Tо the Honorable the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts:
The undersigned Justices of the Supreme Judicial Court respectfully submit their responses to the questions set forth in an order adopted by the House of Representatives on May 25, 1994, and transmitted to this court on that day. The order recites that Senate No. 311, a bill pending before the General Court, entitled “An Act for accountable politics,” in § 20 thereof, amends G. L. c. 55 by adding a new § 6B. Subseсtion (6) of the proposed section establishes limits on the amount of total receipts a political candidate may raise in the years other than the year in which the candidate is running for election; provides that, in calculating “total re
“(6) No candidate shall, in the years other than the year in which the candidate is running for election, raise in the aggregate total receipts in excess of thirty thousand dollars in the case of a candidate for state representative, sixty thousand dollars in the case of a candidate for state senator, one hundred and twenty thousand dollars in the case of a candidate for lieutenant governor, attorney general, auditor, state secretary, treasurer, and receiver general, and two hundred and fifty thousand dollars in the case of a candidate for governor; provided, however, that in calculating said total receipts, unpaid debts incurred in election years shall be excluded.
“The following restrictions apply to those candidates for whom the above restrictions do not apply: in the case of a candidate seeking public office in a city, town or district, no cаndidate shall, in the years other than the year in which the candidate is running for election, raise in the aggregate total receipts in excess of the following amounts; provided, however, that in calculating said total receipts, unpaid debts incurred in election years shall be excluded:
“(a) in the case of a city, town or district with a population greater than 250,000 — one hundred and twenty thousand dollars;
“(6) in the case of a city, town or district with a population between 140,001 and 250,000 — sixty thousand dollars;
*1203 “(c) in the case of a city, town or district with a population between 36,001 and 140,000 — thirty thousand dollars;
“(d) in the case of a city, town or district with a population between 18,001 and 36,000 — fifteen thousand dollars;
“(e) in the case of a city, town or district with a population no more than 18,000 — seven thousand and five hundred dollars.
“For the purposes of this paragraph only, the term ‘total receipts’ shall include any balance carried forward from the election year added to the sum total of all contributions received during non-election years. Any contributions received in excess of the amounts specified in this paragraph shall either be returned to contributors or shall be distributed in accordance with section 18, paragraph VI of this chapter[1 ]”
For convenience, in the remainder of this opinion we shall frequently refer to subsection (6) as the “Bill.”
The order further recites that grave doubt exists as to the constitutionality of the Bill and presents to us the following two questions:
“1. Would said subsection (6) of said Section 6B of said Chapter 55 contained in said Section 20 of said Senate No. 311, if enacted into law, violate the right to freedom of expression or association under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, in that it defines and restricts the total receipts a candidate may raise in the aggregate in years other than election years?
*1204 “2. Would said subsection (6) of said Section 6B of said Chapter 55 contained in said Section 20 of said Senate No. 311, if enacted into law, violate the right to freedom of expression under Article XVI of Part the First of the Constitution of the Commonwealth, or freedom of association under Article XIX of said Part the First of the Constitution of the Commonwealth, in that it defines and restricts the total receipts a candidate may raise in the aggregate in years other than election years?”
We begin our analysis with two general observations about the Bill. First, because the definition of “total receipts” quoted above is followed immediately by a sentence which provides for the return of “contributions” in excess of statutory limits, and which makes no mention of the return of any “balance carried forward,” the Bill expresses a legislative purpose that a candidate who has on hand a balance of campaign funds from an election year is permitted to retain that balance even if it exceeds statutory limits. In such a situation, however, the Bill prohibits the candidate from receiving any additional contributions. Second, while the Bill does not indicate whether a candidate’s own funds are included within the category of “total receipts” that the candidate “raises,” § 20 of proposed Senate No. 311 also makes provision for the insertion in G. L. c. 55 of a new § 7B, which reads as follows: “Any candidate may make expenditures without limitation for the purposes of his own campaign and make contributions without limitation to the candidate’s committee organized on his own behalf.” This provision comports with Federal constitutional decisional law in the area of campaign finance restrictions which makes clear that a candidate’s personal contributions cannot be included within the Bill’s calculation of “total receipts” raised by the candidate. See Buckley v. Valeo,
The distinction between contributions and expenditures set out in the' Buckley opinion does not take us far in the present context.
