The two Plaintiffs-Appellants here are Vermont Right to Life Committee, Inc. (“VRLC”) and Vermont Right to Life Committee — Fund for Independent Political Expenditures (“VRLC-FIPE”). VRLC is a Vermont non-profit corporation and VRLC-FIPE is a political committee formed under Vermont law. Both advocate the “universal recognition of the sanctity of human life from conception through natural death.” J.A. 657, ECF No. 34. VRLC challenges three disclosure provisions of Vermont’s elections laws, contending that they are unconstitutionally vague and violate VRLC’s freedom of speech. First, VRLC challenges the statute requiring that “electioneering communications” identify their sponsor. Second, VRLC challenges the statute requiring that groups engaged in any “mass media activity” must submit certain reports to the Vermont Secretary of State and relevant candidates. Third, VRLC challenges Vermont’s definition of “political committees” and its requirement that such committees submit campaign finance reports. VRLC-FIPE raises an as-applied challenge to Vermont’s limit on contributions to political committees, contending that VRLC-FIPE is an independent-expenditure-only group and therefore the limit violates its freedom of speech. The Defendants-Ap-pellees are various Vermont officials responsible for enforcing Vermont’s elections laws. The district court (Sessions, J.) granted Defendants summary judgment on every claim. We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. Parties
VRLC is a Vermont corporation that files federal tax returns as a non-profit entity under 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(4). VRLC-FIPE was formed by VRLC in 1999 as a registered Vermont political committee under the Vermont campaign finance statutes. VRLC-FIPE contends that it is an “independent expenditure committee” because the resolution of VRLC creating VRLC-FIPE provides that it may not “make monetary or in-kind contributions to candidates,” or “coordinate the content, timing or distribution of its communications or other activities with candidates or their campaigns.” J.A. 1125, ECF No. 36. A third entity, Vermont Right to Life Committee, Inc. Political Committee (‘VRLC-PC”), also formed by VRLC, engages in campaign activities, including making direct contributions to pro-life political candidates. VRLC-PC is not a party in this action.
II. Statutory Scheme
This is not our first encounter with challenges to Vermont election laws by VRLC entities. In Vermont Right to Life Committee, Inc. v. Sorrell (“VRLC I”),
In the instant case, VRLC has challenged the revised versions of the “electioneering communication,” “mass media activity,” and “political committee” provisions of Vermont’s campaign finance laws. VRLC contends that the definitions of particular terms in those laws render the statutes unconstitutional under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. VRLC-FIPE challenges the contribution limits as applied to it. While this appeal was pending, Vermont repealed and replaced its campaign finance statutes. Act of Jan. 23, 2014, 2014 Vt. Acts & Resolves No. 90, Sec. 2, available at http://www.leg.state.vt. us/DOCS/2014/ACTS/ACT090.PDF (cоdified at Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2901 et seq.). In deciding this appeal, this Court must apply the law now in effect. See Starbucks Corp. v. Wolfe’s Borough Coffee, Inc.,
We first set out the relevant statutory language.
A. Electioneering Communication
The definition of “electioneering communication” includes:
any communication that refers to a clearly identified candidate for office and that promotes or supports a candidate for that office or attacks or opposes a candidate for that office, regardless of whether the communication expressly advocates a vote for or against a candidate, including communications published in any newspaper or periodical or broadcast on radio or television or over the Internet or any public address system; placed on any billboards, outdoor facilities, buttons, or printed material attached to motor vehicles, window displays, posters, cards, pamphlets, leaflets, flyers, or other circulars; or containedin any direct mailing, robotic phone calls, or mass e-mails.
Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2901(6). With few exceptions, electioneering communications must identify “the name and mailing address of the person, candidate, political committee, or political party that paid for the communication.” Id. § 2972(a). Electioneering communications “paid for by or on behalf of a political committee or political party” must also identify certain contributors. Id. § 2972(c).
B. Mass Media Activity
Mass media activities include television commercials, radio commercials, mass mailings, literature drops, newspaper advertisements, robotic phone calls, and telephone banks, “which include[ ] the name or likeness of a clearly identified candidate for office.” Id. § 2901(11). A person engaging in certain “mass media activity” must file a report with the Vermont Secretary of State and send a copy to relevant candidates. Id. § 2971(a)(1). “The report shall identify the person who made the expenditure; the name of each candidate whose name or likeness was included in the activity; the amount and date of the expenditure; to whom it was paid; and the purpose of the expenditure.” Id. § 2971(b).
