting that same standard as the constitutional test for
separating, in an as-applied challenge, political speech
protected under the First Amendment from that which
may be banned.4
More importantly, this Court in Buckley had already
rejected an intent-and-effect test for distinguishing be
tween discussions of issues and candidates. See 424 U. S.,
at 43–44. After noting the difficulty of distinguishing
between discussion of issues on the one hand and advocacy
of election or defeat of candidates on the other, the Buck
ley Court explained that analyzing the question in terms
“ ‘of intent and of effect’ ” would afford “ ‘no security for free
——————
4 This is particularly true given that the methodology, data, and con
clusions of the two studies were the subject of serious dispute among
the District Court judges. Compare McConnell v. FEC, 251 F. Supp. 2d
176, 307–312 (DC 2003) (opinion of Henderson, J.) (stating that the
studies were flawed and of limited evidentiary value), with id., at 585,
583–588 (opinion of Kollar-Kotelly, J.) (finding the studies generally
credible, but stating that “I am troubled by the fact that coders in both
studies were asked questions regarding their own perceptions of the
advertisements’ purposes, and that [some of] these perceptions were
later recoded” by study supervisors). Nothing in this Court’s opinion in
McConnell suggests it was resolving the sharp disagreements about the
evidentiary record in this respect.
14 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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discussion.’ ” Id., at 43 (quoting Thomas v. Collins, 323
U. S. 516, 535 (1945)). It therefore rejected such an ap
proach, and McConnell did not purport to overrule Buckley
on this point—or even address what Buckley had to say on
the subject.
For the reasons regarded as sufficient in Buckley, we
decline to adopt a test for as-applied challenges turning on
the speaker’s intent to affect an election. The test to
distinguish constitutionally protected political speech from
speech that BCRA may proscribe should provide a safe
harbor for those who wish to exercise First Amendment
rights. The test should also “reflec[t] our ‘profound na
tional commitment to the principle that debate on public
issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.’ ”
Buckley, supra, at 14 (quoting New York Times Co. v.
Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254, 270 (1964)). A test turning on the
intent of the speaker does not remotely fit the bill.
Far from serving the values the First Amendment is
meant to protect, an intent-based test would chill core
political speech by opening the door to a trial on every ad
within the terms of §203, on the theory that the speaker
actually intended to affect an election, no matter how
compelling the indications that the ad concerned a pend
ing legislative or policy issue. No reasonable speaker
would choose to run an ad covered by BCRA if its only
defense to a criminal prosecution would be that its motives
were pure. An intent-based standard “blankets with
uncertainty whatever may be said,” and “offers no security
for free discussion.” Buckley, supra, at 43 (internal quota
tion marks omitted). The FEC does not disagree. In its
brief filed in the first appeal in this litigation, it argued
that a “constitutional standard that turned on the subjec
tive sincerity of a speaker’s message would likely be inca
pable of workable application; at a minimum, it would
invite costly, fact-dependent litigation.” Brief for Appellee
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 15
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Opinion R the Court
in WRTL I, O. T. 2005, No. 04–1581, p. 39.5
A test focused on the speaker’s intent could lead to the
bizarre result that identical ads aired at the same time
could be protected speech for one speaker, while leading to
criminal penalties for another. See M. Redish, Money
Talks: Speech, Economic Power, and the Values of Democ
racy 91 (2001) (“[U]nder well-accepted First Amendment
doctrine, a speaker’s motivation is entirely irrelevant to
the question of constitutional protection”). “First Amend
ment freedoms need breathing space to survive.” NAACP
v. Button, 371 U. S. 415, 433 (1963). An intent test pro
vides none.
Buckley also explains the flaws of a test based on the
actual effect speech will have on an election or on a par
ticular segment of the target audience. Such a test “ ‘puts
the speaker . . . wholly at the mercy of the varied under
standing of his hearers.’ ” 424 U. S., at 43. It would also
typically lead to a burdensome, expert-driven inquiry,
with an indeterminate result. Litigation on such a stan
dard may or may not accurately predict electoral effects,
but it will unquestionably chill a substantial amount of
political speech.
C
“The freedom of speech . . . guaranteed by the Constitu
tion embraces at the least the liberty to discuss publicly
and truthfully all matters of public concern without previ
ous restraint or fear of subsequent punishment.” Bellotti,
435 U. S., at 776 (internal quotation marks omitted). See
——————
5 Consider what happened in these cases. The District Court permit
ted extensive discovery on the assumption that WRTL’s intent was
relevant. As a result, the defendants deposed WRTL’s executive
director, its legislative director, its political action committee director,
its lead communications consultant, and one of its fundraisers. WRTL
also had to turn over many documents related to its operations, plans,
and finances. Such litigation constitutes a severe burden on political
speech.
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Consolidated Edison Co. of N. Y. v. Public Serv. Comm’n of
N. Y., 447 U. S. 530, 534 (1980). To safeguard this liberty,
the proper standard for an as-applied challenge to BCRA
§203 must be objective, focusing on the substance of the
communication rather than amorphous considerations of
intent and effect. See Buckley, supra, at 43–44. It must
entail minimal if any discovery, to allow parties to resolve
disputes quickly without chilling speech through the
threat of burdensome litigation. See Virginia v. Hicks,
539 U. S. 113, 119 (2003). And it must eschew “the open-
ended rough-and-tumble of factors,” which “invit[es] com
plex argument in a trial court and a virtually inevitable
appeal.” Jerome B. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge &
Dock Co., 513 U. S. 527, 547 (1995). In short, it must give
the benefit of any doubt to protecting rather than stifling
speech. See New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, supra, at
269–270.
In light of these considerations, a court should find that
an ad is the functional equivalent of express advocacy only
if the ad is susceptible of no reasonable interpretation
other than as an appeal to vote for or against a specific
candidate. Under this test, WRTL’s three ads are plainly
not the functional equivalent of express advocacy. First,
their content is consistent with that of a genuine issue ad:
The ads focus on a legislative issue, take a position on the
issue, exhort the public to adopt that position, and urge
the public to contact public officials with respect to the
matter. Second, their content lacks indicia of express
advocacy: The ads do not mention an election, candidacy,
political party, or challenger; and they do not take a posi
tion on a candidate’s character, qualifications, or fitness
for office.
Despite these characteristics, appellants assert that the
content of WRTL’s ads alone betrays their electioneering
nature. Indeed, the FEC suggests that any ad covered by
§203 that includes “an appeal to citizens to contact their
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 17
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
elected representative” is the “functional equivalent” of an
ad saying defeat or elect that candidate. Brief for Appel
lant FEC 31; see Brief for Appellant Sen. John McCain
et al. in No. 06–970, pp. 21–23 (hereinafter McCain Brief).
We do not agree. To take just one example, during a
blackout period the House considered the proposed Uni
versal National Service Act. See App. to Brief for Ameri
can Center for Law and Justice et al. as Amicus Curiae B–
3. There would be no reason to regard an ad supporting or
opposing that Act, and urging citizens to contact their
Representative about it, as the equivalent of an ad saying
vote for or against the Representative. Issue advocacy
conveys information and educates. An issue ad’s impact
on an election, if it exists at all, will come only after the
voters hear the information and choose—uninvited by the
ad—to factor it into their voting decisions.6
The FEC and intervenors try to turn this difference to
their advantage, citing McConnell’s statements “that the
——————
6 For these reasons, we cannot agree with JUSTICE SOUTER’s assertion
that “anyone who heard the Feingold ads . . . would know that WRTL’s
message was to vote against Feingold.” Post, at 23. The dissent sup
ports this assertion by likening WRTL’s ads to the “Jane Doe” example
identified in McConnell v. Federal Election Comm’n, 540 U. S. 93
(2003). But that ad “condemned Jane Doe’s record on a particular
issue.” Post, at 23 (internal quotation marks omitted). WRTL’s ads do
not do so; they instead take a position on the filibuster issue and exhort
constituents to contact Senators Feingold and Kohl to advance that
position. Indeed, one would not even know from the ads whether
Senator Feingold supported or opposed filibusters. JUSTICE SOUTER is
confident Wisconsinites independently knew Senator Feingold’s posi
tion on filibusters, but we think that confidence misplaced. A promi
nent study found, for example, that during the 2000 election cycle, 85
percent of respondents to a survey were not even able to name at least
one candidate for the House of Representatives in their own district.
See Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research,
American National Election Study, 2000: Pre- and Post-Election Survey
243 (N. Burns et al. eds. 2002) online at http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/
cocoon/ICPSR/STUDY/03131.xml (as visited June 22, 2007, and avail
able in Clerk of Court’s case file).
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most effective campaign ads, like the most effective com
mercials for products . . . avoid the [Buckley] magic words
[expressly advocating the election or defeat of a candi
date],” 540 U. S., at 127, and that advertisers “would
seldom choose to use such words even if permitted,” id., at
193. See McCain Brief 19. An expert for the FEC in these
cases relied on those observations to argue that WRTL’s
ads are especially effective electioneering ads because they
are “subtl[e],” focusing on issues rather than simply ex
horting the electorate to vote against Senator Feingold.
App. 56–57. Rephrased a bit, the argument perversely
maintains that the less an issue ad resembles express
advocacy, the more likely it is to be the functional equiva
lent of express advocacy. This “heads I win, tails you lose”
approach cannot be correct. It would effectively eliminate
First Amendment protection for genuine issue ads, con
trary to our conclusion in WRTL I that as-applied chal
lenges to §203 are available, and our assumption in
McConnell that “the interests that justify the regulation of
campaign speech might not apply to the regulation of
genuine issue ads,” 540 U. S., at 206, n. 88. Under appel
lants’ view, there can be no such thing as a genuine issue
ad during the blackout period—it is simply a very effective
electioneering ad.
Looking beyond the content of WRTL’s ads, the FEC and
intervenors argue that several “contextual” factors prove
that the ads are the equivalent of express advocacy. First,
appellants cite evidence that during the same election
cycle, WRTL and its Political Action Committee (PAC)
actively opposed Senator Feingold’s reelection and identi
fied filibusters as a campaign issue. This evidence goes to
WRTL’s subjective intent in running the ads, and we have
already explained that WRTL’s intent is irrelevant in an
as-applied challenge. Evidence of this sort is therefore
beside the point, as it should be—WRTL does not forfeit
its right to speak on issues simply because in other aspects
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 19
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Opinion R the Court
of its work it also opposes candidates who are involved
with those issues.
Next, the FEC and intervenors seize on the timing of
WRTL’s ads. They observe that the ads were to be aired
near elections but not near actual Senate votes on judicial
nominees, and that WRTL did not run the ads after the
elections. To the extent this evidence goes to WRTL’s
subjective intent, it is again irrelevant. To the extent it
nonetheless suggests that the ads should be interpreted as
express advocacy, it falls short. That the ads were run
close to an election is unremarkable in a challenge like
this. Every ad covered by BCRA §203 will by definition air
just before a primary or general election. If this were
enough to prove that an ad is the functional equivalent of
express advocacy, then BCRA would be constitutional in
all of its applications. This Court unanimously rejected
this contention in WRTL I.
That the ads were run shortly after the Senate had
recessed is likewise unpersuasive. Members of Congress
often return to their districts during recess, precisely to
determine the views of their constituents; an ad run at
that time may succeed in getting more constituents to
contact the Representative while he or she is back home.
In any event, a group can certainly choose to run an issue
ad to coincide with public interest rather than a floor vote.
Finally, WRTL did not resume running its ads after the
BCRA blackout period because, as it explains, the debate
had changed. Brief for Appellee 16. The focus of the
Senate was on whether a majority would vote to change
the Senate rules to eliminate the filibuster—not whether
individual Senators would continue filibustering. Given
this change, WRTL’s decision not to continue running
its ads after the blackout period does not support an
inference that the ads were the functional equivalent of
electioneering.
The last piece of contextual evidence the FEC and inter
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venors highlight is the ads’ “specific and repeated cross-
reference” to a website. Reply Brief for Appellant FEC 15.
In the middle of the website’s homepage, in large type,
were the addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers, and
email addresses of Senators Feingold and Kohl. Wiscon
sinites who viewed “Wedding,” “Loan,” or “Waiting” and
wished to contact their Senators—as the ads requested—
would be able to obtain the pertinent contact information
immediately upon visiting the website. This is fully con
sistent with viewing WRTL’s ads as genuine issue ads.
The website also stated both Wisconsin Senators’ positions
on judicial filibusters, and allowed visitors to sign up for
“e-alerts,” some of which contained exhortations to vote
against Senator Feingold. These details lend the election
eering interpretation of the ads more credence, but again,
WRTL’s participation in express advocacy in other aspects
of its work is not a justification for censoring its issue-
related speech. Any express advocacy on the website,
already one step removed from the text of the ads them
selves, certainly does not render an interpretation of the
ads as genuine issue ads unreasonable.
Given the standard we have adopted for determining
whether an ad is the “functional equivalent” of express
advocacy, contextual factors of the sort invoked by appel
lants should seldom play a significant role in the inquiry.
Courts need not ignore basic background information that
may be necessary to put an ad in context—such as
whether an ad “describes a legislative issue that is either
currently the subject of legislative scrutiny or likely to be
the subject of such scrutiny in the near future,” 466
F. Supp. 2d, at 207—but the need to consider such back
ground should not become an excuse for discovery or a
broader inquiry of the sort we have just noted raises First
Amendment concerns.
At best, appellants have shown what we have acknowl
edged at least since Buckley: that “the distinction between
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 21
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Opinion R the Court
discussion of issues and candidates and advocacy of elec
tion or defeat of candidates may often dissolve in practical
application.” 424 U. S., at 42. Under the test set forth
above, that is not enough to establish that the ads can
only reasonably be viewed as advocating or opposing a
candidate in a federal election. “Freedom of discussion, if
it would fulfill its historic function in this nation, must
embrace all issues about which information is needed or
appropriate to enable the members of society to cope with
the exigencies of their period.” Thornhill v. Alabama, 310
U. S. 88, 102 (1940). Discussion of issues cannot be sup
pressed simply because the issues may also be pertinent in
an election. Where the First Amendment is implicated,
the tie goes to the speaker, not the censor.7
——————
7 JUSTICE SCALIA thinks our test impermissibly vague. See post, at
11–12 (opinion concurring in part and concurring in judgment). As
should be evident, we agree with JUSTICE SCALIA on the imperative for
clarity in this area; that is why our test affords protection unless an ad
is susceptible of no reasonable interpretation other than as an appeal to
vote for or against a specific candidate. It is why we emphasize that (1)
there can be no free-ranging intent-and-effect test; (2) there generally
should be no discovery or inquiry into the sort of “contextual” factors
highlighted by the FEC and intervenors; (3) discussion of issues cannot
be banned merely because the issues might be relevant to an election;
and (4) in a debatable case, the tie is resolved in favor of protecting
speech. And keep in mind this test is only triggered if the speech meets
the brightline requirements of BCRA §203 in the first place. JUSTICE
SCALIA’s criticism of our test is all the more confusing because he
accepts WRTL’s proposed three-prong test as “clear.” Post, at 17. We
do not think our test any vaguer than WRTL’s, and it is more protective
of political speech.
JUSTICE SCALIA also asserts that our test conflicts with Buckley v.
Valeo, 424 U. S. 1 (1976) (per curiam). Post, at 13–16. The Buckley
Court confronted a statute restricting “any expenditure . . . relative to a
clearly identified candidate.” 424 U. S., at 42 (internal quotation marks
omitted). To avoid vagueness concerns, this Court first narrowed the
statute to cover only expenditures expressly “advocating the election or
defeat of a candidate”—using the so-called “magic words” of express
advocacy. Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court then
22 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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Opinion R the Court
We confronted a similar issue in Ashcroft v. Free Speech
Coalition, 535 U. S. 234 (2002), in which the Government
argued that virtual images of child pornography were
difficult to distinguish from real images. The Govern
ment’s solution was “to prohibit both kinds of images.”
Id., at 254–255. We rejected the argument that “protected
speech may be banned as a means to ban unprotected
speech,” concluding that it “turns the First Amendment
upside down.” Id., at 255. As we explained: “The Gov
ernment may not suppress lawful speech as the means to
suppress unlawful speech. Protected speech does not
become unprotected merely because it resembles the
latter. The Constitution requires the reverse.” Ibid.
Because WRTL’s ads may reasonably be interpreted as
something other than as an appeal to vote for or against a
specific candidate, we hold they are not the functional
equivalent of express advocacy, and therefore fall outside
the scope of McConnell’s holding.8
——————
proceeded to strike down the newly narrowed statute under strict
scrutiny on the ground that its reach was not broad enough. Id., at 44.
