Coordinated Party Expenditures in Federal Elections: An Overview

December 8, 2014 (RS22644)

Contents

Figures

Tables

Summary

A provision of federal campaign finance law, codified at 52 U.S.C. §30116(d) (formerly 2 U.S.C. §441a(d)), allows political party committees to make expenditures on behalf of their general election candidates for federal office and specifies limits on such spending. These "coordinated party expenditures" are important not only because they provide financial support to campaigns, but also because parties and campaigns may explicitly discuss how the money is spent. Although they have long been the major source of direct party financial support for campaigns, coordinated expenditures have recently been overshadowed by independent expenditures.

In a 1996 ruling, Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee v. Federal Election Commission (FEC) (Colorado I), the U.S. Supreme Court found that political parties have a constitutional right to make unlimited independent expenditures. Federal campaign finance law defines an independent expenditure to include spending for a communication that expressly advocates the election or defeat of a clearly identified candidate, and is not made in cooperation or consultation with a candidate or a political party. In a subsequent case, Colorado II, however, the Court ruled that a political party's coordinated expenditures—that is, expenditures made in cooperation or consultation with a candidate—may be constitutionally limited in order to minimize circumvention of contribution limits. According to the Court, in contrast to independent expenditures, coordinated party expenditures have no "significant functional difference" from direct party candidate contributions.

Despite limited legislative activity on the topic in recent Congresses, coordinated party expenditures remain a component of the debate over the strength of modern political parties. In the 113th Congress, bills primarily related to public financing of campaigns (H.R. 20, H.R. 268, H.R. 269, H.R. 270, and S. 2023) would also permit additional coordinated party expenditures. Revisiting coordinated party expenditure limits might also be relevant following an April 2014 U.S. Supreme Court decision in McCutcheon v. FEC. Recent media reports have also suggested that language to alter coordinated party expenditure limits could be included in appropriations bills or other measures during the remainder of the 113th Congress or early in the 114th Congress.

Those who support existing limits on coordinated party expenditures argue that the caps reduce potential corruption and the amount of money in politics. Opponents maintain that the limits are antiquated, particularly because political parties may make unlimited independent expenditures supporting their candidates. If the caps were lifted and fundraising patterns remained consistent with those discussed here, it appears that neither party would have a substantial resource advantage over the other. It is important to note, however, that individual circumstances would determine particular fundraising and spending decisions.

This report will be updated occasionally as events warrant.


Coordinated Party Expenditures in Federal Elections: An Overview

What Are Coordinated Party Expenditures?

Federal campaign finance law provides political parties with three major options for providing financial support to House, Senate, and presidential candidates: (1) direct contributions, (2) coordinated expenditures, and (3) independent expenditures.1 With direct contributions, parties give money (or in the case of in-kind contributions, financially valuable services) to individual campaigns, but such contributions are subject to strict limits; most party committees are limited to direct contributions of $5,000 per candidate, per election.2 Since the 1996 Colorado I Supreme Court ruling (discussed below), parties may make independent expenditures, which are not limited, on anything allowable by law, but may not coordinate those expenses with candidates. Coordinated expenditures3 allow parties (notwithstanding other provisions in the law regulating contributions to campaigns) to buy goods or services on behalf of a campaign, and to discuss those expenditures with the campaign. Candidates may request that parties make coordinated expenditures, and may request specific purchases, but parties may not give this money directly to campaigns. Because parties are the spending agents, they (not candidates) report their coordinated expenditures to the Federal Election Commission (FEC).

Coordinated party expenditures are subject to limits based on office sought, state, and voting-age population (VAP). Exact amounts are determined by formula and updated annually by the FEC.4 Limits for Senate candidates in 2014, adjusted for inflation, ranged from $94,500 in states with the smallest VAPs to approximately $2.8 million in California.5 In 2014, parties could make up to $47,200 in coordinated expenditures in support of each House candidate in multi-district states, and $94,500 in support of House candidates in single-district states.6 State party committees may authorize their national counterparts to make coordinated-party expenditures on their behalf (or vice versa). If such agreements exist, one party could essentially assume the spending limit for another in particular states, in which case the designated party could spend up to its own limit and up to the other party's limit. Parties may also make coordinated expenditures on behalf of presidential candidates. Limits for the 2016 cycle have not been announced.