The disclosure requirements concerning electioneering communications and mass media activities apply to all individuals and entities engaging in such activities, not just political action committees.
C. Political Committee
A “political committee” (“PAC”) is defined as:
any formal or informal committee of two or more individuals or a corporation, labor organization, public interest group, or other entity, not including a political party, which accepts contributions of $1,000.00 or more and makes expenditures of $1,000.00 or more in any two-year general election cycle for the purpose of supporting or opposing one or more candidates, influencing an election, or advocating a position on a public question in any election, and includes an independent expenditure-only political committee.
Id. § 2901(13). The definition of “political committee” is based in part on the definitions of “contribution” and “expenditure.” Id. A “contribution” is “a payment, distribution, advance, deposit, loan, or gift of money or anything of value, paid or promised to be paid for the purpose of influencing an election, advocating a position on a public question, or supporting or opposing one or more candidates in any election.” Id. § 2901(4).
Prior to the district court’s decision below, a Vermont Superior Court considered a vagueness and overbreadth challenge to the phrase “influencing an election” in the definition of “political committee” in the former version of Vermont’s campaign fl-
A Vermont PAC satisfying these definitions is subject to numerous requirements under Vermont law. For example, a PAC must make all expenditures from a single checking account, file campaign finance reports with the Vermont Secretary of State identifying each person who contributed more than $100 to the PAC, and list all PAC expenditures in certain circumstances. Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, §§ 2922(b), 2963, 2964(b)(1). These reports must be filed three to four times during an election year. Id. § 2964(b)(1), (e).
III. District Court Proceedings
The district court began its analysis of the parties’ cross mоtions for summary judgment by considering VRLC’s vagueness challenges to the Vermont statutes. Beginning with the definitions of “political committee,” “contribution,” and “expenditure,” the district court concluded that the definitions were not vague because the phrase “influencing an election” was no broader than the phrase “supporting or opposing one or more candidates.” Vt. Right to Life Comm., Inc. v. Sorrell,
The district court then considered VRLC’s overbreadth claims. Drawing on Buckley v. Valeo,
The district court also concluded that the First Amendment challenge to the PAC definition should be reviewed under “exacting scrutiny,” because designation as a “political committee” triggered a disclosure regime. Id. at 392-93. Applying this standard of review, the district court concluded that the statute did not impose impermissible burdens or sweep in a substantial amount of protected speech. Id. at 397. Applying exacting scrutiny to the electioneering communication and mass media activity statutes, the district court reached the same conclusion, finding them appropriately tailored to Vermont’s important interests. Id. at 398-400.
The district court then addressed Vermont’s limits on contributions to PACs. VRLC-FIPE contended that the law was unconstitutional as applied to it because VRLC-FIPE did not make contributions to any political campaigns and makes its expenditures independent of any candidate or political campaign.
The district court concluded, however, that VRLC-FIPE could not benefit from any protections accorded to independent-expenditure-only groups because of its close connection to VRLC-PC, an arm of VRLC that “contributes funds to candidates.” Id. at 404-410. Based on the undisputed facts before it, the district court concluded “that the structural melding between [VRLC-FIPE] and [VRLC-PC] leaves no significant functional divide between them for the purposes of campaign' finance law.” Id. at 408. The district court acknowledged that “it is unclear whether even a complete overlap in staff and symmetry in spending permit extending contribution limits that undisputedly apply to a PAC that makes candidate contributions to one that does independent expenditures.” Id. at 409 (citing Emily’s List v. Fed. Election Comm’n,
LEGAL STANDARDS
I. Summary Judgment
This Court reviews a summary judgment decision de novo and applies “the same standards that govern the district court’s consideration of the motion.” Kay-tor v. Elec. Boat Corp.,
II. Scope of Review
A. Vagueness
We first must clarify the scope of the legal challenge before us. VRLC describes its suit as both a facial and an as-applied challenge and argues that the “mass media,” “electioneering communication,” and “political committee” provisions are unconstitutionally vague facially and as applied. However, it is not the label that matters in deciding what standard applies. Doe v. Reed,
VRLC has done little, if anything, to present its as-applied vagueness challenge. See Vt. Right to Life Comm., Inc.,
We recognize the preference for as-applied challenges, United States v. Farhane,
VRLC has not presented any legal arguments or facts specific to an as-applied vagueness challenge. We will therefore analyze these claims under the standards governing facial challenges.
