Decisions, Decisions
Citizen’s United v. Federal Elections Commission – The 2010 Supreme Court Opinion that started the ball rolling by allowing unlimited corporate and union spending in federal elections.
SpeechNow v. Federal Elections Commission – This ruling significantly broadened the impact of Citizens United, “extending its constitutional reasoning from campaign spending to campaign donations.” (SCOTUS Blog, Widening impact of Citizens United)
Backgrounder
CRS Report: Super PACs in Federal Elections: Overview and Issues for Congress, December 2, 2011.
Who’s Sorta Who
Presidential Super PAC Who’s Who: Sunlight Foundation Cheat Sheet
Federal Election Commission – Independent Expenditure-Only Committee Reports
Ongoing Reporting & Analysis
Sunlight Foundation – Super PACs Blog Feed
C-Span Video – Campaign Finance
SSRN Working Papers on Citizen’s United
Fight the Power
National Conference of State Legislatures – This resource looks at the 24 states that currently prohibit or restrict corporate and/or union spending on candidate elections, and includes links to specific statutes and laws.
MoveToAmend.org – This group has organized to reverse the Citizens United ruling and maintains a list of resolutions and ordinances abolishing corporate person-hood.
Montana Supreme Court Upholds Election Spending Limits – LA Times, January 4, 2012.
The Big Apple Lashes Out About the Citizen’s United Decision – Wall Street Journal Law Blog, January 5, 2012. The New York City Council approves a resolution opposing the Citizen’s United decision.