From this, JUSTICE SCALIA concludes that “[i]f a permissible test short
of the magic-words test existed, Buckley would surely have adopted it.”
Post, at 14. We are not so sure. The question in Buckley was how a
particular statutory provision could be construed to avoid vagueness
concerns, not what the constitutional standard for clarity was in the
abstract, divorced from specific statutory language. Buckley’s interme
diate step of statutory construction on the way to its constitutional
holding does not dictate a constitutional test. The Buckley Court’s
“express advocacy restriction was an endpoint of statutory interpreta
tion, not a first principle of constitutional law.” McConnell, 540 U. S.,
at 190. And despite JUSTICE SCALIA’s claim to the contrary, our citation
of Buckley along with other decisions in rejecting an intent-and-effect
test does not force us to adopt (or reject) Buckley’s statutory construc
tion as a constitutional test.
8 Nothing in McConnell’s statement that the “vast majority” of issue
ads broadcast in the periods preceding federal elections had an “elec
tioneering purpose” forecloses this conclusion. 540 U. S., at 206.
Courts do not resolve unspecified as-applied challenges in the course of
resolving a facial attack, so McConnell could not have settled the issue
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 23
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
IV
BCRA §203 can be constitutionally applied to WRTL’s
ads only if it is narrowly tailored to further a compelling
interest. McConnell, 540 U. S., at 205; Bellotti, 435 U. S.,
at 786; Buckley, supra, at 44–45. This Court has never
recognized a compelling interest in regulating ads, like
WRTL’s, that are neither express advocacy nor its func
tional equivalent. The District Court below considered
interests that might justify regulating WRTL’s ads here,
and found none sufficiently compelling. 466 F. Supp. 2d,
at 208–210. We reach the same conclusion.9
——————
we address today. See Members of City Council of Los Angeles v.
Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U. S. 789, 803, n. 22 (1984) (“The fact that [a
law] is capable of valid applications does not necessarily mean that it is
valid as applied to these litigants”). Indeed, WRTL I confirmed as
much. 546 U. S., at 411–412. By the same token, in deciding this as-
applied challenge, we have no occasion to revisit McConnell’s conclusion
that the statute is not facially overbroad.
The “vast majority” language, moreover, is beside the point. The
McConnell Court did not find that a “vast majority” of the issue ads
considered were the functional equivalent of direct advocacy. Rather, it
found that such ads had an “electioneering purpose.” For the reasons
we have explained, “purpose” is not the appropriate test for distinguish
ing between genuine issue ads and the functional equivalent of express
campaign advocacy. See supra, at 14–15. In addition, the “vast major
ity” statement was not necessary to the Court’s facial holding in
McConnell. The standard required for a statute to survive an over
breadth challenge is not that the “vast majority” of a statute’s applica
tions be legitimate. “[B]road language . . . unnecessary to the Court’s
decision . . . cannot be considered binding authority.” Kastigar v.
United States, 406 U. S. 441, 454–455 (1972).
9 The dissent stresses a number of points that, while not central to
our decision, nevertheless merit a response. First, the dissent over
states its case when it asserts that the “PAC alternative” gives corpora
tions a constitutionally sufficient outlet to speak. See post, at 30. PACs
impose well-documented and onerous burdens, particularly on small
nonprofits. See MCFL, 479 U. S. 238, 253–255 (1986) (plurality opin
ion). McConnell did conclude that segregated funds “provid[e] corpora
tions and unions with a constitutionally sufficient opportunity to
engage in express advocacy” and its functional equivalent, 540 U. S., at
24 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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Opinion R the Court
At the outset, we reject the contention that issue advo
cacy may be regulated because express election advocacy
may be, and “the speech involved in so-called issue advo
cacy is [not] any more core political speech than are words
of express advocacy.” McConnell, supra, at 205. This
greater-includes-the-lesser approach is not how strict
scrutiny works. A corporate ad expressing support for the
local football team could not be regulated on the ground
that such speech is less “core” than corporate speech about
an election, which we have held may be restricted. A court
applying strict scrutiny must ensure that a compelling
interest supports each application of a statute restricting
speech. That a compelling interest justifies restrictions on
express advocacy tells us little about whether a compelling
interest justifies restrictions on issue advocacy; the
McConnell Court itself made just that point. See 540
——————
203, but that holding did not extend beyond functional equivalents—
and if it did, the PAC option would justify regulation of all corporate
speech, a proposition we have rejected, see Bellotti, 435 U. S., at 777–
778. Second, the response that a speaker should just take out a news
paper ad, or use a website, rather than complain that it cannot speak
through a broadcast communication, see post, at 18–19, 33, is too glib.
Even assuming for the sake of argument that the possibility of using a
different medium of communication has relevance in determining the
permissibility of a limitation on speech, newspaper ads and websites
are not reasonable alternatives to broadcast speech in terms of impact
and effectiveness. See McConnell v. FEC, 251 F. Supp. 2d, at 569–573,
646 (Kollar-Kotelly, J.). Third, we disagree with the dissent’s view that
corporations can still speak by changing what they say to avoid men
tioning candidates, post, at 30–31. That argument is akin to telling
Cohen that he cannot wear his jacket because he is free to wear one
that says “I disagree with the draft,” cf. Cohen v. California, 403 U. S.
15 (1971), or telling 44 Liquormart that it can advertise so long as it
avoids mentioning prices, cf. 44 Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode Island, 517
U. S. 484 (1996). Such notions run afoul of “the fundamental rule of
protection under the First Amendment, that a speaker has the auton
omy to choose the content of his own message.” Hurley v. Irish-
American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc., 515 U. S.
557, 573 (1995).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 25
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
U. S., at 206, n. 88. Such a greater-includes-the-lesser
argument would dictate that virtually all corporate speech
can be suppressed, since few kinds of speech can lay claim
to being as central to the First Amendment as campaign
speech. That conclusion is clearly foreclosed by our prece
dent. See, e.g., Bellotti, supra, at 776–777.
This Court has long recognized “the governmental inter
est in preventing corruption and the appearance of corrup
tion” in election campaigns. Buckley, 424 U. S., at 45.
This interest has been invoked as a reason for upholding
contribution limits. As Buckley explained, “[t]o the extent
that large contributions are given to secure a political quid
pro quo from current and potential office holders, the
integrity of our system of representative democracy is
undermined.” Id., at 26–27. We have suggested that this
interest might also justify limits on electioneering expendi
tures because it may be that, in some circumstances,
“large independent expenditures pose the same dangers of
actual or apparent quid pro quo arrangements as do large
contributions.” Id., at 45.
McConnell arguably applied this interest—which this
Court had only assumed could justify regulation of express
advocacy—to ads that were the “functional equivalent” of
express advocacy. See 540 U. S., at 204–206. But to
justify regulation of WRTL’s ads, this interest must be
stretched yet another step to ads that are not the func
tional equivalent of express advocacy. Enough is enough.
Issue ads like WRTL’s are by no means equivalent to
contributions, and the quid-pro-quo corruption interest
cannot justify regulating them. To equate WRTL’s ads
with contributions is to ignore their value as political
speech.
Appellants argue that an expansive definition of “func
tional equivalent” is needed to ensure that issue advocacy
does not circumvent the rule against express advocacy,
which in turn helps protect against circumvention of the
26 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
rule against contributions. Cf. McConnell, supra, at 205
(“[R]ecent cases have recognized that certain restrictions
on corporate electoral involvement permissibly hedge
against circumvention of [valid] contribution limits” (in
ternal quotation marks omitted; brackets in original)).
But such a prophylaxis-upon-prophylaxis approach to
regulating expression is not consistent with strict scru
tiny. “[T]he desire for a bright-line rule . . . hardly consti
tutes the compelling state interest necessary to justify any
infringement on First Amendment freedom.” MCFL, 479
U. S., at 263. See Free Speech Coalition, 535 U. S., at 255
(“The Government may not suppress lawful speech as the
means to suppress unlawful speech”); Buckley, supra, at
44 (expenditure limitations “cannot be sustained simply by
invoking the interest in maximizing the effectiveness of
the less intrusive contribution limitations”).
A second possible compelling interest recognized by this
Court lies in addressing a “different type of corruption in
the political arena: the corrosive and distorting effects of
immense aggregations of wealth that are accumulated
with the help of the corporate form and that have little or
no correlation to the public’s support for the corporation’s
political ideas.” Austin, 494 U. S., at 660. Austin invoked
this interest to uphold a state statute making it a felony
for corporations to use treasury funds for independent
expenditures on express election advocacy. Id., at 654–
655. McConnell also relied on this interest in upholding
regulation not just of express advocacy, but also its “func
tional equivalent.” 540 U. S., at 205–206.
These cases did not suggest, however, that the interest
in combating “a different type of corruption” extended
beyond campaign speech. Quite the contrary. Two of the
Justices who joined the 6-to-3 majority in Austin relied, in
upholding the constitutionality of the ban on campaign
speech, on the fact that corporations retained freedom to
speak on issues as distinct from election campaigns. See
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 27
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
494 U. S., at 675–678 (Brennan, J., concurring) (describing
fact that campaign speech ban “does not regulate corpo
rate expenditures in referenda or other corporate expres
sion” as “reflect[ing] the requirements of our decisions”);
id., at 678 (STEVENS, J., concurring) (“[T]here is a vast
difference between lobbying and debating public issues on
the one hand, and political campaigns for election to public
office on the other”). The McConnell Court similarly was
willing to “assume that the interests that justify the regu
lation of campaign speech might not apply to the regula
tion of genuine issue ads.” 540 U. S., at 206, n. 88. And
our decision in WRTL I reinforced the validity of that
assumption by holding that BCRA §203 is susceptible to
as-applied challenges. 546 U. S., at 411–412.
Accepting the notion that a ban on campaign speech
could also embrace issue advocacy would call into question
our holding in Bellotti that the corporate identity of a
speaker does not strip corporations of all free speech
rights. 435 U. S., at 778. It would be a constitutional
“bait and switch” to conclude that corporate campaign
speech may be banned in part because corporate issue
advocacy is not, and then assert that corporate issue
advocacy may be banned as well, pursuant to the same
asserted compelling interest, through a broad conception
of what constitutes the functional equivalent of campaign
speech, or by relying on the inability to distinguish cam
paign speech from issue advocacy.
The FEC and intervenors do not argue that the Austin
interest justifies regulating genuine issue ads. Instead,
they focus on establishing that WRTL’s ads are the func
tional equivalent of express advocacy—a contention we
have already rejected. We hold that the interest recog
nized in Austin as justifying regulation of corporate cam
paign speech and extended in McConnell to the functional
equivalent of such speech has no application to issue
28 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
advocacy of the sort engaged in by WRTL.10
Because WRTL’s ads are not express advocacy or its
functional equivalent, and because appellants identify no
interest sufficiently compelling to justify burdening
WRTL’s speech, we hold that BCRA §203 is unconstitu
tional as applied to WRTL’s “Wedding,” “Loan,” and “Wait
ing” ads.
* * *
These cases are about political speech. The importance
of the cases to speech and debate on public policy issues is
reflected in the number of diverse organizations that have
joined in supporting WRTL before this Court: the Ameri
can Civil Liberties Union, the National Rifle Association,
the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Indus
trial Organizations, the Chamber of Commerce of the
United States of America, Focus on the Family, the Coali
tion of Public Charities, the Cato Institute, and many
others.
Yet, as is often the case in this Court’s First Amend
ment opinions, we have gotten this far in the analysis
without quoting the Amendment itself: “Congress shall
make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech.” The
——————
10 The interest recognized in Austin stems from a concern that “ ‘[t]he
resources in the treasury of a business corporation . . . are not an
indication of popular support for the corporation’s political ideas.’ ”
Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce, 494 U. S. 652, 659 (1990)
(alteration in original). Some of WRTL’s amici contend that this
interest is not implicated here because of WRTL’s status as a nonprofit
advocacy organization. They assert that “[s]peech by nonprofit advo
cacy groups on behalf of their members does not ‘corrupt’ candidates or
‘distort’ the political marketplace,” and that “[n]onprofit advocacy
groups funded by individuals are readily distinguished from for-profit
corporations funded by general treasuries.” Brief for Family Research
Council et al. as Amici Curiae 3, 4. Cf. MCFL, 479 U. S., at 264. We do
not pass on this argument in this as-applied challenge because WRTL’s
funds for its ads were not derived solely from individual contributions.
See Brief for Appellant FEC 11.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 29
Opinion of ofOBERTS, C. J.
Opinion R the Court
Framers’ actual words put these cases in proper perspec
tive. Our jurisprudence over the past 216 years has re
jected an absolutist interpretation of those words, but
when it comes to drawing difficult lines in the area of pure
political speech—between what is protected and what the
Government may ban—it is worth recalling the language
we are applying. McConnell held that express advocacy of
a candidate or his opponent by a corporation shortly before
an election may be prohibited, along with the functional
equivalent of such express advocacy. We have no occasion
to revisit that determination today. But when it comes to
defining what speech qualifies as the functional equivalent
of express advocacy subject to such a ban—the issue we do
have to decide—we give the benefit of the doubt to speech,
not censorship. The First Amendment’s command that
“Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of
speech” demands at least that.
The judgment of the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 1
ALITO, J., concurring
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 06–969 and 06–970
_________________
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, APPELLANT
06–969 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN, ET AL., APPELLANTS
06–970 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
ON APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
[June 25, 2007]
JUSTICE ALITO, concurring.
I join the principal opinion because I conclude (a) that
§203 of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, 2
U. S. C. §441b(b)(2) (2000 ed., Supp. IV), as applied, can
not constitutionally ban any advertisement that may
reasonably be interpreted as anything other than an
appeal to vote for or against a candidate, (b) that the ads
at issue here may reasonably be interpreted as something
other than such an appeal, and (c) that because §203 is
unconstitutional as applied to the advertisements before
us, it is unnecessary to go further and decide whether
§203 is unconstitutional on its face. If it turns out that the
implementation of the as-applied standard set out in the
principal opinion impermissibly chills political speech, see
post, at 15–16 (SCALIA, J., joined by KENNEDY, and
THOMAS, JJ., concurring in part and concurring in judg
ment), we will presumably be asked in a future case
to reconsider the holding in McConnell v. Federal
Election Comm’n, 540 U. S. 93 (2003), that §203 is facially
constitutional.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 1
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 06–969 and 06–970
_________________
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, APPELLANT
06–969 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN, ET AL., APPELLANTS
06–970 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
ON APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
[June 25, 2007]
JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom JUSTICE KENNEDY and
JUSTICE THOMAS join, concurring in part and concurring
in the judgment.
A Moroccan cartoonist once defended his criticism of the
Moroccan monarch (lèse majesté being a serious crime in
Morocco) as follows: “ ‘I’m not a revolutionary, I’m just
defending freedom of speech. . . . I never said we had to
change the king—no, no, no, no! But I said that some
things the king is doing, I do not like. Is that a crime?’ ”1
Well, in the United States (making due allowance for the
fact that we have elected representatives instead of a
king) it is a crime, at least if the speaker is a union or a
corporation (including not-for-profit public-interest corpo
rations) and if the representative is identified by name
within a certain period before a primary or congressional
election in which he is running. That is the import of §203
of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA),
——————
1 Whitlock, Satirist Continues to Prove Himself a Royal Pain, Wash
ington Post, Apr. 26, 2005, pp. C1, C8.
2 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
the constitutionality of which we upheld three Terms ago
in McConnell v. Federal Election Comm’n, 540 U. S. 93
(2003). As an element essential to that determination of
constitutionality, our opinion left open the possibility that
a corporation or union could establish that, in the particu
lar circumstances of its case, the ban was unconstitutional
because it was (to pursue the analogy) only the king’s
policies and not his tenure in office that was criticized.
Today’s cases present the question of what sort of showing
is necessary for that purpose. For the reasons I set forth
below, it is my view that no test for such a showing can
both (1) comport with the requirement of clarity that
unchilled freedom of political speech demands, and (2) be
compatible with the facial validity of §203 (as pronounced
in McConnell). I would therefore reconsider the decision
that sets us the unsavory task of separating issue-speech
from election-speech with no clear criterion.
