| Liberty & Law |
IJ State Chapters Team Up to Fight Campaign Finance Case
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“Arizona’s so-called ‘Clean’ Elections Act allows the state to enter the political debate, place its thumb on the scales, and tip the balance in favor of taxpayer-financed candidates.” |
Among the reasons IJ is challenging Arizona’s campaign finance control measure is because it allows the government to drown out the message of privately funded campaigns by doling out a dollar-for-dollar match to their opponents whenever someone (even without the privately funded candidate’s consent) promotes their candidacy. Arizona law also imposes onerous reporting requirements on privately funded candidates. A privately funded candidate may have to file up to 37 time-consuming reports on contributions during one election cycle, compared to only three such filings for publicly funded candidates. These reports trigger more funds to be immediately disbursed to the tax-funded candidate, thereby placing the entire burden on those who refuse taxpayer funds for their campaign.
In America, we once prized individuals who competed in the marketplace of ideas without the need for force or government financing. Today, however, through ever-increasing public finance schemes, the government hampers such individuality in politics. Arizona’s scheme financially favors candidates who accept public funds while harming those who accept only private, voluntary donations.
IJ’s Arizona and Washington chapters teamed up to do what our entire organization is dedicated to doing: halt government efforts to make decisions in our lives that we are best able to make for ourselves, including our decisions about political speech.
Tim Keller is executive director of the Institute for Justice Arizona Chapter.![]()
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