By a vote of five to four, the US Supreme Court has taken another swipe at 40-year-old Watergate Era reforms designed to restrain the power of money in politics. An individual donor still can't give more than $2600 to a single candidate in a given election — but the total amount he or she can contribute is now unlimited. The majority says removing some limits on individual donors will strengthen democracy. The dissenters call that a threat to the very integrity of government. Political pros envision more money from mega-rich contributors as soon as this year's campaigns for Congress. Will that mean increased corruption, real or apparent? Will what's left of campaign reform survive the next challenge?
Does Campaign Finance Reform Have a Future?
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Credits
Guests:
- John Dunbar - Center for Public Integrity - @JohnDunbar14
- James Bopp - Bopp Law Firm
- Tara Malloy - Campaign Legal Center - @CampaignLegal
- Kenneth Mayer - University of Wisconsin-Madison - @uwpolisci