Connect with us

Finance

The Supreme Court Looks At Eliminating A 50-Year-Old Rule

Published

on

The Supreme Court Looks At Eliminating A 50-Year-Old Rule

The Supreme Court has steadily loosened campaign finance rules in a series of decisions ever since Chief Justice John Roberts was confirmed in 2005. They will look to go further on Tuesday, when the court hears arguments in a case challenging the 50-year-old limits placed on coordinated spending between parties and candidates.

In NRSC v. Federal Election Commission, a Republican campaign committee is challenging limits placed on how much money political parties can spend in direct coordination with candidates. Those limits, which were put in place in the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, were intended as a companion to other rules on how much individuals can contribute to individual campaigns, preventing deep-pocketed contributors from using donations to parties as a work-around to those limits. The current limits on how much a party can spend in coordination with a specific candidate vary, from $63,600 for most House races up to $3.9 million for Senate races in California and even more for presidential candidates.

The case stems from Vice President JD Vance’s 2022 Senate campaign in Ohio. During the primary, Vance’s fundraising lagged behind his GOP opponents and he relied on outside spending from billionaire Peter Thiel to push him over the top. He continued to struggle to raise money in the general election against Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan. (Vance eventually won.) And so, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the chief political committee for GOP Senate candidates, and Vance brought suit to allow the party to spend unlimited sums in direct coordination with their candidate, arguing the coordination limits infringed on core First Amendment rights for political speech.

Lawyers for the NRSC argue that the limits in question block constitutionally protected political speech and do not prevent corruption or its appearance. Since “no one seriously claims that parties are trying to bribe their candidates,” the limits have been defended and upheld in the past as preventing “quid pro quo-by-circumvention,” the NRSC brief states. But this justification was ruled out-of-bounds in the court’s 2014 decision in McCutcheon v. FEC and so the party coordination limits should be struck down, the brief argues.

Indeed, preventing the circumvention of contribution limits is at the heart of the coordinated spending limits. If a political party can raise nearly $1 million from a single donor who wants to spend that on a particular candidate, the party can effectively contribute that $1 million — or more — to the candidate’s campaign by funding, for example, their advertisements as a coordinated expenditure. Since candidates are limited to raising $3,500 per election from a single donor, this would be a major way to circumvent those limits, which are at the heart of campaign finance regulation.

Advertisement
Vice President JD Vance brought suit alongside the National Republican Senatorial Committee to invalidate party coordination limits in a case stemming from his 2022 Senate campaign in Ohio.

Michael Conroy via Associated Press

Each lower court that heard the case rejected the NRSC’s arguments, following the Supreme Court’s 2001 precedent in FEC v. Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee that upheld the limits. There, in a 5-4 decision written by then-Justice David Souter, the court ruled that “a party’s coordinated expenditures, unlike expenditures truly independent, may be restricted to minimize circumvention of contribution limits.” But the Supreme Court took up the case and now could upend campaign finance law yet again.

The court has upheld candidate contribution limits as constitutional since 1976, so it would be logical for them to prevent their circumvention — particularly as it has become easier for parties to raise the kind of large contributions that the candidate limits are meant to protect against. But that hasn’t held the court back in the past.

Since the court last heard a case challenging coordinated party spending limits, its composition has changed dramatically — and so has its campaign finance jurisprudence. In the years since 2001, the court’s conservative bloc has grown from five to six with no real moderates among them. And with the retirement of Sandra Day O’Connor in 2006, the court lost its last member with any experience running for office or working on a political campaign.

It has also issued decision after decision gutting federal and state campaign finance laws. The most prominent of these is 2010’s Citizens United v. FEC, a decision that enabled corporations, unions and nonprofits to spend unlimited sums on independent campaign expenditures. But there are more, including the McCutcheon decision that invalidated aggregate contribution limits that put a cap on how much money a single donor could contribute in total in one election cycle.

