Assemblyman Pedro Nava is sounding the bugles against the U.S. Supreme Court. The Santa Barbara Democrat recently announced heās planning to ask Congress to pass a constitutional amendment overturning the head courtās Jan. 21 decision to grant corporations the right to make campaign contributions through political action committees, or PACs.
The 5-4 ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission ultimately voids a long-standing ban on corporate campaign financing.
In the majority statement, the justices said the First Amendment protects more than just an āindividual on a soapbox and the lonely pamphleteer.ā Banning corporations from making contributions through committees,
the justices said, is limiting their right to
free speech.
However, Nava, like many Democrats, is vehemently opposed to the decision and its projected impact on the future of political campaigning.
āThe Supreme Court has, with one irresponsible decision, obliterated 100 years of bipartisan policy limiting corporate influence in politics,ā Nava said in a release to the media. āThis decision does nothing to actually protect the free speech rights of citizens established by the First Amendment.
āCorporations are legally created economic entities, not people,ā Nava continued in the release. āThis decision will allow them to spend enormous sums of shareholdersā money on campaign messages that have little or nothing to do with the beliefs held by actual people. This will only serve to empower corporate interests and further diminish the American publicās already dim view of the political process.ā
Nava plans to amend his current Assembly Joint Resolution 3 (AJR3)ālegislation that would require politicians and other political organizations to include a statement clearly identifying major donors of $50,000 or more in their campaign advertisementsāto include an amendment upending the Supreme Courtās decision.
AJR3 is awaiting a hearing on the Senate floor in early March.
This article appears in Feb 4-11, 2010.

