Anyone who thinks the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling tilted political influence toward wealthy donors and corporations (and who doesn’t?) should pay attention to what’s happening in ...
Six days after the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, President Barack Obama broke from the norms of polite deference and rebuked the justices sitting before ...
Several of you responded to my “Sunday thought” by saying that the first step out of the mess we’re in is to get rid of the Supreme Court’s bonkers Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission ...
Fifteen years after a landmark Supreme Court case turbocharged corporate spending in the political process, a group hopes it may have a way to finally rein in some of the outsized influence of the ...
The Washington Post’s recent series on campaign finance, beginning with the frighteningly titled “How billionaires took over American politics,” offers a dramatic narrative about money in politics.
His CIA code name is Condor. In the next seventy-two hours almost everyone he trusts will try to kill him.
While Citizens United became shorthand for unlimited political spending, a less-recognized campaign finance case made super PACs a reality.
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