Advertisement

These campaign finance decisions have largely been based on a repeated misunderstanding of how candidates and parties use money in elections. In each case, the court’s decisions loosening campaign finance restrictions have led to massive unintended — at least according to the court’s writings — consequences, such as an increase in undisclosed campaign money and illegal foreign donations and the circumvention of party contribution limits.

There’s no reason to think that won’t happen here.

“This case needs to be looked at in the context of the court’s now-two-decade run of substituting its own judgment for that of voters and Congress on campaign finance,” said Daniel Weiner, a campaign finance law expert for the Brennan Center for Justice, a left-leaning nonprofit.

In Citizens United, then-Justice Anthony Kennedy, who wrote the majority opinion, explained his decision by stating that “independent expenditures, including those made by corporations, do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.” That has proved wildly inaccurate as the corruption convictions of North Carolina insurance executive Greg Lindberg and former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder (R) and the 2015 indictment of then-Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) all involved corrupting contributions made through outside groups making independent expenditures. (Menendez was later convicted of accepting bribes and acting as a foreign agent in a separate case in 2024.)

The Supreme Court under the leadership of Chief Justice John Roberts has repeatedly loosened campaign finance restrictions — with many unintended consequences.
The Supreme Court under the leadership of Chief Justice John Roberts has repeatedly loosened campaign finance restrictions — with many unintended consequences.

Manuel Balce Ceneta via Associated Press

Kennedy also promised that, thanks to the internet and disclosure laws, corporations or others spending unlimited sums on independent expenditures could be held accountable by the public. But Citizens United enabled a radical decrease in the transparency of campaign spending as “dark money” nonprofits, which do not disclose their donors, became significant political spenders. These groups now make up a growing percentage of donors to super PACs. Though super PACs do have to disclose their donors, that does not trickle down to requiring disclosures of the donors to those donors — making the true origin of a large portion of election funding completely opaque.

Advertisement

Similarly, the notion that independent expenditures are truly independent from candidates or parties has proved to be completely inaccurate. The largest-spending outside groups are those directly connected to party leaders or staffed by close aides to the candidates they support. Candidates provide information, like b-roll and directions on what messages to use in advertising for outside groups, on their websites or surreptitiously on social media. And in 2024, the FEC ruled that supposedly independent groups may directly coordinate with parties and candidates on get-out-the-vote operations. Billionaire Elon Musk went on to do exactly this with the Trump campaign and earned a plum spot in the White House for his efforts.

In the McCutcheon case, the court’s decision was largely rooted in naive expectations of how political parties would act once aggregate limits were eliminated. The aggregate contribution limits capped the total amount a donor could give in any one election, among all political parties and candidates. The intent was, like the coordinated spending limits, to prevent corruption and work-arounds of the candidate limits.

A key argument in the case was that, absent the aggregate limits, political parties could create a joint fundraising committee that linked all 50 state parties together with the national party and allowed them to easily shift money donated in one state to support a candidate elsewhere. During oral arguments, Alito called these “wild hypotheticals.”

Then-Justice Antonin Scalia wrote for the majority: “The Government provides no reason to believe that many state parties would willingly participate in a scheme to funnel money to another State’s candidates.”

But that’s exactly what happened. Beginning with Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign in 2016, every presidential campaign has created a super joint fundraising committee that then redirects contributions made to non-swing-state parties toward state parties in swing states or back to the national party.

Advertisement

While the party coordination limits seem to present less of an opportunity for the court to cause severe unintended consequences with another uninformed decision, there are a couple of things to keep in mind.

First and foremost, coordinated spending is done almost entirely in the form of advertising: The candidate designs an ad and plans when and where to run it, and the party foots the bill. But this could have unintended downstream consequences for television stations, which are required to provide candidates with the lowest unit price for campaign ads in the run-up to an election. Neither parties nor outside groups receive this benefit.

The Supreme Court will hear arguments in NRSC v. FEC on Tuesday.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments in NRSC v. FEC on Tuesday.