B. First Amendment
Plaintiffs also argue that Vermont’s political committee, mass media, and electioneering communication definitions and the disclosure regime violate the First Amendment right to free speech “as applied and facially.” In support of the claim that these provisions are “facially unconstitutional,” VRLC relies on cases dealing with overbreadth. Appellants’ Br. 101-03 (citing United States v. Williams,
Because the merits of VRLC’s arguments do not depend on whether they have been raised as part of an as-applied or facial overbreadth challenge, we consider both claims together. VRLC-FIPE has separately brought an as-applied challenge against Vermont’s contribution limits, which will be addressed separately.
“ELECTIONEERING COMMUNICATIONS” AND “MASS MEDIA ACTIVITIES”
VRLC contends that the Vermont statutory disclosure provisions concerning electioneering communications and mass media activities (i) violate the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process guarantee due to vagueness, and (ii) violate the First Amendment’s free speech guarantee. Like the district court, we conclude that the provisions are constitutional.
I. Vagueness
The due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments forbid enforcement of a statute if “the statute ... fails to provide a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited, or is so standardless that it authorizes or encourages seriously discriminatory enforcement.” Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project,
A. “Promotes or Supports ... or Attacks or Opposes”
The “electioneering communication” definition, which triggers disclosure requirements, uses the words “promotes,” “supports,” “attacks,” and “opposes.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2901(6). VRLC contends that these terms are impermissibly vague. We disagree; this language is sufficiently precise.
In McConnell, the Supreme Court explained that these terms are not unconstitutionally vague in a similar context, because they “clearly set forth the confines within which potential party speakers must act in order to avoid triggering the provision.”
The McConnell Court included an additional basis for its conclusion, the nature of the speaker being regulated: “This is particularly the case here, since actions taken
VRLC points to a concurring opinion by Justice Scalia in which he described the issue of whether an advertisement “promotes, attacks, supports, or opposes the named candidate,” as “inherently vague,” asking, “Does attacking the king’s position attack the king?”, Fed. Election Comm’n v. Wise. Right to Life, Inc.,
B. “On Behalf Of’
Electioneering communications “paid for by or on behalf of a political committee or political party” must also identify certain contributors. Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2972(c) (emphasis added). VRLC urges that the phrase “on behalf of’ is unconstitutionally vague. It is not.
Vermont’s previous campaign finance law — and the law considered by the district court below — required that electioneering communications identify “the name of the candidate, party, or political committee by or on whose behalf the same is published or broadcast.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2892 (repealed 2014). The district court rejected Plaintiffs’ vagueness challenge to the phrase “on whose behalf’ in the previous electioneering communication reporting provision, concluding that the phrase “contemplates an agreement between the sponsor and the beneficiary to run the communication.” Vt. Right to Life Comm., Inc.,
C. “Expenditure”
VRLC contends that the definition of the statutory term “expenditure” is unconstitutionally vague. “Expenditure” is used in the mass media activity statute.
As also mentioned above, the Vermont Supreme Court has supplied a narrowing interpretation to the phrase “influencing an election” in the “political committee” definition. As that court explained, the “influencing” phrase “refer[s] only to [the] class of advocacy” covered by the phrase “supporting or opposing”: “they both refer to advocacy to vote in a particular way in an election.” Green Mountain Future,
The purpose of the methods used by [Green Mountain Future] in this case was very clear, partially because [Green Mountain Future] identified the candidate by name and included his pictures in the advertisements. If in the next case, however, an organization ran advertisements in the same way and in the same timeframe with respect to an election without mentioning the candidate’s name, and without including a picture of the candidate, we would be reluctant to hold that the statute as narrowed by the trial court could cover this method— evеn if an objective observer would find the purpose to be the same as when the candidate name and picture was used. As in this case, the objective observer should look to multiple factors: for example, the timing of the advertisement, the images used in the advertisement, the tone of the advertisement, the audience to which the advertisement is targeted, and the prominence of the issued) discussed in the advertisement in the campaign. But where the objective observer concludes that the purpose of an advertisement is to influence voters to vote yes or no on a candidate, the “influencing an election” language should apply. Other than in this circumstance, we agree with the trial court’s narrowing construction.
Id. at 998 (footnote omitted). In other words, if an organization ran an advertise
The expansion of the “influencing” language in the Vermont Supreme Court’s Green Mountain Future decision has no impact here. A communication only qualifies as a mass media activity if it “includes the name or likeness of a clearly identified candidate.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2901(11) (emphasis added). If a communication does not qualify as a mass media activity, it does not trigger the disclosure statute in which the term “expenditure” is used. See Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2971(a)(1) (“[A] person who makes expenditures for any one mass media activity totaling $500.00 or more ... within 45 days before a primary, general, county, or local election shall, for each activity, file a mass media report.” (emphases added)). As a result, the “influencing” language in the expenditure definition has no force in this context. Because the “supporting or opposing” language in the statutory definition of “expenditure” is not vague and the “influencing” language in its definition has no relevance to the mass media activity statute, we reject VRLC’s vagueness challenge to the term “expenditure” as it is used in the mass media activity statute.
