“Voter-Owned” Elections: Cleaning up Campaign Financing or Limiting Free Speech?

Supporters of HB 1517 gathered in Raleigh yesterday to lobby for the “Voter-Owned Elections Act,” which would appropriate $4.58 million over the next two years to expand publicly-funded elections in North Carolina. The proposed legislation would allow candidates for three Council of State offices (Auditor, Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Commissioner of Insurance) to use tax dollars to finance their campaigns.

While advocates of the bill claim it will rid the election process of the corrupting influence of special interests and level the playing field for candidates who are not personally wealthy, reality paints a different picture. Publiclyfunded elections do not accomplish its stated goals, violates citizens’ free speech rights and forces taxpayers to subsidize candidates and ideas they oppose.

About the Act

HB 1517 is being backed by a coalition of left-leaning groups who want to gradually introduce public funding for all state elections in North Carolina. The ostensible idea behind the movement, as voiced by Robert Morgan of North Carolina Voters for Clean Elections, is to “reduce special-interest influence over elections.” North Carolina previously authorized public funding for campaigns for judicial positions beginning with the 2004 election. The bill includes the following provisions:

As of 2006, only six states provide public financing to candidates. Four of these states have publicly-funded elections for all statewide positions, with two others (including North Carolina) providing funding only for select positions. (see chart)

Purpose of the Act

HB 1517 includes several noble-sounding objectives. States the language of the bill:

The purpose of this Article is to ensure the vitality and fairness of democratic elections in North Carolina to the end that any eligible citizen of this State can realistically choose to seek and run for public office. It is also the purpose of this Article to protect the constitutional rights of voters and candidates from the detrimental effects of increasingly large amounts of money being raised and spent in North Carolina to influence the outcome of elections. It is essential to the public interest that the potential for corruption or the appearance of corruption is minimized and that the equal and meaningful participation of all citizens in the democratic process is ensured.

In short, advocates of the bill believe it will eliminate the corrupting influence of special interest groups, encourage more candidates to run for public office, and help citizens feel that their vote matters.

The Reality

Maine and Arizona implemented so-called clean elections in 2000. These elections were very similar to what is being proposed in HB 1517. The reality is that the elections had the opposite effect of what was intended:

Flaws

In addition to not being an effective means of accomplishing its stated goals, the “voter-owned” elections bill may also create a number of unintended consequences:

VOE Act Limits First Amendment Rights

The First Amendment guarantees Americans the right to speak freely and to spend money on political speech just as freely. The decision to become a VOE candidate may be optional for the candidate, but it will limit free speech rights for North Carolinians. When a candidate chooses to become publicly financed, citizens who want to donate money to his campaign will be unable to do so.

Moreover, a stipulation to HB 1517 states that no private contributions are allowed for 21 days prior to a general election if it would trigger the “rescue funds.” Three weeks prior to an election is a very critical time. Banning voluntary contributions because of a prearranged spending limit stifles the exercise of free speech when such speech would be most influential.

Conclusion

The Voter-Owned Elections Act is an attempt to rid the political process of the influence of big money, encourage more candidates to run for office, and restore the public’s faith in government. But experience in other states shows that publicly financed elections simply will not accomplish these goals. As a 2003 op-ed article in the Arizona Republic concluded: “Here’s the bottom line. … We’re left with a system that limits free speech, unfairly favors certain candidates, keeps powerful special interests in the game and drains funds from state priorities.”

Most importantly, as mentioned above, the VOE bill would force taxpayers to fund the campaigns of candidates they do not support. Yet, as Thomas Jefferson reminds us, “To compel a man to furnish funds for the propagation of ideas he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.”

Related Issues: Elections & Voting
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