We next state the United States Supreme Court’s standards for review of campaign finance legislation. As has been noted, the Court has said that the restrictions on freedom of association imposed by contribution limitations are subject to a less strict standard than are the burdens placed on speech by the expenditure limitations. Specifically, in discussing contribution limitations in the Buckley opinion, the Court said that interference with freedom of political association “may be sustained if the State demonstrates a sufficiently important interest and employs means closely drawn to avoid unnecessary abridgement of associatiоnal freedoms.” Buckley v. Valeo, supra at 25. In contrast, the Court said that expenditure limitations must “satisfy the exacting scrutiny applicable to limitations on core First Amendment rights of political expression.” Id. at 44-45. That statement refers to a requirement that such limitations must be “narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.” Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce,
The Supreme Court has said that “preventing corruption or the appearance of corruption are the only legitimate and compelling government interests thus far identified for restricting campaign finances.” Federal Elections Comm’n v. National Conservative Political Action Comm., supra at 496-497. The concerns usually raised in connection with corruption, or its appearance, center on the notion that contributions may be given as a quid pro quo for favorable action or treatment by a candidate presently serving or seeking election, and a fear that the candidate with substantial funds might use those funds for personal benefit or for purposes other than lawful campaign expenditures.
By limiting the amounts that may be raised in nonelection years, the Bill, as we have said, also has the potential effectively to restrict the amount that can be expended in those years. Unless a candidate has personal wealth available, he or she will be confined, in nonelection years, to spending only what has been carried over or what has been raised up to the limits set by the Bill. As a result of the Bill’s structure, a candidate for a two-year office would face a limitation on expenditures every other year. A candidate for a four-year office would face expenditure limitations in three out of every four years. In any of the nonelection years, the candidate might wish, or have reason, to spend in excess of the off-year limitation to promote his or. her candidacy or office, to deliver other political messages to the electorate, or to engage in other lawful political activities.
Further, by effectively precluding contributions to candidates or elected officials who have carried over the maximum permissible amount in campaign funds, the Bill could wholly prevent potential contributors from offering support to a candidate prior to the election year. “A contribution serves as a general expression of support for a candidate . . . [and] serves to affiliate a person with a candidate.” Buckley v. Valeo, supra at 21-22. While a limitation on the amount of a contribution has been considered permissible, see id. at 20-21, legislation that has the effect of prohibiting a contributor from expressing support and affiliation with a candidate for a lengthy period constitutes a significant interference with the right of association. A contributor might have compelling reasons for desiring to express that support at a particular time other than the year of the election. The interest in avoiding corruption, and its appearance, cannot justify what
Finally, we note that the Bill’s restriction on contributions to a candidate who has amassed the permissible limit in funds prior to the election year falls on those who would choose currently to contribute, and it does so on the basis of funds previously accumulated by the candidate, perhaps in a past election cycle. It could be the case then, thаt contributions given to a candidate in one election, when the candidate was opposing A, would be retained and used in a later election, when the candidate was opposing B. Yet a contributor who preferred the candidate to A, might not prefer the candidate to B. The Bill could restrict the freedom of association of current potential contributors, in favor of past contributors, who might not even choose currently to associate with thе candidate. We think that this result further frustrates the right to freedom of association.