Overview of Relevant Supreme Court Precedent7

Independent Spending Limits Found Unconstitutional and Contribution Limits Upheld: Buckley v. Valeo

In its 1976 decision, Buckley v. Valeo,8 the Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA),9 and determined that limits on independent expenditures were unconstitutional, while it upheld reasonable limits on contributions.10 FECA defines an "independent expenditure" to include spending for a communication that expressly advocates the election or defeat of a clearly identified candidate, and is not made in concert or cooperation with or at the request or suggestion of a candidate or a political party.11 In contrast, a "contribution" is generally given to a candidate or party, and is defined to include any gift of money or anything of value made by any person for the purpose of influencing a federal election.12

Most notably, the Buckley Court determined that the spending of money, whether in the form of contributions or expenditures, is a form of "speech" protected by the First Amendment. However, according to the Court, contributions and expenditures invoke different degrees of First Amendment protection.13 Recognizing contribution limitations as one of FECA's "primary weapons against the reality or appearance of improper influence" on candidates by contributors, the Court found that these limits "serve the basic governmental interest in safeguarding the integrity of the electoral process."14 On the other hand, the Court determined that FECA's expenditure limits on individuals, political action committees (PACs), and candidates impose "direct and substantial restraints on the quantity of political speech" and are not justified by an overriding governmental interest.15

Independent Party Spending Limits Found Unconstitutional and Coordinated Party Expenditure Limits Upheld: Colorado I and II

In Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee v. Federal Election Commission (FEC) (Colorado I (1996)),16 the Supreme Court found that political parties have a constitutional right to make unlimited independent expenditures. The Court determined that FECA's coordinated party expenditure limit17 was unconstitutionally enforced against a party's funding of radio advertisements directed against a likely opponent.

Specifically, this case concerned the constitutionality of the coordinated party expenditure limit as applied to expenditures for radio ads by the Colorado Republican Party (CRP) that criticized the likely Democratic Party candidate in the 1986 U.S. Senate election.18 The Court's ruling turned on whether CRP's ad purchase was an "independent expenditure," a "campaign contribution," or a "coordinated expenditure."19 The Court found that the CRP's ad purchase was an independent expenditure deserving constitutional protection, emphasizing that the "constitutionally significant fact" of an independent expenditure is the absence of coordination between the candidate and the source of the expenditure.20 Independent expenditures, the Court held, do not raise heightened governmental interests in regulation because the money is deployed to advance a political point of view separate from a candidate's viewpoint and, therefore, cannot be limited.21

The Court's opinion in Colorado I was limited to the constitutionality of the application of FECA's coordinated party expenditure limit to an independent expenditure by the CRP. Later, in FEC v. Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee (Colorado II),22 the Court considered a facial challenge23 to the constitutionality of the limit on coordinated party spending. In Colorado II, the Supreme Court ruled that a political party's coordinated expenditures—unlike genuine independent expenditures—may be constitutionally limited in order to minimize circumvention of FECA contribution limits. As the Court explained, coordinated party expenditures have no "significant functional difference" from direct party candidate contributions.24

Relying on its holding in Colorado I, in a case evaluating the constitutionality of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA),25 the Court invalidated a statutory provision that essentially required political parties to choose between making coordinated or independent expenditures after nominating a candidate.26 In McConnell v. FEC,27 the Court determined that the statute burdened the right of parties to make unlimited independent expenditures and therefore, was unconstitutional.28

In Citizens United v. FEC,29 the Court overruled a separate portion of McConnell and invalidated BCRA's restriction on corporate and union spending for electioneering communications, as well as the long-standing ban on such spending for independent expenditures.30 As the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has found,31 it does not appear that Citizens United affected the Supreme Court's holding in Colorado II. In contrast to the coordinated party expenditure limit addressed in Colorado II, Citizens United evaluated the constitutionality of limits on independent—not coordinated—spending. Reiterating its holding in Buckley, the Court in Citizens United found that while large campaign contributions create a risk of quid pro quo candidate corruption, large independent expenditures do not. Therefore, in Buckley, the Citizens United Court observed, it determined that limiting independent expenditures fails to serve any substantial government interest in stemming either the reality or the appearance of such corruption.32

Recent Legislative Activity

Reconsidering coordinated party expenditure limits is a consistent part of the debate over the role of political parties compared with other political committees and "outside groups." However, bills devoted specifically to altering the limits have not been considered recently. Perhaps most notably, H.R. 6286 (Cole) during the 111th Congress and S. 1091 (Corker) and H.R. 3792 (Wamp) during the 110th Congress would have eliminated existing caps on coordinated party expenditures. On April 18, 2007, the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration held a hearing on S. 1091; it was not subject to additional legislative action. H.R. 3792 was introduced on October 10, 2007; it did not receive additional action.