I
Today’s cases originated in the efforts of Wisconsin
Right to Life, Inc. (WRTL), a Wisconsin nonprofit, non-
stock ideological advocacy corporation, to lobby Wisconsin
voters concerning the filibustering of the President’s judi
cial nominees. The problem for WRTL was that, under
§203 of BCRA, it would have been unlawful to air its
television and radio ads within 30 days before the Sep
tember 14, 2004, primary or within 60 days before the
November 2, 2004, general election because the ads named
Senator Feingold, who was then seeking reelection. Sec
tion 203(a) of BCRA amended §316(b)(2) of the Federal
Election Campaign Act Amendments of 1974, which pro
hibited corporations and unions from “mak[ing] a contri
bution or expenditure in connection with any election to
any political office, or in connection with any primary
election . . . for any political office.” 2 U. S. C. §441b(a).
Prior to BCRA, that section covered only expenditures for
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 3
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
communications that expressly advocated the election or
defeat of a candidate (in campaign-finance speak, so-called
“express advocacy”). McConnell, supra, at 204. As
amended, however, that section was broadened to cover
“electioneering communication[s],” §441b(b)(2) (2000 ed.,
Supp. IV), which include “any broadcast, cable, or satellite
communication” that “refers to a clearly identified candi
date for Federal office” and that is aired within 60 days
before a general election, or 30 days before a primary
election, in the jurisdiction in which the candidate is
running. §434(f)(3) (2000 ed., Supp. IV).2 Under the new
law, a corporation or union wishing to air advertisements
covered by the definition of “electioneering communica
tion” is prohibited by §203 from doing so unless it first
creates a separate segregated fund run by a “political
action committee,” commonly known as a “PAC.”
§441b(b)(2)(C) (2000 ed., Supp. IV). Three Terms ago, in
McConnell, supra, this Court upheld most of BCRA’s provi
sions against constitutional challenge, including §203. The
Court found that the “vast majority” of ads aired during the
30-day and 60-day periods before elections were “the func
tional equivalent of express advocacy,” id., at 206, but sug
gested that “pure issue ads,” id., at 207, or “genuine issue
ads,” id., at 206, would be protected.
The question in these cases is whether §203 can be
applied to WRTL’s ads consistently with the First Amend
ment. Last Term, this Court unanimously held, in Wis
——————
2 BCRA also includes a backup definition of “electioneering communi
cation” that will take effect in the event the primary definition is “held
to be constitutionally insufficient . . . to support the regulation provided
herein.” 2 U. S. C. §434(f)(3)(A)(ii) (2000 ed., Supp. IV). This defines
“electioneering communication” as “any broadcast, cable, or satellite
communication which promotes or supports a candidate for [a federal]
office, or attacks or opposes a candidate for that office (regardless of
whether the communication expressly advocates a vote for or against a
candidate) and which also is suggestive of no plausible meaning other
than an exhortation to vote for or against a specific candidate.” Ibid.
4 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
consin Right to Life, Inc. v. Federal Election Comm’n, 546
U. S. 410, 411–412 (2006) (per curiam) (WRTL I), that as-
applied challenges to §203 are available. The District
Court in these cases subsequently held that §203 is uncon
stitutional as applied to the three ads at issue. The Court
today affirms the judgment of the District Court. While I
agree with that result, I disagree with the principal opin
ion’s reasons.
II
A proper explanation of my views in these cases requires
some discussion of the case law leading up to McConnell. I
begin with the seminal case of Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S.
1 (1976) (per curiam), wherein this Court considered the
constitutionality of various political contribution and
expenditure limitations contained in the Federal Election
Campaign Act of 1971 (FECA), 86 Stat. 3, as amended, 88
Stat. 1263. Buckley set forth a now-familiar framework
for evaluating the constitutionality of campaign-finance
regulations. The Court began with the recognition that
contributing money to, and spending money on behalf of,
political candidates implicates core First Amendment
protections, and that restrictions on such contributions
and expenditures “operate in an area of the most funda
mental First Amendment activities.” 424 U. S., at 14.
The Court also recognized, however, that the Government
has a compelling interest in “prevention of corruption and
the appearance of corruption.” Id., at 25. The “corruption”
to which the Court repeatedly referred was of the “quid
pro quo” variety, whereby an individual or entity makes a
contribution or expenditure in exchange for some action by
an official. Id., at 26, 27, 45, 47.
The Court then held that FECA’s contribution limita
tions passed constitutional muster because they repre
sented a “marginal restriction upon the contributor’s
ability to engage in free communication,” id., at 20–21,
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 5
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
and were thus subject to a lower level of scrutiny, id., at
25. The Court invalidated, however, FECA’s limitation on
independent expenditures (i.e., expenditures made to
express one’s own positions and not in coordination with a
campaign). Id., at 39–51. In the Court’s view, expendi
ture limitations restrict speech that is “ ‘at the core of our
electoral process and of the First Amendment freedoms,’ ”
id., at 39, and require the highest scrutiny, id., at 44–45.
The independent-expenditure restriction at issue in
Buckley limited the amount of money that could be spent
“ ‘relative to a clearly identified candidate.’ ” Id., at 41
(quoting 18 U. S. C. §608(e)(1) (1970 ed., Supp. IV) (re
pealed 1976)). Before striking down the expenditure
limitation, the Court narrowly construed §608(e)(1), in
light of vagueness concerns, to cover only express advo
cacy—that is, advertising that “in express terms advo
cate[s] the election or defeat of a clearly identified candi
date for federal office” by use of such words of advocacy “as
‘vote for,’ ‘elect,’ ‘support,’ ‘cast your ballot for,’ ‘Smith for
Congress,’ ‘vote against,’ ‘defeat,’ ‘reject.’ ” 424 U. S., at 44,
and n. 52. This narrowing construction excluded so-called
“issue advocacy”—for example, an ad that refers to a clearly
identified candidate’s position on an issue, but does not
expressly advocate his election or defeat. Even as narrowly
construed to cover only express advocacy, however,
§608(e)(1) was held to be unconstitutional because the
narrowed prohibition was too narrow to be effective and
(quite apart from that shortcoming) independent expendi
tures did not pose a serious enough threat of corruption.
Id., at 45–46. Notably, the Court also found the Govern
ment’s interest in “equalizing the relative ability of indi
viduals and groups to influence the outcome of elections”
insufficient to support limitations on independent expendi
tures. Id., at 48.
Buckley might well have been the last word on limita
tions on independent expenditures. Some argued, how
6 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
ever, that independent expenditures by corporations
should be treated differently. That argument should have
been foreclosed by Buckley for several reasons: (1) the
particular provision at issue in Buckley, §608(e)(1) of
FECA, was directed to expenditures not just by “individu
als,” but by “persons,” with “ ‘persons’ ” specifically defined
to include “ ‘corporation[s],’ ” id., at 23, 39, n. 45; (2) the
plaintiffs in Buckley included corporations, id., at 8; and
(3) Buckley, id., at 50–51, cited a case that involved limita
tions on corporations in support of its striking down the
restriction at issue, Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Torn
illo, 418 U. S. 241 (1974). Moreover, pre-Buckley cases
had accorded corporations full First Amendment protec
tion. See, e.g., NAACP v. Button, 371 U. S. 415, 428–429,
431 (1963) (holding that the corporation’s activities were
“modes of expression and association protected by the
First and Fourteenth Amendments”); Grosjean v. Ameri
can Press Co., 297 U. S. 233, 244 (1936) (holding that
corporations are guaranteed the “freedom of speech and of
the press . . . safeguarded by the due process of law clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment”). See also Pacific Gas &
Elec. Co. v. Public Util. Comm’n of Cal., 475 U. S. 1, 8
(1986) (plurality opinion) (“The identity of the speaker is
not decisive in determining whether speech is protected”;
“[c]orporations and other associations, like individuals,
contribute to the ‘discussion, debate, and the dissemina
tion of information and ideas’ that the First Amendment
seeks to foster”).
Indeed, one would have thought the coup de grâce to the
argument that corporations can be treated differently for
these purposes was dealt by First Nat. Bank of Boston v.
Bellotti, 435 U. S. 765 (1978), decided just two years after
Buckley. In that case, the Court struck down a Massachu
setts statute that prohibited corporations from spending
money in connection with a referendum unless the refer
endum materially affected the corporation’s property,
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 7
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
business, or assets. As the Court explained: The principle
that such advocacy is “at the heart of the First Amend
ment’s protection” and is “indispensable to decisionmaking
in a democracy” is “no less true because the speech comes
from a corporation rather than an individual.” 435 U. S.,
at 776–777. And the Court rejected the arguments that
corporate participation “would exert an undue influence
on the outcome of a referendum vote”; that corporations
would “drown out other points of view” and “destroy the
confidence of the people in the democratic process,” id., at
789; and that the prohibition was needed to protect corpo
rate shareholders “by preventing the use of corporate
resources in furtherance of views with which some share
holders may disagree,” id., at 792–793.3
The Court strayed far from these principles, however, in
one post-Buckley case: Austin v. Michigan Chamber of
Commerce, 494 U. S. 652 (1990). This was the only pre-
McConnell case in which this Court had ever permitted
the Government to restrict political speech based on the
corporate identity of the speaker. Austin upheld state
restrictions on corporate independent expenditures in
support of, or in opposition to, any candidate in elections
for state office. 494 U. S., at 654–655. The statute had
been modeled after the federal statute that BCRA §203
amended, which had been construed to reach only express
advocacy, id., at 655, n. 1. And the ad at issue in Austin
used the magical and forbidden words of express advocacy:
——————
3 In Federal Election Comm’n v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc.,
479 U. S. 238, 248 (1986) (MCFL), we addressed the pre-BCRA version
of 2 U. S. C. §441b, which was interpreted to ban corporate treasury
expenditures for express advocacy in connection with federal elections.
We held that, “[r]egardless of whether th[e] concern [for unfair advan
tage to organizations that amass great wealth] is adequate to support
application of §441b to commercial enterprises, a question not before us,
that justification” did not support application of the statute to the
nonprofit organization that brought the challenge in MCFL. 479 U. S.,
at 263 (emphasis added).
8 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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Opinion of SCALIA, J.
“Elect Richard Bandstra.” Id., at 714 (App. to opinion of
KENNEDY, J., dissenting). How did the Court manage to
reach this result without overruling Bellotti? It purported
to recognize a different class of corruption: “the corrosive
and distorting effects of immense aggregations of wealth
that are accumulated with the help of the corporate form
and that have little or no correlation to the public’s sup
port for the corporation’s political ideas.” Austin, supra, at
660.
Among the many problems with this “new” theory of
corruption was that it actually constituted “the same ‘corro
sive and distorting effects of immense aggregations of
wealth,’ found insufficient to sustain a similar prohibition
just a decade earlier,” in Bellotti. McConnell, 540 U. S., at
325 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.) (quoting Austin, supra, at 660;
citation omitted). Indeed, Buckley itself had cautioned that
“[t]he First Amendment’s protection against governmental
abridgment of free expression cannot properly be made to
depend on a person’s financial ability to engage in public
discussion.” 424 U. S., at 49. However, two Members of
Austin’s 6-to-3 majority appear to have thought it signifi
cant that Austin involved express advocacy whereas Bellotti
involved issue advocacy. 494 U. S., at 675–676 (Brennan,
J., concurring); id., at 678 (STEVENS, J., concurring).4
Austin was a significant departure from ancient First
Amendment principles. In my view, it was wrongly de
cided. The flawed rationale upon which it is based is
examined at length elsewhere, including in a dissenting
——————
4 The
dissent asserts that Austin was faithful to Bellotti’s principles,
to prove which it quotes a footnote in Bellotti leaving open the possibil
ity that independent expenditures by corporations might someday be
demonstrated to beget quid-pro-quo corruption. Post, at 12, n. 6 (opin
ion of SOUTER, J.) (quoting Bellotti, 435 U. S., at 788, n. 26). That
someday has never come. No one seriously believes that independent
expenditures could possibly give rise to quid-pro-quo corruption with
out being subject to regulation as coordinated expenditures.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 9
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
opinion in Austin that a Member of the 5-to-4 McConnell
majority had joined, see Austin, 494 U. S., at 695–713
(opinion of KENNEDY, J., joined by O’Connor, J.). See also
id., at 679–695 (SCALIA, J., dissenting); McConnell, 540
U. S., at 257–259 (opinion of SCALIA, J.); id., at 325–330
(opinion of KENNEDY, J.); id., at 273–275 (opinion of
THOMAS, J.). But at least Austin was limited to express
advocacy, and nonexpress advocacy was presumed to
remain protected under Buckley and Bellotti, even when
engaged in by corporations.
Three Terms ago the Court extended Austin’s flawed
rationale to cover an even broader class of speech. In
McConnell, the Court rejected a facial overbreadth chal
lenge to BCRA §203’s restrictions on corporate and union
advertising, which were not limited to express advocacy
but covered vast amounts of nonexpress advocacy (em
braced within the term “electioneering communications”).
540 U. S., at 203–209. The Court held that, at least in
light of the availability of the PAC option, the compelling
governmental interest that supported restrictions on
corporate expenditures for express advocacy also justified
the extension of those restrictions to “electioneering com
munications,” the “vast majority” of which were intended
to influence elections. Id., at 206. Of course, the compel
ling interest to which the Court referred was “ ‘the corro
sive and distorting effects of immense aggregations of
[corporate] wealth,’ ” id., at 205 (quoting Austin, supra, at
660). “The justifications for the regulation of express
advocacy,” the Court explained, “apply equally” to ads run
during the BCRA blackout period “to the extent . . . [those
ads] are the functional equivalent of express advocacy.”
540 U. S., at 206 (emphasis added). The Court found that
the “vast majority” of ads aired during the 30- and 60-day
periods before elections fit that description. Finally, the
Court concluded that, “[e]ven . . . assum[ing] that BCRA
will inhibit some constitutionally protected corporate and
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Opinion of SCALIA, J.
union speech” (i.e., “pure issue ads,” id., at 207, or “genu
ine issue ads,” id., at 206, and n. 88), its application to
such ads was insubstantial, and thus the statute was not
overbroad, id., at 207. But McConnell did not foreclose as-
applied challenges to §203, WRTL I, 546 U. S., at 411–412,
which brings me back to the present cases.
III
The question is whether WRTL meets the standard for
prevailing in an as-applied challenge to BCRA §203.
Answering that question obviously requires the Court to
articulate the standard. The most obvious one, and the
one suggested by the Federal Election Commission (FEC)
and intervenors, is the standard set forth in McConnell
itself: whether the advertisement is the “functional
equivalent of express advocacy.” McConnell, supra, at
206. See also Brief for Appellant FEC 18 (arguing that
WRTL’s “advertisements are the functional equivalent of
the sort of express advocacy that this Court has long
recognized may be constitutionally regulated”); Reply
Brief for Appellant Sen. John McCain et al. in No. 06–970,
p. 14 (“[C]ourts should apply the standard articulated in
McConnell; Congress may constitutionally restrict corpo
rate funding of ads that are the ‘functional equivalent of
express advocacy’ for or against a candidate”). Intervenors
flesh out the standard somewhat further: “[C]ourts should
ask whether the ad’s audience would reasonably under
stand the ad, in the context of the campaign, to promote or
attack the candidate.” Id., at 15. The District Court
instead articulated a five-factor test that looks to whether
the ad under review “(1) describes a legislative issue that
is either currently the subject of legislative scrutiny or
likely to be the subject of such scrutiny in the near future;
(2) refers to the prior voting record or current position of
the named candidate on the issue described; (3) exhorts
the listener to do anything other than contact the candi
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 11
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
date about the described issue; (4) promotes, attacks,
supports, or opposes the named candidate; and (5) refers
to the upcoming election, candidacy, and/or political party
of the candidate.” 466 F. Supp. 2d 195, 207 (DC 2006).
The backup definition of “electioneering communications”
contained in BCRA itself, see n. 2, supra, offers another
possibility. It covers any communication that “promotes
or supports a candidate for that office . . . (regardless of
whether the communication expressly advocates a vote for
or against a candidate) and which also is suggestive of no
plausible meaning other than an exhortation to vote for or
against a specific candidate.” And the principal opinion in
this case offers a variation of its own (one bearing a strong
likeness to BCRA’s backup definition): whether “the ad is
susceptible of no reasonable interpretation other than as
an appeal to vote for or against a specific candidate.”
Ante, at 16.
There is a fundamental and inescapable problem with
all of these various tests. Each of them (and every other
test that is tied to the public perception, or a court’s per
ception, of the import, the intent, or the effect of the ad) is
impermissibly vague and thus ineffective to vindicate the
fundamental First Amendment rights of the large segment
of society to which §203 applies. Consider the application
of these tests to WRTL’s ads: There is not the slightest
doubt that these ads had an issue-advocacy component.