II. First Amendment
A. Express Advocacy
VRLC contends that Vermont cannot impose a disclosure or identification requirement on speech unless that speech is “express advocacy” or broadcast speech that is run shortly before an election and targeted at the relevant electorate. Because Vermont’s definitions of regulated “electioneering communications” and “mass media activities” apply to speech that falls outside of these categories, VRLC contends that they violate the First Amendment. Although VRLC’s position finds some support in pr0,-Citizens United decisions, it cannot be squared with Citizens United.
In Buckley, the Supreme Court responded to vagueness and overbreadth challenges by adopting a narrow construction of the term “political committee” in the Federal Election Campaign Act, which required “political committees” and other persons to disclose their “expenditures.”
Citizens United removed any lingering uncertainty concerning the reach of constitutional limitations in this context. In Citizens United, the Supreme Court expressly rejected the “contention that the disclosure requirements must be limited to speech that is the functional equivalent of express advocacy,” because disclosure is a less restrictive strategy for deterring corruption and informing the electorate.
As a result, the Vermont statutes’ extension beyond express advocacy does not render them unconstitutional.
B. Standard of Review
Although the Vermont statutes’ reach beyond express advocacy does not render them unconstitutional, the statutes remain
Review of the monetary threshold for requiring disclosure of a contribution оr expenditure is highly deferential. In Buckley, the Supreme Court suggested that a disclosure threshold will be upheld unless it is “wholly without rationality,” specifically stating that it would not require the legislature “to establish that it has chosen the highest reasonable threshold.”
C. Application
The electioneering communication and mass media activity statutes are within the scope of regulation permitted under Citizens United. An electioneering communication, which under section 2972(2) must identify the speaker, includes any “communication that refers to a clearly identified candidate for office and that promotes or supports a candidate for that office or attacks or opposes a candidate for that office, regardless of whether the communication expressly advocates a vote for or against a candidate.... ” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2901(6). This definition by its terms only reaches communications that take a position on an actual candidacy. Also, although the provision is not explicitly time limited, an individual can only be a “candidate” within the meaning of the statute once she has taken an “affirmative action” to become a candidate for office by accepting $500 of contributions, making $500 of expenditures, filing a petition for nomination, being nominated, or announcing her candidacy. Id. § 2901(1). Thus, the statute will only apply during a campaign for public office. As a result, the electioneering communication reporting requirements have a substantial relation to the public’s “interest in knowing who is speaking about a candidate shortly bеfore an election.” Citizen’s United,
Admittedly, the mass media reporting requirements, because they do not directly inform the public about the identity of the speaker, are less tailored to the asserted public interest in information about the sources of election-related spending than an identification requirement. But notwithstanding this less direct nexus, the requirement is still substantially related to
These targeted mass media disclosure requirements are substantially related to a sufficiently important governmental interest. By alerting candidates whose image or name is used, the reporting requirement will identify the source of election-related information and encourage candidate response. And by requiring that the speaker notify the candidate whose image or name was used, the provision brings so-called “whisper campaigns” into the sunlight
As a result, the Vermont statutes governing electioneering communications and mass media activities survive exacting scrutiny.
“POLITICAL COMMITTEE” DEFINITION AND DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS
VRLC contends that the Vermont “political committee” definition (i) violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process guarantee because of vagueness, and (ii) violates the First Amendment’s free speech guarantee. Like the district court, we conclude that the statute is constitutional.
I. Vagueness
As noted above, VRLC asserts that the phrases “supporting or opposing” and “influencing an election” are unconstitutionally vague as used in the PAC definition. These phrases are either directly incorporated into the definition of “political committee” or are indirectly incorporated, through the definitions of “contribution” or “expenditure.” As explained above, the phrase “supporting or opposing” is not unconstitutionally vague. See McConnell,
Also explained above, a Vermont Superior Court has interpreted the phrase “influencing an election” such that it is co-extensive with the “supporting or opposing” language. State v. Green Mountain Future, Civ. Div. No. 758-10-10 Wncv, slip
The fact that “influencing an election” covers communications that do not necessarily identify a specific candidate does not make the phrase unconstitutionally vague. In McConnell, 540 U.S at 184,
a public communication that refers to a clearly identified candidate for Federal office (regardless of whether a candidate for State or local office is also mentioned or idеntified) and that promotes or supports a candidate for that office, or attacks or opposes a candidate for that office (regardless of whether the communication expressly advocates a vote for or against a candidate).