J. Scott Applewhite via Associated Press

If parties can suddenly subsidize candidate ads, television stations could be put under financial strain as they lose money that they previously received from higher charges on party advertising. This is an argument made by lawyers for the Democratic National Committee, who have entered the case to defend the limits.

“Broadcasters across the country will face significant increases in advertisements that purport to qualify for lowest unit rates, thereby inflicting a substantial financial strain upon them,” the DNC’s brief states.

This is likely to lead broadcasters to challenge rules that interpret coordinated spending as coming from the candidate and therefore receiving the lowest unit rate, according to Marc Elias, the lead lawyer for the DNC.

Advertisement

“This will have commercial impacts outside of the campaign finance world,” Elias said.

And then there are the unintended consequences that may flow within the campaign finance world.

By eliminating the aggregate limits, the McCutcheon decision opened the door for parties to collect massive contributions from single donors through super joint fundraising committees. In 2024, the maximum contribution to Vice President Kamala Harris’ joint fundraising committee was $929,600 for a single donor. Most of that money wound up with the Democratic National Committee or its state parties, which then circumvented contribution limits by routing that money to swing state committees.

If the court does end the coordinated spending limits, it will lead to a mass circumvention of the candidate limits — just as the McCutcheon decision did for party limits. And, as the unintended consequences of McCutcheon now flow into the NRSC case, so too would the circumvention of candidate limits lead toward their ultimate elimination.

There may be reasonable policy reasons to support ending or raising the coordinated spending limits, as the Brennan Center’s Weiner has advocated. In a world where single billionaires like Musk can spend unlimited amounts to directly coordinate with candidates through super PACs, it would be better for political parties, which are rooted in mass democracy and governance, to be on an equal, if not supreme, footing.

Advertisement

But that should be done by Congress, Weiner argues, not the Supreme Court — which time and time again has shown it does not understand how political campaigns work.

“The ultimate question is who should decide,” Weiner said. “I think it should be Congress that decides. We think of that as a fundamental principle. This is not something within the constitutional competence or, frankly, the expertise of the Supreme Court to make this call.”

Finance

Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers – Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath

Published

on

Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers – Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath



Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers – Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath
















Advertisement





Advertisement







Advertisement

Advertisement

Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers


Board Advances Motion to Address LAHSA’s Failure to Pay Service Providers


1024
888



Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath







Advertisement



Advertisement

Continue Reading

Finance

How “impact accounting” can integrate sustainability with finance

Published

on

How “impact accounting” can integrate sustainability with finance

Around three years ago, Charles Giancarlo, CEO of data platform Pure Storage, came back from Davos and asked his sustainability team to look into an idea he’d encountered at the meeting: Impact accounting, a method for integrating emissions and other externalities into company balance sheets. 

The idea had been slowly picking up adherents in Europe for around a decade, but Pure Storage, which rebranded this month to Everpure, would go on to become the first U.S. company to join the Value Balancing Alliance (VBA), a group of 30 or so companies developing the approach. Trellis checked in last week with Everpure and the VBA for an update.

How does impact accounting work?

At the heart of the approach are a set of “valuation factors,” developed by third-party experts, that are used to convert activity data for emissions, water use, air pollution and other externalities into dollar figures that can be integrated into balance sheets. In the case of emissions, for example, the VBA uses $220 per ton of carbon dioxide equivalent, a figure based on the estimated social impact of rising greenhouse gases levels. 

At Everpure, one long-term goal is to have cost centers be aware of the dollar impact of relevant externalities. After an initial focus on identifying and collecting the most material data, the team is now rolling out a dashboard containing several years of impact accounting numbers.

“It’s catered to different personas,” explained Adrienne Uphoff, Everpure’s ESG regulations and impact accounting manager. Finance was an initial use case, with product managers also on the roadmap. “You can compare it to financial numbers to really understand the impact intensity.”

Advertisement

What value does the approach bring?

“The essence of impact accounting is that you’re translating all these different metrics in the sustainability space into the language the decision makers understand,” said Christian Heller, the VBA’s CEO. “Everyone understands what you’re talking about, and you get a sense of the magnitude of your impact and the risks and opportunities.”