They explicitly urged lobbying on the pending legislative
issue of appellate-judge filibusters. The question before us
is whether something about them caused them to be the
“functional equivalent” of express advocacy, and thus
constitutionally subject to BCRA’s criminal penalty. Does
any of the tests suggested above answer this question with
the degree of clarity necessary to avoid the chilling of
fundamental political discourse? I think not.
The “functional equivalent” test does nothing more than
restate the question (and make clear that the electoral
12 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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advocacy need not be express). The test which asks how
the ad’s audience “would reasonably understand the ad”
provides ample room for debate and uncertainty. The
District Court’s five-factor test does not (and could not
possibly) specify how much weight is to be given to each
factor—and includes the inherently vague factor of
whether the ad “promotes, attacks, supports, or opposes
the named candidate.” (Does attacking the king’s position
attack the king?) The tests which look to whether the ad
is “susceptible of no plausible meaning” or “susceptible of
no reasonable interpretation” other than an exhortation to
vote for or against a specific candidate seem tighter. They
ultimately depend, however, upon a judicial judgment (or
is it—worse still—a jury judgment?) concerning “reason
able” or “plausible” import that is far from certain, that
rests upon consideration of innumerable surrounding
circumstances which the speaker may not even be aware
of, and that lends itself to distortion by reason of the
decisionmaker’s subjective evaluation of the importance or
unimportance of the challenged speech. In this critical
area of political discourse, the speaker cannot be com
pelled to risk felony prosecution with no more assurance of
impunity than his prediction that what he says will be
found susceptible of some “reasonable interpretation other
than as an appeal to vote for or against a specific candi
date.” Under these circumstances, “[m]any persons,
rather than undertake the considerable burden (and some
times risk) of vindicating their rights through case-by-case
litigation, will choose simply to abstain from protected
speech—harming not only themselves but society as a
whole, which is deprived of an uninhibited marketplace of
ideas.” Virginia v. Hicks, 539 U. S. 113, 119 (2003) (cita
tion omitted).
It will not do to say that this burden must be accepted—
that WRTL’s antifilibustering, constitutionally protected
speech can be constrained—in the necessary pursuit of
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 13
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
electoral “corruption.” We have rejected the “can’t-make
an-omelet-without-breaking-eggs” approach to the First
Amendment, even for the infinitely less important (and
less protected) speech category of virtual child pornogra
phy. In Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, 535 U. S. 234
(2002), the Government argued:
“the possibility of producing images by using com
puter imaging makes it very difficult for it to prose
cute those who produce pornography by using real
children. Experts . . . may have difficulty in saying
whether the pictures were made by using real chil
dren or by using computer imaging. The necessary so
lution . . . is to prohibit both kinds of images.” Id., at
254–255.
The Court rejected the principle that protected speech
may be banned because it is difficult to distinguish from
unprotected speech. Ibid. “[T]hat protected speech may
be banned as a means to ban unprotected speech,” it said,
“turns the First Amendment upside down.” Id., at 255.
The same principle must be applied here. Indeed, it must
be applied a fortiori, since laws targeting political speech
are the principal object of the First-Amendment guaran
tee. The fact that the line between electoral advocacy and
issue advocacy dissolves in practice is an indictment of the
statute, not a justification of it.
Buckley itself compels the conclusion that these tests
fall short of the clarity that the First Amendment de
mands. Recall that Buckley narrowed the ambiguous
phrase “any expenditure . . . relative to a clearly identified
candidate” to mean any expenditure “advocating the elec
tion or defeat of a candidate.” 424 U. S., at 42 (internal
quotation marks omitted). But that construction alone did
not eliminate the vagueness problem because “the distinc
tion between discussion of issues and candidates and
advocacy of election or defeat of candidates may often
14 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
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dissolve in practical application.” Ibid. Any effort to
distinguish between the two based on intent of the
speaker or effect of the speech on the listener would “ ‘pu[t]
the speaker . . . wholly at the mercy of the varied under
standing of his hearers,’ ” would “ ‘offe[r] no security for
free discussion,’ ” and would “ ‘compe[l] the speaker to
hedge and trim.’ ” Id., at 43 (quoting Thomas v. Collins,
323 U. S. 516, 535 (1945)). In order to avoid these “consti
tutional deficiencies,” the Court was compelled to narrow
the statutory language even further to cover only advertis
ing that used the magic words of express advocacy. 424
U. S., at 43–44.
If a permissible test short of the magic-words test ex
isted, Buckley would surely have adopted it. Especially
since a consequence of the express-advocacy interpretation
was the invalidation of the entire limitation on independ
ent expenditures, in part because the statute (as thus
narrowed) could not be an effective limitation on expendi
tures for electoral advocacy. (It would be “naiv[e],” Buck
ley said, to pretend that persons and groups would have
difficulty “devising expenditures that skirted the restric
tion on express advocacy of election or defeat but never
theless benefited the candidate’s campaign.” Id., at 45.)
Why did Buckley employ such a “highly strained” reading
of the statute, McConnell, 540 U. S., at 280 (opinion of
THOMAS, J.), when broader readings, more faithful to the
text, were available that might not have resulted in such
underinclusiveness? In particular, after going to the
trouble of narrowing the statute to cover “advocacy of [the]
election or defeat of a candidat[e],” why not do what the
principal opinion in these cases does, which is essentially
to preface that phrase with the phrase “susceptible of no
reasonable interpretation other than as”? Ante, at 16.
There is only one plausible explanation: The Court es
chewed narrowing constructions that would have been
more faithful to the text and more effective at capturing
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 15
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
campaign speech because those tests were all too vague.
We cannot now adopt a standard held to be facially vague
on the theory that it is somehow clear enough for constitu
tional as-applied challenges. If Buckley foreclosed such
vagueness in a statutory test, it also must foreclose such
vagueness in an as-applied test.
Though the principal opinion purports to recognize the
“imperative for clarity” in this area of First Amendment
law, its attempt to distinguish its test from the test found
to be vague in Buckley falls far short. It claims to be “not
so sure” that Buckley rejected its test because Buckley’s
holding did not concern “what the constitutional standard
was in the abstract, divorced from specific statutory lan
guage.” Ante, at 21, n. 7. Forget about abstractions: The
specific statutory language at issue in Buckley was inter
preted to mean “ ‘advocating the election or defeat of a
candidate,’ ” and that is materially identical to the opera
tive language in the principal opinion’s test. The principal
opinion’s protestation that Buckley’s vagueness holding
“d[id] not dictate a constitutional test,” ante, at 21, n. 7, is
utterly compromised by the fact that the principal opinion
itself relies on the very same vagueness holding to reject
an intent-and-effect test in this case. See ante, at 13–14
(citing Buckley, supra, at 43–44). It is the same vagueness
holding, and the principal opinion cannot invoke it on page
13 of its opinion and disclaim it on page 22. Finally, the
principal opinion quotes McConnell for the proposition
that “[t]he Buckley Court’s ‘express advocacy restriction
was an endpoint of statutory interpretation, not a first
principle of constitutional law.’ ” Ante, at 21, n. 7 (quoting
McConnell, 540 U. S., at 190). I am not sure why this
cryptic statement is at all relevant, since we are discuss
ing here the principle of constitutional law that underlay
Buckley’s express-advocacy restriction. In any case, the
statement is assuredly not a repudiation of Buckley’s
vagueness holding, since overbreadth and not vagueness
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was the issue in McConnell.5
What, then, is to be done? We could adopt WRTL’s
proposed test, under which §203 may not be applied to any
ad (1) that “focuses on a current legislative branch matter,
takes a position on the matter, and urges the public to ask
a legislator to take a particular position or action with
respect to the matter,” and (2) that “does not mention any
election, candidacy, political party, or challenger, or the
official’s character, qualifications, or fitness for office,” (3)
whether or not it “say[s] that the public official is wrong or
right on the issue,” so long as it does not expressly say he
is “wrong for [the] office.” Brief for Appellee 56–57 (foot
note omitted).6 Or we could of course adopt the Buckley
——————
5 JUSTICE ALITO’s concurrence at least hints that the principal opin
ion’s test may impermissibly chill speech, and offers to reconsider
McConnell’s holding “[i]f it turns out that the implementation of the as-
applied standard set out in the [principal opinion] impermissibly chills
political speech.” Post, at 1 (emphasis added). The wait-and-see
approach makes no sense and finds no support in our cases. How will
we know that would-be speakers have been chilled and have not spo
ken? If a tree does not fall in the forest, can we hear the sound it would
have made had it fallen? Our normal practice is to assess ex ante the
risk that a standard will have an impermissible chilling effect on First
Amendment protected speech. JUSTICE ALITO seemed to recognize that
as recently as, well, today. In another opinion released this morning,
he finds that a proposed test for censoring student speech “can easily be
manipulated in dangerous ways,” wherefore he “would reject it before
such abuse occurs.” Morse v. Frederick, ante, at 2 (concurring opinion)
(emphasis added). I would accord the core First Amendment speech at
issue here at least the same respect he accords speech in the classroom.
6 The principal opinion claims that its test is no more vague than
WRTL’s test. See ante, at 21, n. 7. I disagree. WRTL’s test requires
yes or no answers to a series of precise and focused questions: Does the
ad take a position on a legislative matter? Does it mention the elec
tion? Does it expressly say the candidate is wrong for the office? A
group of children—indeed, even a group of college students—could
answer these questions with great consistency. The principal opinion’s
test, by contrast, hinges on assessment of the reasonableness of a
determination that something does not constitute advocacy of the
election or defeat of a candidate.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 17
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
test of express advocacy. The problem is that, although
these tests are clear, they are incompatible with McCon
nell’s holding that §203 is facially constitutional, which
was premised on the finding that a vast majority of ads
proscribed by §203 are “sham issue ads,” 540 U. S., at 185,
that fall outside the First Amendment’s protection. In
deed, any clear rule that would protect all genuine issue
ads would cover such a substantial number of ads prohib
ited by §203 that §203 would be rendered substantially
overbroad. The Government claims that even the amor
phous test adopted by the District Court “call[s] into ques
tion a substantial percentage of the statute’s applications,”
Tr. of Oral Arg. 4,7 and that any test providing relief to
WRTL is incompatible with McConnell’s facial holding
because WRTL’s ads are in the “heartland” of what Con
gress meant to prohibit, Brief for Appellant FEC 18, 28,
36, n. 9. If that is so, then McConnell cannot be sustained.
Like the Buckley Court and the parties to these cases, I
——————
7 The same must be said, I think, of the test proposed by the principal
opinion. While its coverage is not entirely clear, it would apparently
protect even McConnell’s paradigmatic example of the functional equiva
lent of express advocacy—the so-called “Jane Doe ad,” which “con
demned 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 126–127.
Indeed, it at least arguably protects the most “striking” example of a so-
called sham issue ad in the McConnell record, the notorious “Yellowtail
ad,” which accused Bill Yellowtail of striking his wife and then urged
listeners to call him and “[t]ell him to support family values.” Id., at
193–194, n. 78 (internal quotation marks omitted). The claim that §203
on its face does not reach a substantial amount of speech protected
under the principal opinion’s test—and that the test is therefore com
patible with McConnell—seems to me indefensible. Indeed, the princi
pal opinion’s attempt at distinguishing McConnell is unpersuasive
enough, and the change in the law it works is substantial enough, that
seven Justices of this Court, having widely divergent views concerning
the constitutionality of the restrictions at issue, agree that the opinion
effectively overrules McConnell without saying so. See post, at 24–25
(SOUTER, J., dissenting). This faux judicial restraint is judicial obfusca
tion.
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recognize the practical reality that corporations can evade
the express-advocacy standard. I share the instinct that
“[w]hat separates issue advocacy and political advocacy is
a line in the sand drawn on a windy day.” See McConnell,
supra, at 126, n. 16 (internal quotation marks omitted);
Brief for Appellant FEC 30; Brief for Appellant Sen. John
McCain et al. in No. 06–970, p. 35. But the way to indulge
that instinct consistently with the First Amendment is
either to eliminate restrictions on independent expendi
tures altogether or to confine them to one side of the tradi
tional line—the express-advocacy line, set in concrete on a
calm day by Buckley, several decades ago. Section 203’s
line is bright, but it bans vast amounts of political advo
cacy indistinguishable from hitherto protected speech.
The foregoing analysis shows that McConnell was mis
taken in its belief that as-applied challenges could elimi
nate the unconstitutional applications of §203. They can
do so only if a test is adopted which contradicts the hold
ing of McConnell—that §203 is facially valid because the
vast majority of pre-election issue ads can constitutionally
be proscribed. In light of the weakness in Austin’s ration
ale, and in light of the longstanding acceptance of the
clarity of Buckley’s express-advocacy line, it was adven
turous for McConnell to extend Austin beyond corporate
speech constituting express advocacy. Today’s cases make
it apparent that the adventure is a flop, and that McCon
nell’s holding concerning §203 was wrong.8
——————
8 JUSTICE KENNEDY’s opinion in McConnell explained why the possi
bility of corporations’ funding speech out of a PAC does not save the
statute from constitutional infirmity. See 540 U. S., at 330–333.
McConnell’s rejection of those arguments rested, of course, upon the
assumption that for non-PAC genuine issue ads as-applied challenges
would be available. See id., at 207; WRTL I, 546 U. S. 410, 411–412
(2006) (per curiam). The discussion today shows that to be mistaken.
The dissent asserts, post, at 31, that there is no reason “why substi
tuting the phrase ‘Contact your Senators’ for the phrase ‘Contact
Senators Feingold and Kohl’ would have denied WRTL a constitution
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 19
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
IV
Which brings me to the question of stare decisis. “Stare
decisis is not an inexorable command” or “ ‘a mechanical
formula of adherence to the latest decision.’ ” Payne v.
Tennessee, 501 U. S. 808, 828 (1991) (quoting Helvering v.
Hallock, 309 U. S. 106, 119 (1940)). It is instead “ ‘a prin
ciple of policy,’ ” Payne, supra, at 828, and this Court has a
“considered practice” not to apply that principle of policy
“as rigidly in constitutional as in nonconstitutional cases.”
Glidden Co. v. Zdanok, 370 U. S. 530, 543 (1962). This
Court has not hesitated to overrule decisions offensive to
the First Amendment (a “fixed star in our constitutional
constellation,” if there is one, West Virginia Bd. of Ed. v.
Barnette, 319 U. S. 624, 642 (1943))—and to do so
promptly where fundamental error was apparent. Just
three years after our erroneous decision in Minersville
School Dist. v. Gobitis, 310 U. S. 586 (1940), the Court
corrected the error in Barnette. Overruling a constitu
tional case decided just a few years earlier is far from
unprecedented.9
——————
ally sufficient . . . alternative.” Surely that is not so. The purpose of
the ad was to put political pressure upon Senator Feingold to change
his position on the filibuster—not only through the constituents who
accepted the invitation to contact him, but also through the very
existence of an ad bringing to the public’s attention that he, Senator
Feingold, stood athwart the allowance of a vote on judicial nominees.
(Unlike the principal opinion, I think that the fair import of the ad in
context.)
9 See, e.g., Seminole Tribe of Fla. v. Florida, 517 U. S. 44 (1996) (over
ruling Pennsylvania v. Union Gas Co., 491 U. S. 1 (1989)); Adarand
Constructors, Inc. v. Peña, 515 U. S. 200 (1995) (overruling in part
Metro Broadcasting, Inc. v. FCC, 497 U. S. 547 (1990)); United States v.
Dixon, 509 U. S. 688 (1993) (overruling Grady v. Corbin, 495 U. S. 508
(1990)); Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U. S. 808 (1991) (overruling South
Carolina v. Gathers, 490 U. S. 805 (1989), and Booth v. Maryland, 482
U. S. 496 (1987)); Daniels v. Williams, 474 U. S. 327 (1986) (overruling
in part Parratt v. Taylor, 451 U. S. 527 (1981)); Garcia v. San Antonio
Metropolitan Transit Authority, 469 U. S. 528 (1985) (overruling
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Of particular relevance to the stare decisis question in
these cases is the impracticability of the regime created by
McConnell. Stare decisis considerations carry little weight
when an erroneous “governing decisio[n]” has created an
“unworkable” legal regime. Payne, supra, at 827. As
described above, the McConnell regime is unworkable
because of the inability of any acceptable as-applied test to
validate the facial constitutionality of §203—that is, its
inability to sustain proscription of the vast majority of
issue ads. We could render the regime workable only by
effectively overruling McConnell without saying so—
adopting a clear as-applied rule protective of speech in the
“heartland” of what Congress prohibited. The promise of
an administrable as-applied rule that is both effective in
the vindication of First Amendment rights and consistent
with McConnell’s holding is illusory.