2 U.S.C. § 431(20)(A)(iii). Despite the statute’s explicit application beyond express advocacy, the Supreme Court held that it was not unconstitutionally vague. McConnell,
II. First Amendment
A. “Major Purpose”
As noted above, VRLC contends that Vermont’s PAC disclosure requirements violate the First Amendment, arguing that Vermont may only impose a disclosure regime on an organization if “the major purpose” of the organization is to advance a candidacy.
Prior to Citizens United, the Fourth Circuit held that an organization could only be subjected to a political committee regulatory regime if the organization met “the major purpose” test. N.C. Right to Life, Inc. v. Leake,
We join the Circuits that have considered PAC definitions in this context after Citizens United and hold that the Constitution does not require disclosure regulatory statutes to be limited to groups having “the major purpose” of nominating or electing a candidate. The “express advocacy” analysis above applies with equal force to “the major purpose” analysis here. When the Buckley Court construed the relevant federal statute to reach only groups having “the major purpose” of electing a candidate, it was drawing a statutory line. See McConnell,
B. Standard of Review
Although Vermont’s PAC statutes are not rendered unconstitutional because they reach beyond organizations having the “major purpose” of nominating or electing a candidate, they remain subject to the appropriate degree of constitutional scrutiny. VRLC argues that “[sjtrict scrutiny applies to government’s defining an organization as a political committee — or whatever label a jurisdiction uses — and thereby imposing political-committee burdens.” Appellants’ Br. 45. In essence, VRLC asks this Court to aggregate the various statutory provisions that apply to a Vermont “political committee,” decide that these provisions add up to an “onerous burden,” and conclude from this that the definition of a Vermont political committee must be evaluated using strict scrutiny.
But as the Fourth Circuit has recently explained:
[The Citizens United ] Court used the word “onerous” in describing certain PAC-style obligations and restrictions [but].... the Court distinguished its application of the strict scrutiny standard to expenditure restrictions from the exacting scrutiny standard applicable to disclosure requirement provisions.... In sum, we conclude that even after Citizens United, it remains the law that provisions imposing disclosure obligations are reviewed under the intermediate scrutiny level of “exacting scrutiny.”
The Real Truth About Abortion, Inc. v. Fed. Election Comm’n,
It is the challenged regulation, not the PAC definition, therefore, that determines what level of scrutiny should apply. VRLC highlights the following obligations that apply to an organization once it is defined as a political committee: registration, recordkeeping necessary for reporting, and reporting requirements. It asserts these “are the very burdens that are ‘onerous’ as a matter of law.” Appellants’ Br. 43. These requirements amount to the establishment of a disclosure regime. As a result, we, like the district court, apply exacting scrutiny to the “political committee” definition as used to impose the registration and disclosure requirements here.
C. Application
Judge Sessions correctly found that Vermont’s PAC definition, in the context of disclosure requirements, survives exacting scrutiny. Vt. Right to Life Comm., Inc.,
The definition also reaches groups only once they have accepted contributions of $1,000 or more and made expenditures of $1,000 or more in any two-year general
Moreover, Vermont’s PAC definition is limited to organizations that make expenditures and receive contributions. Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2901(13). This definition has a substantial relation to Vermont’s legitimate informational interests. Defining PACs as entities that receive contributions and then imposing disclosure requirements simply addresses the situation where, for example, a corporation creates an entity with an opaque name — say, “Americans for Responsible Solutions”— contributes money to that entity, and has that entity engage in speech on its behalf. By requiring that entity to meet reporting and organizational requirements, Vermont can ensure that the underlying speaker is revealed. If the same corporation wishes to engage in independent expenditures, however, it is free to do so without limitation and without falling under the PAC definition and disclosure requirements as long as it does not receive contributions.
Vermont’s tailored disclosure regime is distinguishable from the perpetual reporting and organizational requirements that raised concern for the Eighth Circuit. See Minn. Citizens Concerned for Life, Inc. v. Swanson,
VRLC-FIPE also contends that the $100 threshold for reporting a contribution, see id. § 2963(a)(1), is too low. In
POLITICAL COMMITTEE CONTRIBUTION LIMITS
Vermont law provides that a “political committee ... shall not accept contributions totaling more than $2,000.00 from a single source, political committee or political party in any two-year general election cycle.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2805(a).