This has allowed Everpure to calculate what Uphoff called the “environmental costs of goods sold” and to estimate the impact of circular strategies, such as refurbishing hardware. The analysis reveals “impact savings across the full value chain across five different environmental topics all in a single dollar unit,” she said. 

Analyses like that can then be shared with customers and used to distinguish Everpure from competitors. “The long-term winners in this space are going to be those that can perform against sustainability goals,” said Kathy Mulvany, Everpure’s global head of sustainability. “Impact accounting gives us a way to bring comparability, so companies can understand how they’re truly stacking up.”

What does it take to implement impact accounting?

A great deal of technical work goes into creating valuation factors, but the system is designed so that outside experts create the numbers and hand them to sustainability professionals for use. Still, not every company will have the in-house environmental data that is also needed. Many companies have been collecting emissions data for five years or more, for example, but detailed datasets for water use are less common.

Internal teams also need to be familiar with the concepts. “One of the key learnings from our impact accounting implementation is that the socialization curve is longer than you expect,” said Uphoff. “Attaching monetary values on externalities introduces new metrics and mental models, and that can naturally make people a little nervous at first. It takes time and dialogue for teams to build confidence in how to interpret this new lens on performance.” 

Advertisement

What’s next?

In the early days of impact accounting, companies and consultancies worked independently on different methodologies. Now that work is coalescing, said Heller. The International Standards Organization will start work on a standard this summer, he added, and the VBA is having conversations with the IFRS Foundation, which creates international financial reporting standards.

The approach may also be integrated into mandatory disclosure standards. Heller noted that the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive mentions the potential benefits of companies putting a dollar figure on some environmental impacts. “It’s the next evolutionary step of any kind of sustainability disclosure regulations,” he said.

.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Finance

2 Aspira charter high schools to close by April due to financial issues

Published

on

2 Aspira charter high schools to close by April due to financial issues

Chicago Public Schools is shutting down two Aspira charter high schools by the middle of the year, following financial issues over the past year. 

School leaders are calling the move “unprecedented.”  

Students at the Aspira Business and Finance High School at 2989 N. Milwaukee Ave. in Avondale held a walkout right outside of Aspira after the CEO said they only have enough money to stay open for the next four to five weeks.

Students wanted their questions answered as to why they’re being transferred to other schools.

Angelina Mota is a senior at the high school and said she is concerned about her future.

Advertisement

“It’s very difficult, especially for us, hearing that credits might not go all the way with us. That our graduation might just be taken back. It’s very disappointing,” she said.

This is the first time a CPS school will close before the end of the school year. Both Aspira and CPS said the charter network won’t have the funds to stay open past April.

“The burden on our seniors has got to be… they don’t give a damn about the kids. The seniors,” Aspira of Illinois CEO Edgar Lopez said while fighting back his emotions.

The school is facing a $2.9 million deficit, impacting 540 students and dozens of staff.

CPS said they have already given more than $2.5 million to the charter school to help sustain operations. They said under Illinois law, it reached the legal limit of funding it can provide.

Advertisement

This has been a year-long effort in compliance with state charter school law.

In a statement, CPS said, “Aspira has not submitted required documentation, including evidence of funding to support operations through this school year.”

The documents CPS said are overdue include the school’s fiscal year 25 financial audit, general ledger, and payroll.

“We’re not hiding nothing. The financial documents that they were asking for, Jose told them, we’ll have them to you by Friday. Then they send a letter by Thursday. They didn’t even give us a chance,” Lopez said.

CPS said they’re initiating this due to the lack of financial transparency and solvency.

Advertisement

“We know we don’t want to go anywhere else because we’re used to the routine we have here,” said student Arichely Molina.

“Please let us (stay) open. at least until we graduate,” Mota said.

CPS said their main goal is to ensure the kids have a safety net as they transition to another school. 

The second school is located at 3986 W. Barry Ave., also in the Avondale neighborhood.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending