Policy Post 11.18: Federal Campaign Rules Must Protect Individual Users' Online Speech



A Briefing On Public Policy Issues Affecting Civil Liberties Online
from The Center For Democracy and Technology

(1) CDT Urges Federal Regulators to Protect Individual Users' Online
Political Speech
(2) FEC Holds Two-Day Hearing on Internet Political Speech
(3) Next Steps at FEC and in Congress

------------------------------
(1) Federal Campaign Rules Must Protect Individual Users' Online Speech

As the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) continues to wrestle with how
best to bring campaign rules up to date with the realities of modern
Internet communication, CDT and other public interest advocates are
calling on policymakers to ensure that new rules and interpretations
don't curtail individuals' personal political speech. In recent
testimony, CDT urged the FEC to create a simple rule that would exempt
individual online speech from the reach of campaign finance laws. As it
stands, the FEC's complex rules for political speech threaten to blunt
the effectiveness of the Internet as a tool for individual political
discourse. The FEC must recognize the importance of protecting that
vibrant and independent discourse. CDT urged the Commission not to fall
back on the dense regulatory language typical to federal rulemaking and
instead to draft a short, easily understandable rule -- one that will
clear the doubts of ordinary individuals who fear they may be running
afoul of campaign laws.

To uphold the goals of federal election rules without upsetting the
rights of individual speakers, CDT recommended that the FEC focus
campaign finance regulation not on individuals but instead on
candidates, political parties and other core targets of the campaign
finance laws. In early June, CDT submitted a Joint Statement of
Principles intended to guide the FEC (and ultimately Congress) in any
effort to apply campaign finance laws to individual online speech. A
diverse range of groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union,
the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the National Taxpayers Union, and
People for the American Way, as well as more than a thousand bloggers
and other individuals from across the political spectrum, agreed to the
joint statement. CDT also filed its own detailed comments addressing
specific details of the proposals before the FEC.

The Joint Statement of Principles is available at
http://www.cdt.org/speech/political/20050603cdt-ipdu.pdf.

CDT's Comments to the FEC are available at
http://www.cdt.org/speech/political/20050603cdtcomments.pdf

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(2) FEC Holds Two-Day Hearing on Internet Political Speech

In March 2005, the FEC officially proposed extending some campaign
finance rules to the Internet. The move came in response to a court
order issued in September 2004 that overturned the FEC's prior rules,
which had broadly exempted most online communications. More than 800
organizations and individuals submitted written comments on the March
proposal and on June 28 and 29, the FEC held a hearing to discuss the
proposed rules. Staff Counsel John Morris testified on behalf of CDT.

The FEC heard from 21 witnesses, all of whom agreed on the need for
protecting individuals' online speech. What the witnesses did not agree
on was how best to achieve that protection. Some witnesses, including
CDT, proposed that the FEC should exempt individual advocacy, either by
more clearly focusing its rules on candidates and political parties, or
by creating a significant monetary threshold below which individual
activity on the Internet would be exempt from all regulation. Other
witnesses suggested expanding the so-called "media exemption" to cover
all bloggers or possibly even all Internet communications. The
commissioners themselves appeared divided as to how best to protect
individual speech, and a number of commissioners expressed serious
concern about whether the campaign finance statutes gave the FEC
sufficient authority to craft an adequate exemption.

Although the commissioners still evinced a lack of clear understanding
about how certain aspects of Internet communication work, the hearing
indicated that the FEC is at least striving to understand the technical
ramifications of its proposed rules. The commissioners seemed
particularly concerned that if their regulations too heavily burden
Internet communications, some bloggers and other Internet speakers
could move their web sites overseas or post anonymously in order to
escape the impact of FEC rules.

CDT's testimony at the FEC is available at
http://www.cdt.org/testimony/20050628morris.pdf

The FEC's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is available at
http://www.fec.gov/pdf/nprm/internet_comm/notice_2005-10.pdf

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(3) Next Steps at FEC and in Congress

At the end of the hearings, the FEC gave witnesses one week to
supplement the record of the hearing with additional submissions,
including submissions focused on the technical operations of the
Internet. CDT filed supplemental comments to refute arguments that the
Internet is no different from other forms of traditional media.

The Commission is likely to issue final rules sometime this summer.

Some lawmakers in Congress have proposed bills to exempt certain
Internet communications from campaign finance laws, but it is unclear
whether any of the proposals are likely to move. Ultimately, CDT
believes that Congress may have to amend the campaign finance laws to
make clear that the speech of ordinary Internet users is not covered.

CDT's supplemental comments to the FEC:
http://www.cdt.org/speech/political/20050706fec.pdf

------------------------------
Detailed information about online civil liberties issues may be found
at http://www.cdt.org/.

This document may be redistributed freely in full or linked to
http://www.cdt.org/publications/policyposts/11/18.

Excerpts may be re-posted with prior permission of dmcguire@cdt.org

Policy Post 11.18 Copyright 2005 Center for Democracy and Technology

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