I. Campaign Finance Standards of Review
A. Expenditure Limits
Strict scrutiny applies when the government seeks to ban or limit political expenditures. Ognibene v. Parkes,
The Supreme Court has recognized only one interest that is sufficiently compelling to justify an expenditure limitation: preventing the actuality or appearance of quid pro quo corruption. Id. at 358-59,
B. Contribution Limits
Contribution limits are “more leniently reviewed because they pose only indirect constraints on speech and associational rights.” Ognibene,
II. Independent-Expenditure-Only Groups
In Citizens United, the Supreme Court declared that “ ‘[t]he absence of prearrangement and coordination of an expenditure with the candidate or his agent not only undermines the value of the expenditure to the candidate, but also alleviates the danger that expenditures will be given as a quid pro quo for improper commitments from the candidate.’ ”
VRLC-FIPE urges that we follow these courts and hold that contribution limits may not be constitutionally applied to “independent expenditure” entities. But even if contribution limits would be unconstitutional as applied to independent-expenditure-only groups, VRLC-FIPE would not succeed here. The dis
In holding that independent expenditures cannot give rise to quid pro quo corruption, the Supreme Court focused on the “absence of prearrangement and coordination” when expenditures are independent. Citizens United,
Nor is it enough to merely state in organizational documents that a group is an independent-expenditure-only group. Some actual organizational separation between the groups must exist to assure that the expenditures are in fact uncoordinated. We therefore decline to adopt the reasoning of the Fourth Circuit in NCRL III. There, the Fourth Circuit rejected North Carolina’s argument that NCRL-FIPE (a similar organization to VRLC-FIPE) was “not actually an independent expenditure committee because it [was] ‘closely intertwined’” with NCRL and NCRL-PAC, twо organizations (similar to VRLC and VRLC-PC) that did not limit their activities to independent expenditures. NCRL III,
There is little guidance from other courts on examining coordination of expenditures, but we conclude that, at a minimum, there must be some organizational separation to lessen the risks of coordinated expenditures. Separate bank accounts and organizational documents do not ensure that “information [ ] will only be used for independent expenditures.” Catholic Leadership Coal. of Tex. v. Reisman, No. A-12-CA-566-SS,
The decisions cited by VRLC-FIPE to challenge the district court’s conclusion that VRLC-FIPE is not sufficiently separate from VRLC-PC are inapposite. In Citizens United, the Supreme Court observed thаt a corporation’s “PAC is a separate association from the corporation.”
III. Undisputed Facts in the District Court’s Evaluation of the Summary Judgment Motions
The role of the court on a summary judgment motion is “to determine whether, as to any material issue, a genuine factual dispute exists.” In re Dana Corp.,
The State’s summary judgment motion included numerous depositions, financial reports, emails, meeting minutes, and expert reports. Both parties attached statements of undisputed materials facts to their summary judgment motions. In its response brief, the State attached a statement of disputed facts, which contested Plaintiffs’ showing. Plaintiffs did not file an opposing statement of disputed facts. Therefore, we, like the district court, consider the factual record undisputed. On the basis of the State’s evidence, described below, we agree with the district court that there was no genuine dispute of material fact as to VRLC-FIPE’s organizational separation from VRLC-PC.
VRLC-PC is registered with the Federal Election Commission as a federal PAC and was created by VRLC to engage in federal and state campaign activities, including making direct contributions to candidates. It is clearly not an independent-expenditure-only group. VRLC-FIPE offers only two facts to demonstrate that it must be treated as separate from VRLC-PC. One, the organizational documents show that VRLC created two committees, VRLC-PC and VRLC-FIPE. Two, VRLC-FIPE maintains a seрarate bank account. For the reasons discussed above, these facts alone are not enough to hold that VRLC-FIPE is an independent-expenditure-only group when, based on the State’s undisputed evidence, it is otherwise indistinguishable from the non-independent-expenditure-only group, VRLC-PC.