Since that time, most proposals to alter existing coordinated party expenditures have been components of other bills, particularly those devoted to public financing. Most recently, these include H.R. 20 (Sarbanes), H.R. 268 (Sarbanes), H.R. 269 (Yarmuth), H.R. 270 (David Price), and S. 2023 (Durbin), all introduced during the 113th Congress. Recent media reports have also suggested that language to alter coordinated party expenditure limits could be included in appropriations bills or other measures during the remainder of the 113th Congress or early in the 114th Congress.33

Financial Overview and Analysis34

Although coordinated expenditures played a large role in party financial activity throughout the 1970s and 1980s, recent elections suggest that party reliance on coordinated expenditures is changing. As Table 1 and Figure 1 (below) show, although the Colorado I decision permitted parties to make unlimited independent expenditures during and after the 1996 cycle, those expenditures remained relatively modest through 2002. From 1996 to 2002, total party coordinated expenditures outpaced independent expenditures—often by large amounts.

Beginning in 2004, however, party spending shifted dramatically, with far more total independent expenditures than coordinated expenditures. In 2004, the two major parties made more than four times in independent expenditures what they did in coordinated expenditures. That allocation of resources continued in 2006, when the parties spent more than six times on independent expenditures as they did on coordinated expenditures. The trend also continued thereafter, albeit in some cases less dramatically than in 2004. In 2012, the two major parties spent more than three times on independent expenditures what they did in coordinated party expenditures (approximately $254 million versus about $76 million). As the table also shows, at various points since 1996, each major party has outspent the other in coordinated expenditures. For the most part, however, Democrats and Republicans have allocated similar amounts to coordinated party expenditures. As of this writing, figures for the 2014 cycle have not been released.

Table 1. National Party Coordinated and Independent Expenditures

 

Coordinated Expenditures

Independent Expenditures

Election Cycle

Democrat

Republican

Total

Democrat

Republican

Total

1996

$22,576,000

$30,959,151

$53,535,151

$1,495,090

$10,026,541

$11,521,631

1998

$18,643,156

$15,696,145

$34,339,301

$1,489,707

$263,646

$1,753,353

2000

$20,989,872

$29,598,965

$50,588,837

$2,310,175

$1,556,802

$3,866,977

2002

$7,057,291

$15,951,023

$23,008,314

$1,701,292

$1,944,116

$3,645,408

2004

$33,113,799

$29,101,396

$62,215,195

$176,491,696

$88,032,382

$264,524,078

2006

$20,694,359

$14,156,926

$34,851,285

$108,100,265

$115,646,387

$223,746,652

2008

$37,988,558

$31,952,985

$69,941,543

$156,191,039

$124,682,649

$280,873,688

2010

$24,907,052

$27,135,226

$52,042,278

$107,366,866

$76,138,018

$183,504,884

2012

$39,511,028

$36,307,810

$75,818,838

$113,752,700

$140,306,195

$254,058,896

Source: CRS analysis of FEC data in files accompanying "Table 1, National Party Financial Activity" in the respective 24-month national-party financial activity summary for the listed election cycles, http://fec.gov/press/campaign_finance_statistics.shtml.

Note: Individual party totals include expenditures from the Democratic National Committee, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and state and local Democratic committees; and Republican National Committee, National Republican Senatorial Committee, National Republican Congressional Committee, and state and local Republican committees, as reflected in the FEC data. The FEC data include only federal activity.

Figure 1. National Party Coordinated and Independent Expenditures

Source: CRS analysis of FEC data in files accompanying "Table 1, National Party Financial Activity" in the respective 24-month national-party financial activity summary for the listed election cycles, http://fec.gov/press/campaign_finance_statistics.shtml.

Notes: Individual party totals include expenditures from the Democratic National Committee, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and state and local Democratic committees; and Republican National Committee, National Republican Senatorial Committee, National Republican Congressional Committee, and state and local Republican committees, as reflected in the FEC data. The FEC data include only federal activity.

