Election Law
What Ails Us?
112 Yale L.J. 1135 (2003) Is American democracy sick? If so, what ails it? More importantly, can the disease be cured? Can its symptoms be alleviated by imaginative and well-crafted laws? Or is it a genetic disorder embedded in the DNA of modern representative government and thus unlikely to yield to therapeutic manipulation? In recent years, advocates of increased campaign finance regulation have often expressed the view that our democracy is indeed pitifully ill, that it has fallen prey to an inert citizenry and the pervasive and undue influence of money. Reformers implicitly believe, however, that the disease is curable, that it was caused by a dysfunctional system of financing political campaigns, and that it could accordingly be remedied simply by overhauling that system. The recently enacted Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, commonly known as McCain-Feingold, incorporated many of the new restrictions that most reformers thought ought to be included in that overhaul, including prohibitions on soft-money contributions and regulations on issue ads. In Voting with Dollars: A New Paradigm for Campaign Finance, Bruce Ackerman and Ian Ayres join the chorus of reform advocates who believe that democracy is ailing, that the cause of its illness is a fundamentally flawed campaign finance system, and that it can be cured if that system is properly overhauled. The overhaul they propose, however, departs radically from what reformers have conventionally advocated. Instead of direct public funding of election campaigns, they propose giving citizens public money--"Patriot dollars"--with which to support candidates or causes of their choice. Instead of advocating severe limits on private campaign contributions, or ever-more complete disclosure from the ever-growing number of participants in the political process, they propose mandating contributor anonymity while permitting substantial (although not unlimited) private giving. Ackerman and Ayres make extravagant claims for their new paradigm's ability to transform political life. With Patriot dollars available to them, voters will not remain disengaged and inert: Patriot dollars will rekindle citizen sovereignty and give "renewed vitality to [Americans'] democratic commitments." And by eliminating the ability of contributors to credibly communicate the amount of their gifts to candidates (and thus to secure for themselves a corresponding amount of influence), the secret donation booth will "disrupt the special-interest dealing" we now take for granted. Ackerman and Ayres's proposals for Patriot dollars and the secret donation booth represent genuinely new ideas about how campaign finance should be reformed. Voting with Dollars was conceived and written before the passage of McCain-Feingold, and published when that law's prospects remained dim despite the fact that it had passed the House. At present, unfortunately for the authors, the book can hardly be considered timely: Although its authors claimed to be putting their paradigm forward as a genuine alternative for Congress to consider instead of McCain-Feingold, its publication practically coincided with McCain-Feingold's enactment. Congress rarely can gather the momentum to engage in serious debate, much less to pass legislation, regarding campaign finance. It is therefore unlikely that Ackerman and Ayres's book will have any practical effect whatsoever: At least for the time being, the legislative debate over campaign finance reform is over. Nonetheless, the authors are important scholars, their ideas are provocatively imaginative, and the topic of campaign finance is not insignificant just because Congress is not likely to revisit it any time soon. Moreover, Ackerman and Ayres claim to have devised a campaign finance regime that would solve two vexing predicaments--namely, how to kindle citizen engagement in politics and how to purge the legislative process of selfish interest-group rent-seeking. Because it addresses and claims to have answers to these questions, Voting with Dollars deserves serious attention. The principal thesis of this Review is that even in the unlikely event that it were enacted into law, the new paradigm would almost certainly fail to achieve the benefits the authors so confidently predict: Patriot dollars will not ignite citizen interest in politics, nor will the secret donation booth end special-interest legislation. This, I argue, is because both widespread citizen disengagement and a legislative process dominated by interest-group competition (in which moneyed interests are important, but not the only, players) are practically inevitable characteristics of our complex modern democracy. The prevailing system of financing political campaigns is not a but-for cause of these phenomena, nor will reforming that system alleviate them. More particularly, it is quixotic to expect that either citizen disengagement or interest-group competition will yield significantly to the reforms embodied in Ackerman and Ayres's new paradigm, despite its imaginativeness and originality. Making this argument is not my only object in this Review. The book's manner of exposition also warrants comment, as does its constitutional analysis. It should be noted at the outset, however, that I pay scant critical attention to the details of the new paradigm. That task is best left to a reader who has been convinced that the new paradigm reflects a sound diagnosis and wants to make sure its design is not defective. The Review proceeds as follows. Part I summarizes the book. The summary almost, but not quite completely, eschews criticism or comment. It also contains more than the usual amount of direct quotation, in hopes of conveying not merely the essence of the new paradigm but also a first-hand impression of the authors' rhetorical style. Part II argues that the new paradigm's fatal flaw, one shared by nearly all advocates of campaign finance reform, is a profound misdiagnosis of what ails modern democracy. The problem with our democracy is not how we finance campaigns. It is that the incentives affecting citizen behavior are systematically skewed both to encourage disengagement and to permit most special-interest deal-making to go undetected and unpunished. What democracy most desperately needs is transparent public decisionmaking: Then citizens could more readily understand what their elected officials are doing and hold them to account for it at regularly scheduled competitive elections. Part III comments on the book's exposition and scrutinizes its constitutional analysis.