First, the fact that there are two separate bank accounts does not mean the funds were actually treated as separate. An accountant who examined VRLC’s, VRLC-FIPE’s, and VRLC-PC’s structure and finances for the State described “a fluidity of funds between VRLC-FIPE and VRLC-PC.” He found that VRLC transferred funds from VRLC-PC to VRLC-FIPE if VRLC-FIPE lacked the resources to engage in a certain activity. VRLC-FIPE’s treasurer testified that the groups use VRLC-PC’s money to fund VRLC-FIPE’s primary activity of producing voter guides when VRLC-FIPE lacks the funding. Meeting minutes also show that the two groups do not consider their funding streams as distinct. In a 2008 VRLC-PC committee meeting, for example, those present described a joint fund-raising goal in combined VRLC-FIPE and VRLC-PC funds. Taken as a whole, the groups’ financial history and related documents do not support a finding that there is any operational barrier between VRLC-FIPE and VRLC-PC.
Next is the organizational structure of the groups; here again there is no evidence that VRLC-FIPE is segregated at all from VRLC-PC. Both are committees of the umbrella organization VRLC, which, by itself, would not show coordination, but the State’s accountant represented that VRLC has complete control over VRLC-FIPE’s and VRLC-PC’s structure and finances. The members of both committees are appointed by the president of VRLC with the approval of VRLC’s board. The committees share a substantial overlap in membership. They meet at the same time
Then there are VRLC-FIPE’s actual activities. It appears that VRLC-FIPE’s primary purpose is the production of voter guides describing the pro-life positions of candidates in each county in Vermont. This activity, however, is done in concert with VRLC-PC. Together the two groups produce and pay for the guides, which often list both groups as sponsors. VRLC-PC in turn bases its endorsement decisions on these voter guides. Beer-worth and Morin then decide whether to provide the candidates that VRLC-PC endorses with access to the organization’s support phone mailing list. There is no point at which VRLC-FIPE separates itself from the lines of communication between the candidate, VRLC, and VRLC-PC. At every step of the campaign process, it is completely enmeshed with VRLC-PC.
The 2010 campaign exemplifies the groups’ structural melding and absence of any informational or activities wall. In 2010, Beerworth advised Brian Dubie (VRLC-PC has endorsed Dubie in every election in which he has run), the Republican candidate for Governor, and members of his campaign stаff on issues. This same year, the Dubie campaign accepted more than $900 worth of VRLC’s support phone lists as an in-kind contribution.
Because VRLC-FIPE chose not to contest the Defendants’ Statement of Undisputed Material Facts or its evidence in support of its motion for summary judgment, we — like the district court — are limited to the State’s evidence. There is nothing in the record that raises a genuine dispute as to whether VRLC-FIPE operated as an entity apart from VRLC-PC. It relied on funding from VRLC and VRLC-PC when necessary. It was comprised of the same people — including VRLC-PC’s own chairwoman. It worked with VRLC-PC on its primary, if not only, project, voter guides. It received its information and advice from the same sources. It met at the same time and place. Un-controverted, this evidence is sufficient to conclude that VRLC-FIPE is not meaningfully distinct from VRLC-PC, and affirm the district court’s grant of Defendants’ summary judgment motion on this issue.
In Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee v. Federal Election Commission, the Supreme Court rejected the argument that a party’s expenditure is coordinated “because a party and its candidate are identical,” saying “[w]e cannot assume ... that this is so.”
IV. Contribution Limits as Applied to VRLC-FIPE
Those courts that have found contribution limits unconstitutional as applied to independent-expenditure-only groups have
VRLC-FIPE is indistinguishable from VRLC-PC, a non-independent-expenditure-only group. As discussed above, this is clear from the total overlap of staff and resources, the fluidity of funds, and the lack of any informational barrier between the entities. We acknowledge, though, that especially with committees that operate with low funding levels, small staff, and few resources, it will be difficult at times to maintain separation among those committees. Nevertheless, in the absence of any opposing evidence here, we have no basis to find that VRLC-FIPE is distinct from the non-independent-expenditure-only organization VRLC-PC.
We have held that the state may impose contribution limits on some groups— groups such as VRLC-PC that directly contribute or coordinate expenditures with campaigns. Where VRLC-FIPE is functionally indistinguishable from VRLC-PC, the same limits may constitutionally apply to it. “The Supreme Court has upheld limitations on contributions to entities whose relationships with candidates are sufficiently close to justify concerns about corruption or the appearance thereof.” Long Beach Area Chamber of Commerce v. City of Long Beach,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons given above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court in all respects.
Notes
. The definition then enumerates a number of exceptions such as volunteer services and personal loans from lending institutions. Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2901(4).
. The decision also addressed the language "affecting the outcome of an election,” which is not contained in the new law and so does not need to be considered here. See Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2801(4) (repealed 2014).
. Plaintiffs also note that certain federal requirements apply to groups qualifying as a "political committee” as defined under federal law. See Appellants' Br. 44 (citing 2 U.S.C. § 441b). Plaintiffs have not challenged the federal requirements in this action.