It is not as though McConnell produced a settled body of
law. Indeed, it is far more accurate to say that McConnell
unsettled a body of law. Not until 1947, with the enact
ment of the Taft-Hartley amendments to the Federal
Corrupt Practices Act, 1925, did Congress even purport to
regulate campaign-related expenditures of corporations
and unions. See United States v. CIO, 335 U. S. 106, 107,
113–115 (1948). In the three decades following, this Court
expressly declined to pronounce upon the constitutionality
——————
National League of Cities v. Usery, 426 U. S. 833 (1976)); United States
v. Scott, 437 U. S. 82 (1978) (overruling United States v. Jenkins, 420
U. S. 358 (1975)); National League of Cities, supra, (overruling Mary
land v. Wirtz, 392 U. S. 183 (1968)); Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651
(1974) (overruling in part Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U. S. 618 (1969);
State Dept. of Health and Rehabilitative Servs. of Fla. v. Zarate, 407
U. S. 918 (1972); and Sterrett v. Mothers’ & Children’s Rights Organiza
tion, 409 U. S. 809 (1972)); Miller v. California, 413 U. S. 15 (1973)
(overruling Book Named “John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of
Pleasure” v. Attorney General of Mass., 383 U. S. 413 (1966)); Perez v.
Campbell, 402 U. S. 637 (1971) (overruling Kesler v. Department of
Public Safety of Utah, 369 U. S. 153 (1962)).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 21
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
of such restrictions on independent expenditures. See
Pipefitters v. United States, 407 U. S. 385, 400 (1972);
United States v. Automobile Workers, 352 U. S. 567, 591–
592 (1957); CIO, supra, at 110, 124. When the Court
finally did turn to that question, it struck them down. See
Buckley, 424 U. S. 1. Our subsequent pre-McConnell
decisions, with the lone exception of Austin, disapproved
limits on independent expenditures. The modest medicine
of restoring First Amendment protection to nonexpress
advocacy—speech that was protected until three Terms
ago—does not unsettle an established body of law.
Neither do any of the other considerations relevant to
stare decisis suggest adherence to McConnell. These cases
do not involve property or contract rights, where reliance
interests are involved. Payne, supra, at 828. And
McConnell’s §203 holding has assuredly not become “em
bedded” in our “national culture.” Dickerson v. United
States, 530 U. S. 428, 443–444 (2000) (declining to over
rule Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U. S. 436 (1966), in part
because it had become embedded in our national culture).
If §203 has had any cultural impact, it has been to under
mine the traditional and important role of grassroots
advocacy in American politics by burdening the “budget-
strapped nonprofit entities upon which many of our citi
zens rely for political commentary and advocacy.” McCon
nell, 540 U. S., at 340 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.).
Perhaps overruling this one part of McConnell with
respect to one part of BCRA would not “ai[d] the legisla
tive effort to combat real or apparent corruption.” Id., at
194. But the First Amendment was not designed to facili
tate legislation, even wise legislation. Indeed, the assess
ment of former House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt,
a proponent of campaign-finance reform, may well be
correct. He said that “ ‘[w]hat we have is two important
values in direct conflict: freedom of speech and our desire
for healthy campaigns in a healthy democracy,’ ” and
22 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
Opinion of SCALIA, J.
“ ‘[y]ou can’t have both.’ ” Gibbs, The Wake-Up Call, Time,
Feb. 3, 1997, pp. 22, 25. (He was referring, presumably,
to incumbents’ notions of healthy campaigns.) If he was
wrong, however, and the two values can coexist, it is
pretty clear which side of the equation this institution is
primarily responsible for. It is perhaps our most impor
tant constitutional task to assure freedom of political
speech. And when a statute creates a regime as unwork
able and unconstitutional as today’s effort at as-applied
review proves §203 to be, it is our responsibility to de
cline enforcement.
* * *
There is wondrous irony to be found in both the genesis
and the consequences of BCRA. In the fact that the insti
tutions it was designed to muzzle—unions and nearly all
manner of corporations—for all the “corrosive and distort
ing effects” of their “immense aggregations of wealth,”
were utterly impotent to prevent the passage of this legis
lation that forbids them to criticize candidates (including
incumbents). In the fact that the effect of BCRA has been
to concentrate more political power in the hands of the
country’s wealthiest individuals and their so-called 527
organizations, unregulated by §203. (In the 2004 election
cycle, a mere 24 individuals contributed an astounding
total of $142 million to 527s. S. Weissman & R. Hassan,
BCRA and the 527 Groups, in The Election After Reform
79, 92—96 (M. Malbin ed. 2006).) And in the fact that
while these wealthy individuals dominate political dis
course, it is this small, grass-roots organization of Wiscon
sin Right to Life that is muzzled.
I would overrule that part of the Court’s decision in
McConnell upholding §203(a) of BCRA. Accordingly, I join
Parts I and II of today’s principal opinion and otherwise
concur only in the judgment.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 1
SOUTER, J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 06–969 and 06–970
_________________
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, APPELLANT
06–969 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN, ET AL., APPELLANTS
06–970 v.
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC.
ON APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
[June 25, 2007]
JUSTICE SOUTER, with whom JUSTICE STEVENS, JUSTICE
GINSBURG, and JUSTICE BREYER join, dissenting.
The significance and effect of today’s judgment, from
which I respectfully dissent, turn on three things: the
demand for campaign money in huge amounts from large
contributors, whose power has produced a cynical elector
ate; the congressional recognition of the ensuing threat to
democratic integrity as reflected in a century of legislation
restricting the electoral leverage of concentrations of
money in corporate and union treasuries; and McConnell
v. Federal Election Comm’n, 540 U. S. 93 (2003), declaring
the facial validity of the most recent Act of Congress in
that tradition, a decision that is effectively, and unjusti
fiably, overruled today.1
I
The indispensable ingredient of a political candidacy is
——————
1 Substantially for the reasons stated by the Court, ante, at 7–10, I
believe these cases are justiciable.
2 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
money for advertising. In the 2004 campaign, more than
half of the combined expenditures by the two principal
presidential candidates (excluding fundraising) went for
media time and space. See The Costliest Campaign,
Washington Post, Dec. 30, 2004, p. A7.2 And in the 2005–
——————
2 Between candidates, political action committees, interest groups,
and national, state, and local parties, spending on the 2004 state and
federal elections exceeded $4 billion. K. Patterson, Spending in the
2004 Election, in Financing the 2004 Election 68, 71, tbl. 3–1 (D.
Magleby, A. Corrado, & K. Patterson eds. 2006). Congressional cam
paigns spent over $1 billion in 2004, id., at 75, tbl. 3–4, state legislative
candidates raised three-quarters of a billion dollars in the 2003–2004
election cycle, The Institute on Money in State Politics, State Elec-
tions Overview 2004, p. 2 (2005), available at http://www.followthe
money.org/press/Reports/200601041.pdf (all Internet materials as
visited June 20, 2007, and available in Clerk of Court’s case file), and
gubernatorial candidates raised over $200 million, id., at 6. State
judicial campaigns have become flush with cash as well, with state
supreme court candidates raising over $30 million in the 2005–2006
cycle. Sample et al., The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2006, p. 16
(2007), available at http://www.justiceatstake.org/files/NewPoliticsof
JudicialElections2006.pdf. In a single 2004 judicial election in Illinois,
the candidates raised a breathtaking $9.3 million, an amount the
winner called “ ‘obscene.’ ” The Justice-elect wondered, “ ‘How can
people have faith in the system?’ ” Moyer & Brandenburg, Big Money
and Special Interests are Warping Judicial Elections, Legal Times, Oct.
9, 2006, p. 50 (quoting Justice Lloyd Karmeier of the Illinois Supreme
Court). According to polling data, the fear that people will lose trust in
the system is well founded. With respect to judicial elections, a context
in which the influence of campaign contributions is most troubling, a
recent poll of business leaders revealed that about four in five thought
that campaign contributions have at least “some influence” on judges’
decisions, while 90 percent are at least “somewhat concerned” that
“[c]ampaign contributions and political pressure will make judges
accountable to politicians and special interest groups instead of the law
and the Constitution.” Zogby International, Attitudes and Views of
American Business Leaders on State Judicial Elections and Political
Contributions to Judges 4–5 (May 2007), available at http://www.
ced.org/docs/report/report_2007judicial_survey.pdf. People have similar
feelings about other elected officials. See M. Mellman & R. Wirthlin,
Public Views of Party Soft Money, in Inside the Campaign Finance
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 3
SOUTER, J., dissenting
2006 election cycle, the expenditure of more than $2 bil
lion on television shattered the previous record, even
without a presidential contest. See Inside Media, Me
diaWeek, Nov. 20, 2006, p. 18. The portent is for still
greater spending. By the end of March 2007, almost a
year before the first primary and more than 18 months
before the general election, presidential candidates had
already raised over $150 million. See Balz, Fundraising
Totals Challenge Early Campaign Assumptions, Washing
ton Post, Apr. 17, 2007, p. A1 (citing figures and noting
that “[t]he campaign is living up to its reputation as the
most expensive in U. S. history”). To reach this total, the
leading fundraisers collected over $250,000 per day in the
first quarter of 2007, Mullins, Clinton Leads the Money
Race, Wall Street Journal, Apr. 16, 2007, p. A8, and the
eventual nominees are expected to raise $500 million
apiece (about $680,000 per day over a 2-year election
cycle), Kirkpatrick and Pilhofer, McCain Lags in Income
But Excels in Spending, Report Shows, N. Y. Times, Apr.
15, 2007, p. 20.
The indispensability of these huge sums has two signifi
cant consequences for American Government that are
particularly on point here. The enormous demands, first,
assign power to deep pockets. See Balz, supra, at A6 (“For
all the interest in Internet fundraising, big donors still
ruled in the first quarter, with roughly 80 percent of dona
tions coming in amounts of $1,000 or more”). Candidates
occasionally boast about the number of contributors they
have, but the headlines speaking in dollars reflect political
reality. See, e.g., Mullins, supra, at A8 (headlined “Clin
ton Leads the Money Race”).
Some major contributors get satisfaction from pitching
in for their candidates, but political preference fails to
——————
Battle 266–269 (A. Corrado, T. Mann, & T. Potter eds. 2003) (hereinaf
ter Mellman & Wirthlin); see also infra, at 4–5.
4 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
account for the frequency of giving “substantial sums to
both major national parties,” McConnell, 540 U. S., at 148,
a practice driven “by stark political pragmatism, not by
ideological support for either party or their candidates,”
Brief for Committee for Economic Development et al. as
Amici Curiae in McConnell, O. T. 2003, No. 02–1674, p. 3
(hereinafter CED Brief). What the high-dollar pragma
tists of either variety get is special access to the officials
they help elect, and with it a disproportionate influence on
those in power. See McConnell, supra, at 130–131. As the
erstwhile officer of a large American corporation put it,
“ ‘[b]usiness leaders believe—based on experience and with
good reason—that . . . access gives them an opportunity to
shape and affect governmental decisions and that their
ability to do so derives from the fact that they have given
large sums of money to the parties.’ ” CED Brief 9. At a
critical level, contributions that underwrite elections are
leverage for enormous political influence.
Voters know this. Hence, the second important conse
quence of the demand for big money to finance publicity:
pervasive public cynicism. A 2002 poll found that 71
percent of Americans think Members of Congress cast
votes based on the views of their big contributors, even
when those views differ from the Member’s own beliefs
about what is best for the country. Mellman & Wirthlin
267; see also id., at 266 (“In public opinion research it is
uncommon to have 70 percent or more of the public see an
issue the same way. When they do, it indicates an unusu
ally strong agreement on that issue”). The same percent
age believes that the will of contributors tempts Members
to vote against the majority view of their constituents. Id.,
at 267. Almost half of Americans believe that Members
often decide how to vote based on what big contributors to
their party want, while only a quarter think Members
often base their votes on perceptions of what is best for the
country or their constituents. Ibid.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 5
SOUTER, J., dissenting
Devoting concentrations of money in self-interested
hands to the support of political campaigning therefore
threatens the capacity of this democracy to represent its
constituents and the confidence of its citizens in their
capacity to govern themselves. These are the elements
summed up in the notion of political integrity, giving it a
value second to none in a free society.
II
If the threat to this value flowing from concentrations of
money in politics has reached an unprecedented enormity,
it has been gathering force for generations. Before the
turn of the last century, as now, it was obvious that the
purchase of influence and the cynicism of voters threaten
the integrity and stability of democratic government, each
derived from the responsiveness of its law to the interests
of citizens and their confidence in that focus. The danger
has traditionally seemed at its apex when no reasonable
limits constrain the campaign activities of organizations
whose “unique legal and economic characteristics” are
tailored to “facilitat[e] the amassing of large treasuries,”
Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce, 494 U. S. 652,
658, 660 (1990). Corporations were the earliest subjects of
concern; the same characteristics that have made them
engines of the Nation’s extraordinary prosperity have
given them the financial muscle to gain “advantage in the
political marketplace” when they turn from core corporate
activity to electioneering, Federal Election Comm’n v.
Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc., 479 U. S. 238, 258
(1986) (MCFL), and in “Congress’ judgment” the same
concern extends to labor unions as to corporations, Federal
Election Comm’n v. National Right to Work Comm., 459
U. S. 197, 210 (1982); see also Austin, supra, at 661.
A
In the wake of the industrial expansion after the Civil
War there developed a momentum for civic reform that led
6 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
to the enactment of the Pendleton Civil Service Act of
1883, ch. 27, 22 Stat. 403, which stopped political parties
from raising money through compulsory assessments on
federal employees. Not unnaturally, corporations filled
the vacuum, see R. Mutch, Campaigns, Congress, and
Courts xvi–xvii (1988) (hereinafter Mutch), and in due
course demonstrated what concentrated capital could do.
The resulting political leverage disturbed “the confidence
of the plain people of small means in our political institu
tions,” E. Root, The Political Use of Money (delivered Sept.
3, 1894), in Addresses on Government and Citizenship
141, 143–144 (R. Bacon & J. Scott eds. 1916) (cited in
United States v. Automobile Workers, 352 U. S. 567, 571
(1957)), and the 1904 Presidential campaign eventually
“crystallized popular sentiment” on the subject of money
and politics, id., at 572. In his next message to Congress,
President Theodore Roosevelt invoked the power “to pro
tect the integrity of the elections of its own officials [as]
inherent” in government, and called for “vigorous meas
ures to eradicate” perceived political corruption, for he
found “no enemy of free government more dangerous and
none so insidious.”3 39 Cong. Rec. 17 (1904).
The following year, the President urged that “[a]ll con
tributions by corporations to any political committee or for
any political purpose should be forbidden by law.” 40
Cong. Rec. 96 (1905). His call was seconded by the Senate
sponsor of the eventual legislation, whose “sad thought
[was] that the Senate is discredited by the people of the
United States as being a body more or less corruptible or
——————
3 Perhaps the President’s call was inspired by the accusations from
his own 1904 Democratic opponent, Judge Alton B. Parker, that the
Republican camp accepted corporate campaign contributions intended
to buy influence. See A. Corrado, Money and Politics: A History of
Federal Campaign Finance Law, in A. Corrado, T. Mann, D. Ortiz, & T.
Potter, The New Campaign Finance Sourcebook 7, 10–11 (2005) (here
inafter Campaign Finance Sourcebook).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 7
SOUTER, J., dissenting
corrupted.” Id., at 229. The President persisted in his
1906 message to Congress with another call for “a law
prohibiting all corporations from contributing to the cam
paign expenses of any party,” 41 Cong. Rec. 22, and the
next year Congress passed the Tillman Act of 1907:
“it shall be unlawful for any national bank, or any
corporation organized by authority of any laws of
Congress, to make a money contribution in connection
with any election to any political office. It shall also
be unlawful for any corporation whatever to make a
money contribution in connection with any election at
which Presidential and Vice-Presidential electors or a
Representative in Congress is to be voted for or any
election by any State legislature of a United States
Senator.” 34 Stat. 864–865.4
The aim was “not merely to prevent the subversion of the
integrity of the electoral process,” but “to sustain the
active, alert responsibility of the individual citizen in a
democracy for the wise conduct of government.” Automo
bile Workers, supra, at 575.
