At a glance
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that political parties can spend unlimited funds in coordination with their own candidates, striking down federal spending caps as a First Amendment violation.
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that political parties can spend unlimited money in direct coordination with their own candidates, striking down decades-old federal spending caps as a violation of free speech. The decision essentially removes one of the last remaining guardrails on party-candidate coordination in campaign finance.
This follows the Court's 2010 Citizens United decision by taking another step toward unlimited money in politics. Parties can now funnel unlimited funds to their own candidates without breaking coordination rules, which were supposed to prevent exactly that scenario. The ruling came as a clean win for Republicans, who have generally been more aggressive about testing campaign finance limits in court.
Citation trail
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