.The new contribution limitations take effect on January 1, 2015, on which date a "political committee shall not accept contributions totaling more than: (A) $4,000.00 from a single source; (B) $4,000.00 from a political committee; or (C) $4,000.00 from a political party.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 17, § 2941(a)(4).
. In Buckley, the Supreme Court responded to vagueness . and overbreadth concerns by construing a federal elections statute to reach only "organizations that are under the control of a candidate or the major purpose of which is the ... election of a candidate,” and to reach only express advocacy, as opposed to issue advocacy.
. The district court noted that VRLC-FIPE was barred from launching a facial challenge to the statute because of a judgment against it in previous litigation, Vt. Right to Life Comm., Inc. v. Sorrell,
. In light of McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, - U.S. -,
. "A law is unconstitutionally overbroad if it punishes a substantial amount of protected free speech, judged in relation to its plainly legitimate sweep.” United States v. Farhane,
. This does not apply to the "support” or "oppose" language in the PAC definition, discussed below.
. VRLC also asserts that the PAC definition is vague where it too uses the term "expenditure.” This challenge will be dealt with below when addressing the constitutional challenges to Vermont's PAC definition.
. In VRLC I, this Court relied on Buckley’s distinction between express and issue advocacy to hold that a previous version of the Vermont disclosure statute was "unconstitutional on its face. The section apparently requires reporting of expenditures on radio or television advertisements devoted to pure issue advocacy in violation of the clear command of Buckley.”
. The Seventh Circuit has recently interpreted this portion of Citizens United as confined to its "specific and narrow context.” Wis. Right to Life, Inc. v. Barland,
. In a decision that predated Citizens United, the Second Circuit stated that "[m]andatory disclosure requirements may represent a greater intrusion into the exercise of First Amendment rights of freedom of speech and association than do reporting provisions...." VRLC I,
. As an example of so-called "whisper campaigns,” there have been (still unproven) accusations that during the Republican presidential primary race in 2000, groups supporting a candidate arranged for mass phone calls that strongly suggested that John McCain had an illegitimate child. See Richard Gooding, The Trashing of John McCain, Vanity Fair, Nov. 2004, available at http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/ 2004/1 l/mccain200411 If such conduct occurred in Vermont, the group that arranged the phone calls would be required to report it to the candidate being attacked. This would allow the candidate to more quickly and effectively respond.
. The Seventh Circuit has since distinguished Center for Individual Freedom v. Ma-digan by applying the "major purpose” limitation to narrow a campaign finance regulation it found would otherwise violate the First Amendment. Barland,
. Although there may be an open question as to what level of scrutiny should apply where the political committee definition is used to impose the burden of contribution limits, we, like the district court, do not find a need to reach that question here. VRLC has not challenged the contribution limits and expressly stated in its brief that such limits were "immaterial” for the purpose of its challenge to the political committee definition.
. The statutory scheme only asks for information that PACs would track even absent a legal requirement. A contributor database is a valuable asset for a PAC, and few organizations would fail to maintain an accounting of its expenditures.
. Although VRLC-FIPE contends that the Fourth Circuit has applied a more stringent test to a disclosure threshold, it is not clear whether the Fourth Circuit was inquiring into the actual dollar value that would trigger a report. N.C. Right to Life Comm. Fund for Indep. Political Expenditures v. Leake,
. As mentioned in note 4 supra, new contribution limits will take effect on January 1, 2015.
. The Court also allowed for the possibility that such regulation could be justified as preventing circumvention of contribution limits. McCutcheon v. Fed. Election Comm’n, - U.S. -,
. Even the D.C. district courts, however, have not resolved whether Emily’s List holds that a separate bank account alone is sufficient to allow for unlimited expenditures. Compare Stop This Insanity, Inc. Emp. Leadership Fund v. Fed. Election Comm’n,
. Dissenting from this conclusion, Judge Michael stated that “at any given moment, the same director or staffer is on the one hand ensuring that NCRL-PAC’s activities follow a candidate’s campaign strategy, while on the other hand 'independently’ designing NCRL-FIPE’s expenditure strategy to promote that same candidate.” NCRL III,
. We acknowledge that the record does not show that funds from VRLC-FIPE were used for candidate contributions. Nonetheless, the "fluidity of funds” is enough to show that the accounts were not kept sufficiently separate to establish that VRLC-FIPE is an independent group capable of succeeding with an as-applied challenge to contribution limits.
