STAY CONNECTED

SIGN UP FOR CAC UPDATES

SEARCH TEXT & HISTORY

ABOUT TEXT & HISTORY

Text & History is a project of the Constitutional Accountability Center (CAC), a think tank and public interest law firm dedicated to fulfilling the progressive promise of the Constitution. Through in-depth legal reporting and analysis, we aim to show readers how the Constitution fundamentally upholds progressive outcomes. Learn more…

RECENT POSTS

RECENT COMMENTS

  • Tax Lawyer says "The Constitution prohibited blacks, women and non-real property holders from voting. Enough said...."
  • Dennis Santiago says "I’m a little bit unclear what you are counseling people to do with this piece...."
  • Freedom4All says "Absolutely wonderful and important work! Thank you!"
  • Thomaspain says "Yes, taxes are a good thing. What we need to worry about is leaving our future children, with the..."
  • TheCableGuy says "I don’t understand. Are you going to prove that the Tea Party is Constitutionally illiterate..."

ISSUE AREAS

COMMENTARY

BLOGROLL

ARCHIVES

Corporations and the Constitution at the Supreme Court: Oral Argument in Citizens United v. FEC

By David H. Gans, Director, Human Rights, Civil Rights, and Citizenship Program

Today, in a rare special session marking the Supreme Court debuts of Justice Sonia Sotomayor and Solicitor General Elena Kagan, the Court considered a First Amendment challenge to a federal statute banning corporations from spending money from their treasuries to finance electioneering communications that advocate the election or defeat of federal candidates. The case, Citizens United v. FEC, was first argued last spring. Rather than decide the case last Term however, the Court in June asked for new briefing and ordered re-argument on whether the Court should overrule two of its own precedents, decided in 1990 and 2003, that recognize that corporations do not have the same free speech rights that individuals have.

With these precedents on the chopping block, constitutional first principles loomed large during today’s oral argument. Over the past 25 years, we have grown accustomed to seeing conservative Justices make text and history arguments, while liberal Justices emphasize judicial doctrine.

But during today’s oral argument, it was the Court’s liberal Justices who forcefully argued from text and history. Asking the first question of Ted Olson, counsel for Citizens United, Justice Ginsburg reminded Olson that it is living persons, not corporations, who are “endowed by [their] Creator with unalienable rights.” Justice Sotomayor, too, picked up on this theme, emphasizing how the Supreme Court had rewritten the Constitution to create the fiction that corporations are persons entitled to the same basic rights as human beings. If we are looking to constitutional first principles to topple precedents, she asked, why shouldn’t we also look at the cases that invented corporate constitutional personhood and “imbued a creature of State law with human characteristics”? Near the end of the argument, Justice Breyer joined in, emphasizing that corporations are artificial, state-created entities – a view tracing all the way back to Chief Justice Marshall’s 1819 opinion in the Dartmouth College case – and that in exchange for their special advantages, corporations may legitimately be subject to disabilities to which citizens are not. And, not to be left out, Justice Stevens reminded his colleagues that former Chief Justice William Rehnquist (no starry-eyed liberal, he) had forcefully made these points in a dissenting opinion in First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti (1976).

Complementing these text and history arguments, Seth Waxman, representing Senators John McCain and Russ Feingold and two former members of Congress, powerfully demonstrated why federal campaign finance law has treated corporations and human beings differently for more than a century: giving corporations an unfettered right to use their corporate treasuries to help elect candidates beholden to their special interests would put our democratic process in jeopardy, letting corporations overwhelm the election process with money derived from the special advantages conferred by the government.

Neither Ted Olson, Floyd Abrams, who represented Sen. Mitch McConnell as an amicus, nor any of the Court’s conservative Justices, had any response to the constitutional text and history cogently presented by Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and others. Rather than confront constitutional text and history, Olson and the Court’s conservatives rested solely on the Court’s doctrine that corporations are persons with constitutional rights – the very distortion of text and history that Justice Sotomayor’s questioning discussed. Yet, it seems likely that these views will carry the day. Justices Scalia and Kennedy brimmed with hostility towards the federal ban on corporate electioneering, continually emphasizing that it applied to all corporations, including mom-and-pop barbershops and corporations without shareholders. (Of course, as Solicitor General Kagan countered, nothing in the law prevents the owners of such small corporations from spending money on election speech as individuals). Justice Thomas, characteristically silent, seems certain, based on prior rulings, to invalidate the federal statute, since he reached a similar conclusion in McConnell v. FEC. Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito – effectively the swing votes here – seemed likely to join them in protecting corporations, with the big questions being how far Chief Justice Roberts will go in overturning past Court precedents. Chief Justice Roberts’ questions to Solicitor General Kagan today, and her concessions that the government is defending the result, not the reasoning, of some past precedents, seemed designed to make overruling those precedents less objectionable.

We’ve already written why Citizens United is likely to be a momentous ruling; after today’s argument, the stakes are even bigger. The Court’s opinion is likely to be a major statement about the constitutional place of corporations in America. We hope the Justices take seriously the Constitution’s text and history and recognize that whatever rights corporations may have, corporations do not have the same constitutional freedoms as living persons, the “We the People” of the Constitution’s opening words.

Comments

Comment from Henry E. Payson
Time: September 11, 2009, 4:29 pm

The obvious, undemocratic abuses of legislative systems have their entire standing based on the fiction of corporations having the same rights as human beings as citizens. Perhaps the Court could limit the rights to free speach to that supported by plebicite (sp?) of a majority organizational membership on each issue.

Comment from Amanda
Time: September 22, 2009, 4:56 am

The Court could limit the rights to free speach to that supported by plebicite (sp?)

Comment from Jeff Stratford
Time: January 25, 2010, 5:44 pm

Wow! I’m completely overwhelmed. I’m stuck back on the concept of corporations having the same rights as individuals. Corporations should nor have anything resembling the rights of a an individual.

When I speak of politics and democracy the first words out of my mouth are, “we have to get the money out of politics”. Until we do that, we will have a cynical and disenfranchised populace, which is the antithesis of democracy.

This ruling is the death knell of democracy, unless we can create new laws that clearly state the role of corporations in our democratic system. That role being zero, none. Corporations are not individuals and they have no rights under the constitution. The only rights they have have are those which are granted to them by their articles of incorporation as outlined by the laws of the states and the federal government, not the constitution.

I personally do not want to grant corporations the rights of individuals. The people the are wealthy on their behalf already have the rights they need.

“take money out of politics”. Take the “rights” away from the corporation. They have none! Give the government back to the people.

Write a comment