B
Thirty years later, new questions about the electoral
influence of accumulated wealth surfaced as organized
labor expanded during the New Deal. In the 1936 elec
tion, labor unions contributed “unprecedented” sums,
S. Rep. No. 151, 75th Cong., 1st Sess., 127 (1937), the
greater part of them by the United Mine Workers, see
Campaign Finance Sourcebook 17. And in due course
——————
4 A bill along similar lines had been unsuccessfully introduced years
earlier by Senator William Chandler, a New Hampshire Republican
whom the railroad interests helped defeat in 1900. See Mutch 4–6
(discussing the unlikely alliance between Chandler, a radical Republi
can, and Senator Benjamin Tillman, a South Carolina Democrat who
ultimately succeeded in enacting the law that carries his name).
8 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
reaction began to build: “[w]artime strikes gave rise to
fears of the new concentration of power represented by the
gains of trade unionism. And so the belief grew that, just
as the great corporations had made huge political contri
butions to influence governmental action . . . , the powerful
unions were pursuing a similar course, and with the same
untoward consequences for the democratic process.”
Automobile Workers, supra, at 578. Congress responded
with the War Labor Disputes Act of 1943, which extended
the ban on corporate donations to labor organizations, ch.
144, §9, 57 Stat. 167–168, an extension that was made
permanent in the Labor Management Relations Act, 1947,
better known as Taft-Hartley, §304, 61 Stat. 159–160.
C
At the same time, Congress had another worry that
foreshadows our case today. It was concerned that the
statutory prohibition on corporate “contribution[s]” was
being so narrowly construed as to open a “loophole
whereby corporations, national banks, and labor organiza
tions are enabled to avoid the obviously intended restric
tive policy of the statute by garbing their financial assis
tance in the form of an ‘expenditure’ rather than a
contribution.” S. Rep. No. 1, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., 38–39
(1947); see also H. Rep. No. 2739, 79th Cong., 2d Sess., 40
(1947) (“The intent and purpose of the provision of the act
prohibiting any corporation or labor organization making
any contribution in connection with any election would be
wholly defeated if it were assumed that the term ‘making
any contribution’ related only to the donating of money
directly to a candidate, and excluded the vast expendi
tures of money in the activities herein shown to be en
gaged in extensively. Of what avail would a law be to
prohibit the contributing direct to a candidate and yet
permit the expenditure of large sums in his behalf?”).
Taft-Hartley therefore extended the prohibition to any
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 9
SOUTER, J., dissenting
“contribution or expenditure” by a corporation or a union
“in connection with” a federal election. §304, 61 Stat.
159.5
D
The new law left open, however, the right of a union to
spend money on electioneering from a segregated fund
raised specifically for that purpose from members, but not
drawn from the general treasury. Segregated funding
entities, the now-familiar political action committees or
PACs, had been established prior to Taft-Hartley, and we
concluded in Pipefitters v. United States, 407 U. S. 385,
409 (1972), that Taft-Hartley did not prohibit “union
contributions and expenditures from political funds
financed in some sense by the voluntary donations of
employees.”
This balance of authorized and restricted financing
methods for corporate and union electioneering was made
explicit in the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971
(FECA). See 86 Stat. 10 (“[T]he phrase ‘contribution or
expenditure’ . . . shall not include . . . the establishment,
administration, and solicitation of contributions to a sepa
rate segregated fund to be utilized for political purposes by
a corporation or labor organization”). “[T]he underlying
theory [of the statute was] that substantial general pur
pose treasuries should not be diverted to political pur
poses, both because of the effect on the political process of
such aggregated wealth and out of concern for the dissent
ing member or stockholder.” 117 Cong. Rec. 43381 (1971)
(statement of Rep. Hansen). But the PAC exception main
——————
5 Taft-Hartley also specified that the prohibition extends to primary
elections, 61 Stat. 159, an extension that had been thought likely to
exceed the authority of Congress under Art. I, §4 of the Constitution
until our decision in United States v. Classic, 313 U. S. 299, 317 (1941).
See H. Rep. No. 2093, 78th Cong., 2d Sess., 8–9 (1945) (discussing the
significance of Classic).
10 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
tained “ ‘the proper balance in regulating corporate and
union political activity required by sound policy and the
Constitution.’ ” Pipefitters, supra, at 431 (quoting 117
Cong. Rec. 43381 (statement of Rep. Hansen)).6
E
In 1986, in MCFL, we reexamined the longstanding ban
on spending corporate and union treasury funds “in con
nection with” federal elections, 2 U. S. C. §441b, and drew
two conclusions implicated in the present case. First, we
construed the “in connection with” phrase in much the
same way we had interpreted comparable FECA language
challenged in Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1 (1976) (per
curiam). We held that to avoid vagueness, the product of
prohibited corporate and union expenditures “must consti
tute ‘express advocacy’ in order to be subject to the prohi
bition.” MCFL, 479 U. S., at 249.
We thus held that the prohibition applied “only to ex
penditures for communications that in express terms
advocate the election or defeat of a clearly identified can
didate for federal office.” Buckley, 424 U. S., at 44. “[E]x
press terms,” in turn, meant what had already become
known as “magic words,” such as “ ‘vote for,’ ‘elect,’ ‘sup
port,’ ‘cast your ballot for,’ ‘Smith for Congress,’ ‘vote
——————
6 FECA also validated corporate and union spending on internal
communications and nonpartisan activities designed to promote voting.
See 86 Stat. 10 (“[T]he phrase ‘contribution or expenditure’ . . . shall not
include communications by a corporation to its stockholders and their
families, or by a labor organization to its members and their families on
any subject [or] nonpartisan registration and get-out-the-vote cam
paigns by a corporation aimed at its stockholders and their families or
by a labor organization aimed at its members and their families”). “ ‘If
an organization . . . believes that certain candidates pose a threat to its
well-being or the well-being of its members or stockholders, it should be
able to get its views to those members or stockholders. . . . Both union
members and stockholders have the right to expect this expert guid
ance.’ ” Pipefitters, 407 U. S., at 431, n. 42 (quoting 117 Cong. Rec.
43380 (statement of Rep. Hansen)).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 11
SOUTER, J., dissenting
against,’ ‘defeat,’ ‘reject.’ ” Ibid., n. 52. The consequence of
this construction was obvious: it pulled the teeth out of the
statute, as we had understood when we announced it in its
earlier application in Buckley:
“The exacting interpretation of the statutory language
necessary to avoid unconstitutional vagueness . . . un
dermines the limitation’s effectiveness as a loophole-
closing provision by facilitating circumvention by
those seeking to exert improper influence upon a can
didate or officeholder. It would naively underestimate
the ingenuity and resourcefulness of persons and
groups desiring to buy influence to believe that they
would have much difficulty devising expenditures that
skirted the restriction on express advocacy of election
or defeat but nevertheless benefited the candidate’s
campaign.” Id., at 45.
Nor was the statute, even as thus narrowed, enforceable
against the particular advocacy corporation challenging
the limit in MCFL. This was the second holding of MCFL
relevant here; we explained that the congressional effort
to limit the political influence of corporate money “has
reflected concern not about use of the corporate form per
se, but about the potential for unfair deployment of wealth
for political purposes,” 479 U. S., at 259. We held that this
“legitima[te]” concern could not reasonably extend to
electioneering expenditures by the corporation at issue in
MCFL, which neither “engage[d] in business activities”
nor accepted donations from business corporations and
unions (and thus could not serve as a “condui[t]” for politi
cal spending by those entities). Id., at 263–264.7
——————
7 Compare Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce, 494 U. S. 652,
664 (1990) (First Amendment does not protect a nonprofit corporation
from expenditure limits if the corporation accepts corporate and union
contributions, lest corporations and unions readily “circumvent” restric
tions on their own election spending “by funneling money through”
12 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
F
As was expectable, narrowing the corporate-union elec
tioneering limitation to magic words soon reduced it to
futility. “[P]olitical money . . . is a moving target,” Issa
charoff & Karlan, The Hydraulics of Campaign Finance
Reform, 77 Tex. L. Rev. 1705, 1707 (1999), and the “inge
nuity and resourcefulness” of political financiers revealed
the massive regulatory gap left by the “magic words” test,
——————
nonprofits). JUSTICE SCALIA asserts that Austin “strayed far from” the
principles we announced in First Nat. Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, 435
U. S. 765 (1978). Ante, at 7 (opinion concurring in part and concurring
in judgment). Bellotti, however, concerned corporate spending in
connection with a referendum, and we went out of our way in that case
to avoid casting any doubt upon the constitutionality of limiting corpo
rate expenditures during candidate elections. We said:
“The overriding concern behind the enactment of [the federal restric
tions on corporate contributions and expenditures] was the problem of
corruption of elected representatives through the creation of political
debts. The importance of the governmental interest in preventing this
occurrence has never been doubted. The case before us presents no
comparable problem, and our consideration of a corporation’s right to
speak on issues of general public interest implies no comparable right
in the quite different context of participation in a political campaign for
election to public office. Congress might well be able to demonstrate
the existence of a danger of real or apparent corruption in independent
expenditures by corporations to influence candidate elections.” 435
U. S., at 788, n. 26 (citations omitted).
Eight years before Austin, we unanimously reaffirmed that Bellotti
“specifically pointed out that in elections of candidates to public office,
unlike in referenda on issues of general public interest, there may well
be a threat of real or apparent corruption.” Federal Election Comm’n v.
National Right to Work Comm., 459 U. S. 197, 210, n. 7 (1982). Then,
four years later, in MCFL, we also noted that an expenditure limit
offering corporations a PAC alternative is “distinguishable from the
complete foreclosure of any opportunity for political speech” that we
addressed in Bellotti. 479 U. S., at 259, n. 12. So Austin did not
“stra[y]” from Bellotti, ante, at 7 (opinion of SCALIA, J.); the reasons
Bellotti was not controlling in Austin had been clearly foreshadowed in
Bellotti itself and confirmed repeatedly in our decisions leading up to
Austin.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 13
SOUTER, J., dissenting
Buckley, 424 U. S., at 45. It proved to be the door through
which so-called “issue ads” of current practice entered
American politics.
An issue ad is an advertisement on a political subject
urging the reader or listener to let a politician know what
he thinks, but containing no magic words telling the re
cipient to vote for or against anyone. By the 1996 election
cycle, between $135 and $150 million was being devoted to
these ads, see McConnell, 540 U. S., at 127, n. 20, and
because they had no magic words, they failed to trigger
the limitation on union or corporate expenditures for
electioneering. Experience showed, however, just what we
foresaw in Buckley, that the line between “issue” broad
casts and outright electioneering was a patent fiction, as
in the example of a television “issue ad” that ran during a
Montana congressional race between Republican Rick Hill
and Democrat Bill Yellowtail in 1996:
“ ‘ “Who is Bill Yellowtail? He preaches family values
but took a swing at his wife. And Yellowtail’s re
sponse? He only slapped her. But ‘her nose was not
broken.’ He talks law and order . . . but is himself a
convicted felon. And though he talks about protecting
children, Yellowtail failed to make his own child sup
port payments—then voted against child support en
forcement. Call Bill Yellowtail. Tell him to support
family values.” ’ ” McConnell, supra, at 193–194,
n. 78.8
——————
8 Or this example from a Texas district where Democrat Nick
Lampson challenged incumbent Republican Steve Stockman, and
where the AFL–CIO ran the following advertisement in September and
October of 1996:
“ ‘[Narrator] What’s important to America’s families? [Middle-aged
man] “My pension is very important because it will provide a signifi
cant amount of my income when I retire.” [Narrator] And where do the
candidates stand? Congressman Steve Stockman voted to make it
easier for corporations to raid employee pension funds. Nick Lampson
14 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
There are no “magic words” of “express advocacy” in that
statement, but no one could deny with a straight face that
the message called for defeating Yellowtail.
There was nothing unusual about the Yellowtail issue
ad in 1996, and an enquiry into campaign practices by the
Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs found as a
general matter that “the distinction between issue and
express advocacy . . . appeared to be meaningless in the
1996 elections.” 3 S. Rep. No. 105–167, p. 3994 (1998).
“ ‘ “What separates issue advocacy and political advocacy is
a line in the sand drawn on a windy day.” ’ ” McConnell,
supra, at 126, n. 16 9 (quoting the former director of an
advocacy organization’s PAC). Indeed, the President of
the AFL–CIO stated that “ ‘the bulk of’ ” its ads were tar
geted for broadcast in districts represented by “ ‘first-term,
freshmen Republicans who . . . may be defeatable,’ ” 3
S. Rep. No. 105–167, at 3997, 3998, and n. 23, and the
Senate Committee found that the union used a “$.15 per
member, per month assessment” to finance “issue ads that
were clearly designed to influence the outcome of the
election,” id., at 3999, 4000. Not surprisingly, “ostensibly
independent” ads “were often actually coordinated with,
and controlled by, the campaigns.” McConnell, supra, at
131.
Nor was it surprising that the Senate Committee heard
testimony that “ ‘[w]ithout taming’ ” the vast sums flowing
into issue ads, “ ‘campaign finance reform—no matter how
thoroughly it addresses . . . perceived problems—will come
——————
opposes that plan. He supports new safeguards to protect employee
pension funds. When it comes to your pension, there is a difference.
Call and find out.’ ” McConnell v. FEC, 251 F. Supp. 2d 176, 201 (DC
2003) (per curiam) (emphasis deleted; brackets in original).
9 Quoting McConnell, supra, at 536, 537 (Kollar-Kotelly, J.) (in turn
quoting T. Metaksa, Opening Remarks at the American Assn. of Politi
cal Consultants Fifth General Session on “Issue Advocacy,” Jan. 17,
1997, p. 2).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 15
SOUTER, J., dissenting
to naught.’ ” 3 S. Rep. No. 105–167, at 4480 (quoting
testimony of Professor Daniel R. Ortiz). The Committee
predicted that “if the course of non-action is followed, . . .
Congress would be encouraging further growth of union,
corporate nonprofit and individual independent expendi
tures.” Id., at 4481.10 The next two elections validated the
——————
10 The Senate Committee was not alone in its concerns. In Wisconsin,
for example, the Governor’s Blue-Ribbon Commission on Campaign
Finance Reform reported:
“Especially beginning in 1996, issue advocacy during the campaign
season dramatically expanded in Wisconsin.
. . . . .
“The Commission concludes that, in each of these cases, the expendi
tures were clearly campaign-oriented activities. They were quite
clearly designed to influence the electoral process. They were focused
either on electing or defeating a candidate. The Commission bases this
conclusion on the following points:
“Although those paying for the activities claimed they were aimed
solely at educating voters on the issues, they each mentioned the names
of candidates for office.
“They occurred only when election races were in progress that in
volved a contest between an incumbent and a challenger. When the
election was over, the activities ended.
“The activity has occurred after legislative sessions when the issues
about which advocacy was occurring were not being deliberated by the
legislature.
“The activity occurred in campaign season, between the candidate’s
filing for candidacy and election time. Advertisements of this sort have
tended to occur at virtually no other time.
“The activity involved the electronic media, mass mailings, or cen
trally located telephone banks.
. . . . .
“The explosive growth of campaign-based advocacy, without even
disclosure of its activities and funding sources, poses a grave risk to the
integrity of elections. It has created a two-tiered campaign process: one,
based in candidates and political parties, which is tightly regulated and
controlled; the other, based in interest group activity under the guise of
‘issue advocacy’ but actually quite clearly election-focused, which lies
beyond accountability.” 1 Governor’s Blue-Ribbon Commission on
Campaign Finance Reform, State of Wisconsin: Report of the Commis
16 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
prediction: during the 1998 cycle, spending on issue ads
doubled to between $270 and $340 million, and the figure
climbed to $500 million in the 2000 cycle. McConnell, 540
U. S., at 127, n. 20. A report from the Annenberg Public
Policy Center concluded that “[t]he type of issue ad that
dominated depended greatly on how close we were to the
general election. . . . Though candidate-centered issue ads
always made up a majority of issue ads, as the election
approached the percent [of] candidate-centered spots
increased . . . such that by the last two months before the
election almost all televised issue spots made a case for or
against a candidate.” Issue Advertising in the 1999–2000
Election Cycle 14 (2001).
They were worth the money of those who ultimately
paid for them. According to one former Senator, “ ‘Mem
bers will . . . be favorably disposed to those who finance’ ”
interest groups that run “ ‘issue ads’ ” when those financi
ers “ ‘later seek access to discuss pending legislation.’ ”
McConnell v. FEC, 251 F. Supp. 2d 176, 556 (DC
2003) (Kollar-Kotelly, J.) (quoting the declaration of Dale
Bumpers).
The congressional response was §203 of the Bipartisan
Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA), 116 Stat. 91, which
redefined prohibited “expenditure” so as to restrict corpo
rations and unions from funding “electioneering communi
cation[s]” out of their general treasuries. 2 U. S. C.
