Lawrence Lessig

  • July 31, 2012

    by Clark Taylor

    In Citizens United v. FEC, the Supreme Court paved the way for unprecedented amounts of outside campaign spending by powerful interests. As a result, billionaires like Sheldon Adelson and the Koch brothers have pledged to spend up to $400 million in an all-out effort to ensure that the voices of the richest few are heard the loudest.

    The numbers support the trend. Richard L. Hasen, an election law expert at University of California, Irvine, says outside campaign spending through March 8 amounts to more than $88 million for federal elections. This represents a significant contrast to the $37.5 million in 2004 and $14.2 million in 2000. The growth is even starker in mid-term years as the same spending jumped from $1.8 million in 2006 to $15.8 million in 2010.

    Perhaps most disconcerting, this regime has led to a situation in which the superrich can spend more and more on elections without any disclosure. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), in testimony before a Senate committee, claimed that there were at least 23 families worth over $1 billion who have given more than $250,000 in campaign contributions this cycle. Just 196 Americans have given more than 80 percent of the total money donated to super PACs.

    Groups and individuals have proposed efforts to help blunt the or counter powerful interests seeking to sway elections. Professor Lawrence Lessig has advocated for a series of citizen conventions to craft a constitutional amendment. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) has called for a constitutional amendment. The group Free Speech for People also proposes a constitutional amendment. Jeff Clements, co-founder and president of the group, stated in written testimony to the Senate, that a constitutional amendment was needed to restore congressional power over campaign finance regulation. Perhaps the closest Congress has come to reform was the DISCLOSE ACT, which would have required that independent groups disclose those donors who give more than $10,000. Though the bill received support from a majority of the Senate, Republicans blocked the measure using a procedural move.

  • October 25, 2010
    Not all media coverage of the midterm elections has dwelled on predictions of a power change in Washington - some outlets have focused attention on money flowing anonymously into this year's election cycle. For example, The New York Times reported last week on the enormous amounts of money that have been pumped into the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which has allowed it "to become one of the most well-financed critics of the Obama administration and an influential player in this fall's Congressional elections."

    Much of campaign financing coverage notes the impact the Supreme Court's 2010 opinion in Citizens United v. FEC, which overturned decades of precedent regarding the regulation of corporate campaign financing. In an interview with The Nation's Chris Hayes, Harvard law school professor Lawrence Lessig acknowledges the troubles of the Citizens United outcome, but says our democracy was already corrupted by a campaign financing system that has driven droves of politicians to be beholden to large funders.

    Lessig, director of Harvard's Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics, told Hayes, "Our democracy was already broken before Citizens United." Before that decision was issued earlier this year, we "already had a system that drove members to be dependent upon funders rather than upon citizens, and that dependency is what is corrupting of the original conception of what a democracy would be - as Federalist 52 put it, our government was to be an entity where our Congress would be dependent on our people alone."

    Lessig continued:

    Well, it is absurd to think that our Congress is dependent upon our people alone today, and that's because of our current political financing system. So a lot of people want to spend a lot of energy trying to overturn Citizens United - and I'm the first to say that Citizens United is going to create all sorts of bad influences - but overturning Citizens United is not going to solve the problem.

    The first course of action, Lessig maintains, is to push for reform "that radically changes the economy of influence that members live under when they raise money to run for Congress." As an example, he mentioned the Fair Elections Now Act, which he said would make it possible for candidates to run campaigns "where they took no more than $100 dollars from any citizen." Those contributions would be matched by the government, and would help produce a much different crop of candidates, he said.

    If such change were in place before the next election cycle, Lessig said it would "produce a significant number of congress people" not beholden to the kinds of interests fueling today's election cycle. And those lawmakers, Lessig said, "could then begin to think about what other reforms might be necessary to make sure we have the kind of election cycle that our framers intended us to have."

    Audio of the Lessig interview is available here.

  • August 9, 2010

    The students at ACS's University of Nebraska College of Law chapter are adding to the stock of ACS podcasts available for those looking to "jog to the soothing cadence of Harvard Law professor Lawrence Lessig."

    The members of the student chapter have launched a law-interviews podcast series, and ACS student hosts have already recorded interviews with an impressive set that includes Lessig, Eugene Volokh, Jen Moreno and Josh Blackman.

    Starting this fall, the students will interview guests twice a month. Would-be guests, or fellow law students who want to get involved, can e-mail the chapter at amoreperfectpodcast@acslawnebraska.org.

    The national headquarters' series of podcasts and videos are available on our website here or via iTunes here.

  • March 26, 2010

    A draft proposal of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) has been leaked, and critics are sharpening their attacks on the controversial anti-pirating agreement.

    ACTA has long been a subject of criticism. Being negotiated behind closed doors, the multi-national agreement is intended to standardize intellectual property enforcement among participating countries. Critics argue, however, that the secret negotiations shaping ACTA should be made transparent. Leaked reports on the substance of negotiations have also drawn fire.

    Today's Washington Post bears an op-ed by Harvard Law professors Lawrence Lessig and Jack Goldsmith who reiterate prior criticisms of both the process producing ACTA and the agreement's substance. Their op-ed also introduces constitutional concerns for how the United States might join the agreement, noting that the administration has suggested enactment without congressional involvement.