The second State interest advanced for the Bill, that of equalizing the funds available to candidates for expressive purposes to encourage more competitive elections, has been expressly disapproved by the Supreme Court. “[T]he concept that government may restrict the speech of some elements of our society [incumbents] in order to enhanсe the relative voice of others [prospective challengers] is wholly foreign to the First Amendment, which was designed ‘to secure “the widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and antagonistic sources,” ’ and ‘ “to assure unfettered interchange of ideas for the bringing about of political and social changes desired by the people.”' New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, [
Accordingly, for the reasons explained above, the Justices conclude that the Bill, if enacted into law, would, under current decisions of the United States Supreme Court, violate rights of free expression and association guaranteed by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, and, therefore, we answer Question 1, “Yes.”
2. Question 2 asks whether the Bill would violate the protections of frеe expression and association granted by art. 16, as amended by art. 77 of the Amendments, and art. 19 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. We have considered these protections as comparable to those guaranteed by the First Amendment and have said that a burden placed on these protections can be justified only when a compelling State interest can be shown in the imposition of the restric-
tion. See Associated Indus. of Mass. v. Attorney Gen., ante 279, 289 & n.8 (1994); First Nat’l Bank v. Attorney Gen.,
Paul J. Liacos
Herbert P. Wilkins
Ruth I. Abrams
Joseph R. Nolan
Neil L. Lynch
Francis P. O’Connor
John M. Greaney
Notes
This reference appears to be to that part of G. L. c. 55, § 18 (1992 ed.), which specifies that certain “residual funds” may be donated to the Local Aid Fund, public charities, scholarship funds, or city or town general funds.
Despite the reaffirmation of the distinction in Federal Election Comm’n v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc.,
The Legislature has also enacted limits on contributions to candidates “in any calendar year.” G. L. c. 55, § 7A (a) (1), inserted by St. 1994, c. 43, § 27. The Bill could therefore have the effect of limiting candidates with large campaign funds to the receipt of a small election-year contribution or contributions from any given contributor, while candidates who had not exceeded the Bill’s limits could receive contributions each year. This could itself create a constitutional problem. See Service Employees Int’l Union v. Fair Political Practices Comm’n,
In an advisory opinion, the Supreme Court of New Hampshire concluded that a law limiting campaign contributions to amounts proportional to the number of qualified voters would be unconstitutional, on the ground that the difference between such a limit and a limit on expenditures “is one of form, not of substance.” Opinion of the Justices,
The Bill may also have equal protection implications because it treats differently those candidates with large campaign funds and those without such funds. In the absence of any definitive discussion of this problem by the Supreme Court, we will assume that the standards in the equal protection area are the same as the standards applicable to restrictions on First Amendment rights because the statutory classification places burdens on both rights of expression and association. See Austin v. Michigan Cham
Despite an invitation for briefs on the issues raised by the questions posed by the House of Representatives, no briefs from any of the invitees were submitted. A letter was submitted by Common Cause/Massachusetts commenting in general terms on the Bill. The comments did not endorse the Bill, but requested that we limit our comments strictly to the Bill and not address the “[S]tote interest involved in limiting campaign war chests” without a “finding] that the [S]tote has a compelling interest in addressing this serious problem.” Our responses, as they must be in this context, are directed only to the Bill and the current state of Federal constitutional law.
In the context of an advisory opinion, we lack an empirical basis for determining whether a candidate or an elected official might desire to spend in. excess of the contribution ceilings in a nonelection year. There are, however, permissible uses for campaign funds in nonelection years in addition to early campaigning.
It also has been suggested that the Bill’s provisions might be justified as a means of preventing, in effect, the circumvention of contribution limitations, which are designed to prevent a single donor from exercising undue influence over a candidate. Repeated large contributions by a single donor, carried over year to year, might be viewed as avoiding the intent of the annual limit, on single donor contributions. Provisions that limit the amount that may be raised in a nonelection year might, at least in some cases, eliminate the possibility of large annual donations from a single source that can be accumulated in anticipation of election campaigning. It is clear, however, that the Bill’s provisions are not narrowly tailored to support limits on single donor contributions, an issue which is properly addressed by contribution limitations and disclosure requirements.
In Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce,