§441b(b)(2) (2000 ed., Supp. IV). The new phrase “elec
tioneering communication” was narrowly defined in
BCRA’s §201 as “any broadcast, cable, or satellite commu
nication” that
“(I) refers to a clearly identified candidate for Fed
eral office;
“(II) is made within—
“(aa) 60 days before a general, special, or runoff
——————
sion, available at http://www.lafollette.wisc.edu/campaign_reform/final.
htm.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 17
SOUTER, J., dissenting
election for the office sought by the candidate; or
“(bb) 30 days before a primary or preference elec
tion, or a convention or caucus of a political party that
has authority to nominate a candidate, for the office
sought by the candidate; and
“(III) in the case of a communication which refers
to a candidate for an office other than President or
Vice President, is targeted to the relevant electorate.”
§434(f)(3)(A)(i).
III
In McConnell, we found this definition to be “easily
understood and objectiv[e],” raising “none of the vagueness
concerns that drove our analysis” of the statutory lan
guage at issue in Buckley and MCFL, 540 U. S., at 194,
and we held that the resulting line separating regulated
election speech from general political discourse does not,
on its face, violate the First Amendment. We rejected any
suggestion “that Buckley drew a constitutionally man
dated line between express advocacy [with magic words]
and so-called issue advocacy [without them], and that
speakers possess an inviolable First Amendment right to
engage in the latter category of speech.” Id., at 190. To
the contrary, we held that “our decisions in Buckley and
MCFL were specific to the statutory language before us;
they in no way drew a constitutional boundary that for
ever fixed the permissible scope of provisions regulating
campaign-related speech.” Id., at 192–193. “[T]he pres
ence or absence of magic words cannot meaningfully dis
tinguish electioneering speech,” which is prohibitable,
“from a true issue ad,” we said, since ads that “esche[w]
the use of magic words . . . are no less clearly intended to
influence the election.” Id., at 193. We thus found “[l]ittle
difference . . . between an ad that urged viewers to ‘vote
against Jane Doe’ and one that condemned Jane Doe’s
record on a particular issue before exhorting viewers to
18 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
‘call Jane Doe and tell her what you think.’ ” Id., at 126–
127.
We understood that Congress had a compelling interest
in limiting this sort of electioneering by corporations and
unions, for §203 exemplified a tradition of “repeatedly
sustained legislation aimed at ‘the corrosive and distorting
effects of immense aggregations of wealth that are accu
mulated with the help of the corporate form and that have
little or no correlation to the public’s support for the corpo
ration’s political ideas.’ ” Id., at 205 (quoting Austin, 494
U. S., at 660). Nor did we see any plausible claim of sub
stantial overbreadth from incidentally prohibiting ads
genuinely focused on issues rather than elections, given
the limitation of “electioneering communication” by time,
geographical coverage, and clear reference to candidate.
“Far from establishing that BCRA’s application to pure
issue ads is substantial, either in an absolute sense or
relative to its application to election-related advertising,
the record strongly supports the contrary conclusion.” 540
U. S., at 207. Finally, we underscored the reasonableness
of the §203 line by emphasizing that it defined a category
of limited, but not prohibited, corporate and union speech:
“Because corporations can still fund electioneering com
munications with PAC money, it is ‘simply wrong’ to view
[§203] as a ‘complete ban’ on expression rather than a
regulation.” Id., at 204 (quoting Federal Election Comm’n
v. Beaumont, 539 U. S. 146, 162 (2003)). Thus “corpora
tions and unions may finance genuine issue ads [in the
runup period] by simply avoiding any specific reference to
federal candidates, or in doubtful cases by paying for the
ad from a segregated [PAC] fund.” 540 U. S., at 206.
We may add that a nonprofit corporation, no matter
what its source of funding, is free to pelt a federal candi
date like Jane Doe with criticism or shower her with
praise, by name and within days of an election, if it speaks
through a newspaper ad or on a website, rather than a
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 19
SOUTER, J., dissenting
“broadcast, cable, or satellite communication,” 2 U. S. C.
§434(f)(3)(A)(i) (2000 ed., Supp. IV). And a nonprofit may
use its general treasury to pay for clearly “electioneering
communication[s]” so long as it declines to serve as a
conduit for money from business corporations and unions
(and thus qualifies for the MCFL exception).11
* * *
In sum, Congress in 1907 prohibited corporate contribu
tions to candidates and in 1943 applied the same ban to
unions. In 1947, Congress extended the complete ban
from contributions to expenditures “in connection with” an
election, a phrase so vague that in 1986 we held it must be
confined to instances of express advocacy using magic
words. Congress determined, in 2002, that corporate and
union expenditures for fake issue ads devoid of magic
words should be regulated using a narrow definition of
“electioneering communication” to reach only broadcast
ads that were the practical equivalents of express advo
cacy. In 2003, this Court found the provision free from
vagueness and justified by the concern that drove its
enactment.
This century-long tradition of legislation and judicial
precedent rests on facing undeniable facts and testifies to
an equally undeniable value. Campaign finance reform
has been a series of reactions to documented threats to
electoral integrity obvious to any voter, posed by large
sums of money from corporate or union treasuries, with no
redolence of “grassroots” about them. Neither Congress’s
decisions nor our own have understood the corrupting
——————
11 Campaign finance laws also continue to provide several specific
exemptions from the general prohibition on corporate election-related
spending, including communications “on any subject” with stockholders
and certain personnel, as well as “nonpartisan registration and get-out
the-vote campaigns” similarly aimed at shareholders and personnel.
§441b(b)(2); see also n. 6, supra.
20 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
influence of money in politics as being limited to outright
bribery or discrete quid pro quo; campaign finance reform
has instead consistently focused on the more pervasive
distortion of electoral institutions by concentrated wealth,
on the special access and guaranteed favor that sap the
representative integrity of American government and defy
public confidence in its institutions. From early in the
20th century through the decision in McConnell, we have
acknowledged that the value of democratic integrity justi
fies a realistic response when corporations and labor
organizations commit the concentrated moneys in their
treasuries to electioneering.
IV
The corporate appellee in these cases, Wisconsin Right
to Life (WRTL), is a nonprofit corporation funded to a
significant extent by contributions from other corpora
tions.12 In 2004, WRTL accepted over $315,000 in corpo
rate donations, App. 40, and of its six general fund contri
butions of $50,000 or more between 2002 and 2005, three,
including the largest (for $140,000), came from corporate
donors, id., at 118–121.
WRTL also runs a PAC, funded by individual donations,
which has been active over the years in making independ
ent campaign expenditures, as in the previous two elec
tions involving Senator Feingold. Id., at 15. During the
1998 campaign, for example, WRTL’s PAC spent $60,000
to oppose him. Ibid. In 2004, however, despite a sharp
nationwide increase in PAC receipts, WRTL focused its
fundraising on its corporate treasury, not the PAC, id., at
41–43, and took in only $17,000 in PAC contributions, as
——————
12 To the extent these facts are disputed, we must view them in the
light most favorable to the Federal Election Commission and the
intervenor-defendants, since the District Court granted WRTL’s motion
for summary judgment. See Pennsylvania State Police v. Suders, 542
U. S. 129, 134 (2004).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 21
SOUTER, J., dissenting
against over $150,000 during 2000, id., at 41–42.
Throughout the 2004 senatorial campaign, WRTL made
no secret of its views about who should win the election
and explicitly tied its position to the filibuster issue. Its
PAC issued at least two press releases saying that its “Top
Election Priorities” were to “Re-elect George W. Bush” and
“Send Feingold Packing!” Id., at 78–80, 82–84. In one of
these, the Chair of WRTL’s PAC was quoted as saying,
“ ‘We do not want Russ Feingold to continue to have the
ability to thwart President Bush’s judicial nominees.’ ” Id.,
at 82–83. The Spring 2004 issue of the WRTL PAC’s
quarterly magazine ran an article headlined “Radically
Pro-Abortion Feingold Must Go!”, which reported that
“Feingold has been active in his opposition to Bush’s judi
cial nominees” and said that “the defeat of Feingold must
be uppermost in the minds of Wisconsin’s pro-life commu
nity in the 2004 elections.” Id., at 101–103.
It was under these circumstances that WRTL ran the
three television and radio ads in question. The bills for
them were not paid by WRTL’s PAC, but out of the general
treasury with its substantial proportion of corporate con
tributions; in fact, corporations earmarked more than
$50,000 specifically to pay for the ads, id., at 41. Each one
criticized an unnamed “group of Senators” for “using the
filibuster delay tactic to block federal judicial nominees
from a simple ‘yes’ or ‘no’ vote,” and described the Sena
tors’ actions as “politics at work, causing gridlock and
backing up some of our courts to a state of emergency.”13
They exhorted viewers and listeners to “[c]ontact Senators
Feingold and Kohl and tell them to oppose the filibuster,”
but instead of providing a phone number or e-mail ad
dress, they told the audience to go to BeFair.org, a website
——————
13 These quotations are taken from the “Wedding” ad, although the
relevant language in all of the ads is virtually identical. See ante, at 4–
6, and nn. 2–3 (principal opinion).
22 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
set up by WRTL. A visit to this website would erase any
doubt a listener or viewer might have as to whether Sena
tors Feingold and Kohl were part of the “group” con
demned in the ads: it displayed a document that criticized
the two Senators for voting to filibuster “16 out of 16
times” and accused them of “putting politics into the court
system, creating gridlock, and costing taxpayers money.”
Id., at 86.
WRTL’s planned airing of the ads had no apparent
relation to any Senate filibuster vote but was keyed to the
timing of the senatorial election. WRTL began broadcast
ing the ads on July 26, 2004, four days after the Senate
recessed for the summer, and although the filibuster
controversy raged on through 2005, WRTL did not resume
running the ads after the election. Id., at 29, 32. During
the campaign period that the ads did cover, Senator Fein-
gold’s support of the filibusters was a prominent issue.
His position was well known,14 and his Republican oppo
nents, who vocally opposed the filibusters, made the issue
a major talking point in their campaigns against him.15
In sum, any Wisconsin voter who paid attention would
have known that Democratic Senator Feingold supported
filibusters against Republican presidential judicial nomi
nees, that the propriety of the filibusters was a major
issue in the senatorial campaign, and that WRTL along
with the Senator’s Republican challengers opposed his
reelection because of his position on filibusters. Any alert
——————
14 See, e.g., Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Constitution,
Civil Rights and Property Rights of the Senate Committee on the
Judiciary, 108th Congress, 1st Sess., 5–7 (2003) (statement of Sen.
Feingold).
15 See Gilbert, 3 Seeking Feingold Seat Attack Him on Judges Issue,
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Nov. 18, 2003, App. 70–76 (“In Wisconsin,
the three Republicans vying to take on Senate Democrat Russ Feingold
are attacking him on judges and assert the controversy resonates with
voters”).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 23
SOUTER, J., dissenting
voters who heard or saw WRTL’s ads would have under
stood that WRTL was telling them that the Senator’s
position on the filibusters should be grounds to vote
against him.
Given these facts, it is beyond all reasonable debate that
the ads are constitutionally subject to regulation under
McConnell. There, we noted that BCRA was meant to
remedy the problem of “[s]o-called issue ads” being used
“to advocate the election or defeat of clearly identified
federal candidates.” 540 U. S., at 126. We then gave a
paradigmatic example of these electioneering ads subject
to regulation, saying that “[l]ittle difference existed . . .
between an ad that urged viewers to ‘vote against Jane
Doe’ and one that condemned Jane Doe’s record on a
particular issue before exhorting viewers to ‘call Jane Doe
and tell her what you think.’ ” Id., at 126–127.
The WRTL ads were indistinguishable from the Jane
Doe ad; they “condemned [Senator Feingold’s] record on a
particular issue” and exhorted the public to contact him
and “tell [him] what you think.”16 And just as anyone who
heard the Jane Doe ad would understand that the point
was to defeat Doe, anyone who heard the Feingold ads (let
alone anyone who went to the website they named) would
know that WRTL’s message was to vote against Feingold.
If it is now unconstitutional to restrict WRTL’s Feingold
ads, then it follows that §203 can no longer be applied
constitutionally to McConnell’s Jane Doe paradigm.
McConnell’s holding that §203 is facially constitutional
is overruled. By what steps does the principal opinion
reach this unacknowledged result less than four years
after McConnell was decided?
——————
16 That the ads purported to target Senator Kohl as well as Senator
Feingold is of little import; since the ads would have run during the
peak of the 2004 campaign, the audience’s focus would naturally fall
more heavily on Senator Feingold (who was up for reelection) rather
than Senator Kohl (who was not).
24 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
A
First, it lays down a new test to identify a severely
limited class of ads that may constitutionally be regulated
as electioneering communications, a test that is flatly
contrary to McConnell. An ad is the equivalent of express
advocacy and subject to regulation, the opinion says, only
if it is “susceptible of no reasonable interpretation other
than as an appeal to vote for or against a specific candi
date.” Ante, at 16. Since the Feingold ads could, in isola
tion, be read as at least including calls to communicate
views on filibusters to the two Senators, those ads cannot
be treated as the functional equivalent of express advocacy
to elect or defeat anyone, and therefore may not constitu
tionally be regulated at all.
But the same could have been said of the hypothetical
Jane Doe ad. Its spoken message ended with the instruc
tion to tell Doe what the voter thinks. The same could
also have been said of the actual Yellowtail ad. Yet in
McConnell, we gave the Jane Doe ad as the paradigm of a
broadcast message that could be constitutionally regulated
as election conduct, and we explicitly described the Yel
lowtail ad as a “striking example” of one that was “clearly
intended to influence the election,” McConnell, 540 U. S.,
at 193, and n. 78.
The principal opinion, in other words, simply inverts
what we said in McConnell. While we left open the possi
bility of a “genuine” or “pure” issue ad that might not be
open to regulation under §203, id., at 206–207, and n. 88,
we meant that an issue ad without campaign advocacy
could escape the restriction. The implication of the adjec
tives “genuine” and “pure” is unmistakable: if an ad is
reasonably understood as going beyond a discussion of
issues (that is, if it can be understood as electoral advo
cacy), then by definition it is not “genuine” or “pure.” But
the principal opinion inexplicably wrings the opposite
conclusion from those words: if an ad is susceptible to any
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 25
SOUTER, J., dissenting
“reasonable interpretation other than as an appeal to vote
for or against a specific candidate,” then it must be a
“pure” or “genuine” issue ad. Ante, at 16. This stands
McConnell on its head, and on this reasoning it is pos-
sible that even some ads with magic words could not be
regulated.
B
Second, the principal opinion seems to defend this in
version of McConnell as a necessary alternative to an
unadministrable subjective test for the equivalence of
express (and regulable) electioneering advocacy. The
principal opinion acknowledges, of course, that in McCon
nell we said that “[t]he justifications for the regulation of
express advocacy apply equally to ads aired during [the
period shortly before an election] if the ads are intended to
influence the voters’ decisions and have that effect.” 540
U. S., at 206. But THE CHIEF JUSTICE says that statement
in McConnell cannot be accepted at face value because we
could not, consistent with precedent, have focused our
First Amendment enquiry on whether “the speaker actu
ally intended to affect an election.” Ante, at 14.17 THE
——————
17 THE CHIEF JUSTICE says that Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1 (1976)
(per curiam), “already rejected” any test that calls for an assessment of
the intent and effect of corporate electioneering. Ante, at 13. The
“reject[ion]” to which THE CHIEF JUSTICE presumably refers is Buckley’s
quotation of Thomas v. Collins, 323 U. S. 516 (1945), where we found
impermissibly vague a statute that permitted a union leader to “ ‘laud
unionism’ ” but forbade him to “imply an invitation” to join a union. Id.,
at 534. The problem with this predicament, we reasoned, was the lack
of a clearly permissible opportunity for expression: Whether words
“designed to fall short of invitation would miss that mark is a question
both of intent and of effect,” and no speaker “safely could assume that
anything he might say . . . would not be understood by some as an
invitation.” Id., at 535. We then specified that the speaker in Thomas
was left with an impermissibly limited universe of “three choices: (1) to
stand on his right and speak freely; (2) to quit, refusing entirely to
speak; (3) to trim, and even thus to risk the penalty.” Id., at 536.
