Justice Kavanaugh Unlocked Ways to Fight Foreign Interference.
He made clear the constitutional rights of foreign actors abroad cannot be violated, because they have no constitutional rights.
By Ellen L. Weintraub
Ms. Weintraub is a commissioner on the Federal Election Commission.
'Among many other recent developments not likely on anyones 2020 bingo card, a Supreme Court decision about foreign aid and legalized prostitution has shattered perceived constraints on the authority of the United States to robustly defend its elections against foreign interference.
This summer, in U.S. Agency for International Development v. Alliance for Open Society International, the Supreme Court, in a 5-to-3 decision, with the majority opinion written by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, ruled that the U.S. government can compel overseas public health organizations that receive U.S. foreign aid to publicly oppose prostitution.
Yet Justice Kavanaughs decree that foreign citizens outside U.S. territory do not possess rights under the U.S. Constitution is so expansive that it spills into election law, giving federal and state governments ample authority to defend us against the full range of foreign political warfare, without fear of violating the First Amendment.
It is settled law that foreign citizens (and the organizations and governments they comprise) cannot make contributions to U.S. political campaigns, nor can they spend money on communications that expressly advocate for or against U.S. political candidates. But clever adversaries have found ways around these rules.
For instance, the vast majority of Russias 2016 interference efforts on social media slyly didnt even mention candidates. . .
Even the efforts that did relate to candidates werent necessarily paid ads. Russia organized pro-Trump flash mobs in Florida and spent millions on a troll farm that set loose an army of propaganda-bearing bots on social-media platforms. Russia went so far as to organize both sides of a June 2016 protest at a mosque in Houston. . .
Ive never thought this type of activity was protected by the First Amendment because I have long viewed the reach of the foreign-national political-spending ban to be broad. But some serious legal thinkers have lost sleep over whether a conservative Supreme Court would strike down aggressive efforts to limit such interference on free-speech grounds.
The source of this doubt was, ironically, a 2011 opinion written by Brett Kavanaugh when he was on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. In Bluman v. Federal Election Commission, then-Judge Kavanaugh upheld the federal law banning political spending by foreign nationals but speculated that the ban might not survive constitutional scrutiny if applied to anything but contributions to U.S. candidates or communications that expressly advocate for or against a candidates election.
Now, the Supreme Court has told us that the constitutional rights of foreign citizens outside U.S. territory cannot be violated because they have no constitutional rights to violate. . .
(T)he Supreme Court would be hard-pressed to walk back this paradigm-shifting ruling. The Supreme Court case, then, carries a double punch in election law.
The key to this opinions paradigm shift is its transformation of a term that doesnt even appear in the decision: expenditure. (This result might surprise even Justice Kavanaugh.)
Federal law defines an expenditure as any purchase, payment, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, or gift of money or anything of value, made by any person for the purpose of influencing any election for Federal office. And federal law bars foreign nationals from making such expenditures.
Back in 1976, the Supreme Court, in Buckley v. Valeo, sharply confined the scope of the term expenditure to include only money spent on communications that expressly advocate the election or defeat of a clearly identified candidate what became known as express advocacy. But the court did so specifically to protect those who seek to exercise protected First Amendment rights. And, crucially, Justice Kavanaughs bold language in the Alliance for Open Society decision makes clear that foreign governments have no First Amendment rights in the first place.
The decision thus restores the term expenditure to its original sweep as to foreign nationals, meaning that the law bars not just ad spending aimed at influencing an election result, but any sort of spending that seeks to influence any election for Federal office in any way. . .
Some in Congress had already been taking aim at this sort of influence. Few, though, would have predicted that Justice Kavanaugh would be the one to hit the bull's-eye. . .
If Vladimir Putin, or any other foreign leader, would like to talk about American politics during a CNN interview, nothings stopping him. But if he wants to spend money to influence our elections by inflaming social divisions, sowing discord, hiring troll farms, hacking campaign computers, suppressing the vote, or by any other means the legal basis for the government to respond more aggressively is now crystal clear.
Given everything weve learned since 2016 about the breathtaking and continuing extent of foreign attacks on American democracy, our governments response must be strong and unequivocal. And now theres no excuse for it not to be.'
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/19/opinion/kavanaugh-foreign-interference.html?
Miguelito Loveless
(4,475 posts)try to undo this unintended consequence so as to protect the action of their Russian allies.
HuskyOffset
(891 posts)expenditures is a drinking game.