Traditional public financing of campaigns is in trouble. Successful candidates have increasingly rejected public financing because it provides inadequate funding and limits candidate spending. November 2012 was the first general election in which presidential candidates from both major parties rejected public financing since the inception of the program. The U.S. Supreme Court recently issued a decision that undermined traditional public financing systems. If existing programs are not revamped soon public financing may be off the public radar for decades, as budget deficits make antiquated public financing programs ripe targets for spending cuts. This Essay proposes a paradigm shift. Public financing should no longer aim to purge private mo...
In his Seventh Annual Message to Congress on December 3, 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt proposed...
Many Americans have become increasingly concerned over the role of money in politics, and back more ...
This paper argues that the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in FEC v. Davis render...
Traditional public financing of campaigns is in trouble. Successful candidates have increasingly rej...
This Article asserts the current predicament of public campaign financing is this: options that are ...
Lack of participation is a primary problem with money in politics. Relatively few people make politi...
Today, there are very different public financing rules for both the general and primary election. In...
After this peculiar and unique election cycle, the public financing laws will have to be redeveloped...
The 2008 election cycle has sparked a mind-boggling array of changes in the way we, as Americans, tr...
After the Supreme Court upheld the Federal Election Campaign Act in Buckley v. Valeo, the modern sys...
Typical campaign finance proposals focus on limiting the amount of money that can be contributed to ...
In this article, legal scholar Richard Briffault traces the history of public funding of presidentia...
This Article uses the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s recent opinion in McConnell v. FEC to argue that the l...
In 1974 Congress authorized public funding for presidential nomination campaigns. Public funding was...
Our existing federal campaign finance system – the product of Watergate Era legislation and the Sup...
In his Seventh Annual Message to Congress on December 3, 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt proposed...
Many Americans have become increasingly concerned over the role of money in politics, and back more ...
This paper argues that the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in FEC v. Davis render...
Traditional public financing of campaigns is in trouble. Successful candidates have increasingly rej...
This Article asserts the current predicament of public campaign financing is this: options that are ...
Lack of participation is a primary problem with money in politics. Relatively few people make politi...
Today, there are very different public financing rules for both the general and primary election. In...
After this peculiar and unique election cycle, the public financing laws will have to be redeveloped...
The 2008 election cycle has sparked a mind-boggling array of changes in the way we, as Americans, tr...
After the Supreme Court upheld the Federal Election Campaign Act in Buckley v. Valeo, the modern sys...
Typical campaign finance proposals focus on limiting the amount of money that can be contributed to ...
In this article, legal scholar Richard Briffault traces the history of public funding of presidentia...
This Article uses the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s recent opinion in McConnell v. FEC to argue that the l...
In 1974 Congress authorized public funding for presidential nomination campaigns. Public funding was...
Our existing federal campaign finance system – the product of Watergate Era legislation and the Sup...
In his Seventh Annual Message to Congress on December 3, 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt proposed...
Many Americans have become increasingly concerned over the role of money in politics, and back more ...
This paper argues that the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in FEC v. Davis render...