26 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
CHIEF JUSTICE suggests it is more likely that the McCon
nell opinion inadvertently borrowed the language of “in
tended . . . effect[s],” 540 U. S., at 206, from academic
studies in the record of viewers’ perceptions of the ads’
purposes, ante, at 12.18
——————
THE CHIEF JUSTICE implies that considering the intent and effect of
corporate advertising during as-applied challenges to §203 would put
corporations in precisely the same bind; thus, he wonders how McCon
nell could use the language of intent and effect without “even ad
dress[ing] what Buckley” (and by extension, Thomas) “had to say on the
subject.” Ante, at 14. But one need not look far in our McConnell
opinion to understand why we thought that corporations have more
than the constrained set of options available to the union leader in
Thomas. Just a few sentences after holding that ads with electioneer
ing intent and effect are regulable, we gave this explanation: “in the
future corporations and unions may finance genuine issue ads [shortly
before an election] by simply avoiding any specific reference to federal
candidates, or in doubtful cases by paying for the ad from a segregated
fund.” 540 U. S., at 206. In other words, corporations can find refuge
in constitutionally sufficient and clearly delineated safe harbors by
modifying the content of their ads (by omitting a candidate’s name) or
by altering the sources of their ads’ financing (from general treasuries
to PACs). THE CHIEF JUSTICE thus wrongly jettisons our conclusions
about the constitutionality of regulating ads with electioneering pur
pose; we meant what we said in McConnell, and we did not overlook
First Amendment jurisprudence when we said it. Whereas THE CHIEF
JUSTICE says that BCRA “should provide a safe harbor for those who
wish to exercise First Amendment rights,” ante, at 14, we already held
in McConnell that the campaign finance law accomplishes precisely
that.
18 THE CHIEF JUSTICE speculates that McConnell derived its test for
functional equivalence from “[t]wo key studies,” ante, at 12, but not a
shred of language in McConnell supports that theory. In stating the
legal standard, McConnell made no mention of any study. What is the
authority, then, for asserting that the studies were pivotal to the
standard we announced in McConnell? See ante, at 12. Other than
WRTL’s brief, THE CHIEF JUSTICE cites only Judge Henderson’s sepa
rate district court opinion in McConnell. Ante, at 12. But THE CHIEF
JUSTICE quotes one part of Judge Henderson’s analysis and neglects to
mention that she in turn was quoting the lead author of one of the
studies in question: “According to the Brennan Center, the Buying Time
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 27
SOUTER, J., dissenting
If THE CHIEF JUSTICE were correct that McConnell
made the constitutional application of §203 contingent on
whether a corporation’s “motives were pure,” or its issue
advocacy “subjective[ly] sincer[e],” ante, at 14 (internal
quotation marks omitted), then I, too, might be inclined to
reconsider McConnell’s language. But McConnell did not
do that. It did not purport to draw constitutional lines
based on the subjective motivations of corporations (or
their principals) sponsoring political ads, but merely
described our test for equivalence to express advocacy as
resting on the ads’ “electioneering purpose,” which will be
objectively apparent from those ads’ content and context
(as these cases and the examples cited in McConnell read
ily show). We therefore held that §203 was not substan
tially overbroad because “the vast majority of ads clearly
had such a purpose,” and consequently could be regulated
consistent with the First Amendment. 540 U. S., at 206.
For that matter, if the studies to which THE CHIEF
JUSTICE refers were now to inform our reading of McCon
nell, they would merely underscore the objective character
of the proper way to determine whether §203 is constitu
tional as applied to a given ad. The authors of those stud
ies did not conduct discovery of the “actua[l] inten[tions],”
ante, at 14, behind any ads; nor, to my knowledge, were
the sponsors of campaign ads summoned before research
ers to explain their motivations. The studies merely con
firmed that “reasonable people are . . . able to discern
between ads whose primary purpose is to support a candi
date and those intended to provide information about a
policy issue.” J. Krasno & D. Seltz, Buying Time: Televi
——————
reports were ‘the central piece of evidence marshaled by defenders of’
BCRA’s electioneering communication provisions ‘in support of their
constitutional validity.’ ” McConnell, 251 F. Supp. 2d, at 307–308
(opinion of Henderson, J.) (italics in original) (quoting deposition of
Craig P. Holman, principal co-author of Buying Time 2000: Television
Advertising in the 2000 Federal Elections (Brennan Center 2001)).
28 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
sion Advertising in the 1998 Congressional Elections 9
(2000). To be clear, I am not endorsing the precise meth
odology of those studies (and THE CHIEF JUSTICE is correct
that we did not do so in McConnell, ante, at 13, n. 4); the
point is only that the studies relied on a “reasonable”
person’s understanding of the ads’ apparent purpose, and
thus were no less objective than THE CHIEF JUSTICE’s own
approach.
A similarly mistaken fear of an unadministrable and
speech-chilling subjective regime seems to underlie THE
CHIEF JUSTICE’s unwillingness to acknowledge the part
that consideration of an ad’s context necessarily plays in
any realistic assessment of its meaning. A reasonable
Wisconsinite watching or listening to WRTL’s ads would
likely ask and answer some obvious questions about their
circumstances. Is the group that sponsors these ads the
same one publicly campaigning against Senator Feingold’s
reelection? THE CHIEF JUSTICE says that this information
is “beside the point,” because WRTL’s history of overt
electioneering only “goes to [its] subjective intent.” Ante,
at 18. Did these “issue” ads begin appearing on the air
during the election season, rather than at the time the
filibuster “issue” was in fact being debated in the Senate?
This, too, is said to be irrelevant. Ante, at 19. And does
the website to which WRTL’s ads direct viewers contain
material expressly advocating Senator Feingold’s defeat?
This enquiry is dismissed as being “one step removed from
the text of the ads themselves.” Ante, at 20. But these
questions are central to the meaning of the ads, and any
reasonable person would take account of circumstances in
coming to understand the object of WRTL’s ad. And why
not? Each of the contextual facts here can be established
by an objective look at a public record; none requires a
voter (or a litigant) to engage in discovery of evidence
about WRTL’s operations or internal communications, and
none goes to a hidden state of mind.
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 29
SOUTER, J., dissenting
This refusal to see and hear what any listener to
WRTL’s ads would actually consider produces a rule no
different in practice from the one adopted by the District
Court, which declined to look beyond the “four corners” of
the ads themselves. 466 F. Supp. 2d 195, 207 (DC 2006).
Although THE CHIEF JUSTICE ostensibly stops short of
categorically foreclosing consideration of context, see ante,
at 20, the application of his test here makes it difficult to
see how relevant contextual evidence could ever be taken
into account the way it was in McConnell,19 and it is hard
to imagine THE CHIEF JUSTICE would ever find an ad to be
“susceptible of no reasonable interpretation other than as
an appeal to vote for or against a specific candidate,” ante,
at 16, unless it contained words of express advocacy. THE
CHIEF JUSTICE thus effectively reinstates the same tooth
less “magic words” criterion of regulable electioneering
that led Congress to enact BCRA in the first place.
C
Third, it may be that the principal opinion rejects
McConnell on the erroneous assumption that §203 flatly
bans independent electioneering communications by a
corporation. THE CHIEF JUSTICE argues that corporations
must receive “the benefit of any doubt,” ante, at 16, when
——————
19 Like the District Court, the only bit of context THE CHIEF JUSTICE
would allow the reasonable listener is the congressional agenda:
whether the “ ‘issue’ ” addressed in an ad currently is, or soon will be,
“ ‘the subject of legislative scrutiny.’ ” Ante, at 20 (quoting 466 F. Supp.
2d, at 207). For example, THE CHIEF JUSTICE says, there would have
been “no reason” to think that WRTL’s ad constituted anything but a
pure issue ad if it addressed a bill pending during Senator Feingold’s
reelection campaign, such as the Universal National Service Act. Ante,
at 17. It is revealing, of course, that THE CHIEF JUSTICE does not invoke
the filibuster issue, the subject of WRTL’s ads, as the legislative matter
with particular salience during the 2004 election. But why the reason
able listener can look to Congress but not the calendar on the wall or a
WRTL website is difficult to fathom.
30 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
ever we undertake the task of “separating . . . political
speech protected under the First Amendment from that
which may be banned,” ante, at 13. But this is a funda
mental misconception of the task at hand: we have al
ready held that it is “ ‘simply wrong’ to view [§203] as a
‘complete ban’ on expression,” because PAC financing
provides corporations “with a constitutionally sufficient
opportunity to engage in express advocacy.”20 McConnell,
540 U. S., at 203–204 (quoting Beaumont, 539 U. S., at
162). Thus, a successful as-applied challenger to §203
should necessarily show, at the least, that it could not
constitutionally be subjected to the administrative rules
that govern a PAC’s formation and operation. See id., at
163. This would be an uphill fight, after our repeated
affirmations that the PAC structure does not impose
excessive burdens, ibid. (citing National Right to Work
Comm., 459 U. S., at 201–202), and WRTL has a particu
larly weak position on this point: it set up its own PAC
long before the 2004 election, used it to campaign openly
against Senator Feingold in the past, and could have
raised noncorporate donations to it in the 2004 election
cycle. Any argument that establishing and maintaining a
PAC is unconstitutionally burdensome for WRTL would
thus likely be futile, and certainly should not prevail on
WRTL’s summary judgment motion.
For that matter, even without the PAC alternative, it
would be untrue that §203 “banned” WRTL from saying
anything a genuine issue ad would say, for WRTL could
have availed itself of either or both of the following addi
tional options. It is undisputed that WRTL’s ads could
have been broadcast lawfully in the runup to the election
——————
20JUSTICE SCALIA also adopts the same misconception that §203 is a
“ban” on speech. See ante, at 18 (“Section 203’s line is bright, but it
bans vast amounts of political advocacy indistinguishable from hitherto
protected speech”).
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 31
SOUTER, J., dissenting
(and bankrolled from WRTL’s general treasury) if Senator
Feingold’s name had been omitted and the Senator not
otherwise singled out. Since members of today’s majority
apparently view WRTL’s broadcasts either as “genuine
issue ad[s],” ante, at 16 (opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE), or
as “lobby[ing] Wisconsin voters concerning the filibuster
ing of the President’s judicial nominees,” ante, at 2
(SCALIA, J., concurring in part and concurring in judg
ment), a claim that omitting Senator Feingold’s name
would “ban” WRTL’s message is specious. Yet one
searches my Brothers’ opinions in vain for any persuasive
reason why substituting the phrase “Contact your Sena
tors” for the phrase “Contact Senators Feingold and Kohl”
would have denied WRTL a constitutionally sufficient
(and clearly lawful) alternative way to send its message.
If WRTL is to be believed when it claims that the issue
was the point of the ads, it would have lost nothing by
referring simply to the “Senators.”
Finally, the suggestion that §203 is a ban on political
speech is belied by MCFL’s safe harbor for nonprofit advo
cacy corporations: under that rule, WRTL would have
been free to attack Senator Feingold by name at any time
with ads funded from its corporate treasury, if it had not
also chosen to serve as a funnel for hundreds of thousands
of dollars from other corporations. Thus, what is called a
“ban” on speech is a limit on the financing of electioneer
ing broadcasts by entities that refuse to take advantage of
the PAC structure but insist on acting as conduits from
the campaign war chests of business corporations.
D
In sum, McConnell does not graft a subjective standard
onto campaign regulation, the context of campaign adver
tising cannot sensibly be ignored, and §203 is not a ban on
speech. What cannot be gainsaid, in any event, is that in
treating these subjects as it does, the operative opinion
32 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
produces the result of overruling McConnell’s holding on
§203, less than four years in the Reports. Anyone who
doubts that need merely ask what the law would have
been if, back in 2003, this Court had held §203 facially
unconstitutional.
BCRA’s definition of “electioneering communication,”
which identifies the communications regulable under
§203, includes a backup to be used if the primary defini
tion “is held to be constitutionally insufficient by final
judicial decision to support the regulation provided
herein.” 2 U. S. C. §434(f)(3)(A)(ii) (2000 ed., Supp. IV). If
this should occur, “electioneering communication” is to be
defined as
“any broadcast, cable, or satellite communication
which promotes or supports a candidate for that office,
or attacks or opposes a candidate for that office (re
gardless of whether the communication expressly ad
vocates a vote for or against a candidate) and which
also is suggestive of no plausible meaning other than
an exhortation to vote for or against a specific candi
date.” Ibid.
This backup sounds familiar because it is essentially
identical to THE CHIEF JUSTICE’s test for evaluating an as-
applied challenge to the original definition of “electioneer
ing communication”: regulation is permissible only if the
communication is “susceptible of no reasonable interpreta
tion other than as an appeal to vote for or against a spe
cific candidate,” ante, at 16. Thus does the principal opin
ion institute the very standard that would have prevailed
if the Court formally overruled McConnell. There is nei
ther a theoretical nor a practical basis to claim that
McConnell’s treatment of §203 survives.
E
The price of McConnell’s demise as authority on §203
seems to me to be a high one. The Court (and, I think, the
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 33
SOUTER, J., dissenting
country) loses when important precedent is overruled with
out good reason, and there is no justification for departing
from our usual rule of stare decisis here. The same combi
nation of alternatives that was available to corporations
affected by McConnell in 2003 is available today: WRTL
could have run a newspaper ad, could have paid for the
broadcast ads through its PAC, could have established itself
as an MCFL organization free of corporate money, and
could have said “call your Senators” instead of naming
Senator Feingold in its ads broadcasted just before the
election. Nothing in the related law surrounding §203 has
changed in any way, let alone in any way that undermines
McConnell’s rationale. See Planned Parenthood of South
eastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U. S. 833, 854–855 (1992).
Nor can any serious argument be made that McCon
nell’s holding has been “unworkable in practice.” Allied-
Signal, Inc. v. Director, Div. of Taxation, 504 U. S. 768,
783 (1992) (internal quotation marks omitted). McConnell
validated a clear rule resting on mostly bright-line condi
tions, and there is no indication that the statute has been
difficult to apply.21 Although WRTL contends that the as-
applied remedy has proven to be “[i]nadequate” because
such challenges cannot be litigated quickly enough to
avoid being mooted, Brief for Appellee 65–66, nothing
prevents an advertiser from obtaining a preliminary in
junction if it can qualify for one, and WRTL does not point
to any evidence that district courts have been unable to
——————
21 These as-applied challenges provide no reason to second-guess our
conclusion in McConnell that the rule for differentiating between
electioneering ads and genuine issue ads is administrable. WRTL’s ads
clearly have an electioneering purpose and, as explained above, fall
comfortably within the heartland of electioneering communications
that §203 may validly regulate. Thus, although JUSTICE SCALIA claims
that “[t]oday’s cases make it apparent” that McConnell must be over
ruled, ante, at 18, there is nothing about today’s cases that suggests
that McConnell is unworkable. We therefore have no occasion to
reconsider McConnell from first principles.
34 FEDERAL ELECTION COMM’N v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO
LIFE, INC.
SOUTER, J., dissenting
rule on any such matters in a timely way.
Finally, it goes without saying that nothing has changed
about the facts. In Justice Frankfurter’s words, they
demonstrate a threat to “the integrity of our electoral
process,” Automobile Workers, 352 U. S., at 570, which for
a century now Congress has repeatedly found to be imper
iled by corporate, and later union, money: witness the
Tillman Act, Taft-Hartley, FECA, and BCRA. See Part II,
supra. McConnell was our latest decision vindicating
clear and reasonable boundaries that Congress has drawn
to limit “ ‘the corrosive and distorting effects of immense
aggregations of wealth,’ ” 540 U. S., at 205 (quoting Austin,
494 U. S., at 660), and the decision could claim the justifi
cation of ongoing fact as well as decisional history in rec
ognizing Congress’s authority to protect the integrity of
elections from the distortion of corporate and union funds.
After today, the ban on contributions by corporations
and unions and the limitation on their corrosive spending
when they enter the political arena are open to easy cir
cumvention, and the possibilities for regulating corporate
and union campaign money are unclear. The ban on
contributions will mean nothing much, now that compa
nies and unions can save candidates the expense of adver
tising directly, simply by running “issue ads” without
express advocacy, or by funneling the money through an
independent corporation like WRTL.
But the understanding of the voters and the Congress
that this kind of corporate and union spending seriously
jeopardizes the integrity of democratic government will
remain. The facts are too powerful to be ignored, and
further efforts at campaign finance reform will come. It is
only the legal landscape that now is altered, and it may be
that today’s departure from precedent will drive further
reexamination of the constitutional analysis: of the dis
tinction between contributions and expenditures, or the
relation between spending and speech, which have given
Cite as: 551 U. S. ____ (2007) 35
SOUTER, J., dissenting
structure to our thinking since Buckley itself was decided.
I cannot tell what the future will force upon us, but I
respectfully dissent from this judgment today.