One potential concern about lifting the caps on party coordinated expenditures could be that one party would have an inherent advantage over the other. Recent fundraising totals suggest that the historic fundraising gap between Democrats and Republicans has narrowed, although disparities between the two parties still exist. As Table 2 and Figure 2 show, since 1996, local, state, and national Republican Party committees have accumulated more receipts than their Democratic counterparts, as has generally occurred since at least the 1970s. Although an 88% gap between Democratic and Republican receipts existed in 1996 ($416.5 million for Republicans versus $221.6 million for Democrats), beginning in 2004, the two parties began to raise roughly similar amounts. Despite a 24% Republican advantage in 2006 ($599 million versus $483.1 million), differences between the parties have been small since 2008. In 2012, the Democratic and Republican parties both raised about $800 million. On their own, these data do not suggest particular outcomes if caps on party coordinated expenditures were lifted, but they do indicate that one party may not necessarily have a major total financial advantage over the other if the caps are lifted in the near future. Although the parties would not choose to spend all those funds on coordinated party expenditures, the data suggest that they would likely be working with roughly equal resources.

Table 2. Total Receipts of Democratic and Republican Party Committees

Election Cycle

Democratic Party Committees

Republican Party Committees

1996

$221,613,028

$416,513,249

1998

$159,961,869

$285,007,168

2000

$275,230,680

$465,840,139

2002

$217,245,185

$424,140,589

2004

$688,767,334

$782,410,369

2006

$483,141,404

$599,008,498

2008

$763,340,182

$792,867,579

2010

$618,065,814

$542,143,412

2012

$800,137,906

$803,531,878

Source: CRS analysis of FEC data in files accompanying "Table 1, National Party Financial Activity" in the respective 24-month national-party financial activity summary for the listed election cycles, http://fec.gov/press/campaign_finance_statistics.shtml.

Notes: Individual party totals include the Democratic National Committee, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and state and local Democratic committees; and Republican National Committee, National Republican Senatorial Committee, National Republican Congressional Committee, and state and local Republican committees, as reflected in the FEC data. The FEC data include only federal activity.

Figure 2. Total Receipts of Democratic and Republican Party Committees

Source: CRS analysis of FEC data. Data for 2006-2012 appear in files accompanying "Table 1, National Party Financial Activity" in the "2011-2012 Election Cycle Data Summaries through 12/31/12," statistical summary, http://fec.gov/press/summaries/2012/ElectionCycle/24m_NatlParty.shtml. Data for 1996-2004 appear in files accompanying "Table 1, National Party Financial Activity" in the respective 24-month national-party financial activity summary, http://fec.gov/press/campaign_finance_statistics.shtml.

Notes: Individual party totals include the Democratic National Committee, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and state and local Democratic committees; and Republican National Committee, National Republican Senatorial Committee, National Republican Congressional Committee, and state and local Republican committees, as reflected in the FEC data. The FEC data do not count transfers among committees and include only federal activity.

For those who support lifting the caps on coordinated party expenditures, current limits impinge on parties' abilities to orchestrate unified campaigns with their candidates after the limits are reached. Unrestricted coordinated party expenditures could shift party spending away from independent expenditures, although each option would retain unique characteristics. Parties might continue to choose independent expenditures if they wish to distance campaigns from what many political professionals and some candidates view as necessary, but politically unpopular, purchases (e.g., for political advertising attacking opponents).35 On the other hand, coordinated expenditures would be more attractive for parties wishing to communicate freely with campaigns about campaign-related spending. Raising or eliminating coordinated party expenditure limits might also provide parties with additional resources to compete against independent expenditures from super PACs or other "outside" groups.36 Additional coordinated expenditures could, therefore, strengthen arguably weakening ties between parties and campaigns.

Proponents of limits on party coordinated expenditures contend that the caps reduce the amount of money in politics. They also potentially prevent circumvention of individual contribution limits by donors who may seek to indirectly support campaigns by making contributions to political parties. (However, it should be noted that FECA already restricts "earmarked" contributions.)37 For those who generally support regulating political money, lifting or raising the caps on party-coordinated expenditures would likely be objectionable on principle, could appear to undercut similar regulatory efforts adopted since the 1970s, and could go against public sentiment generally favoring limiting the amount of money in politics.

Finally, revisiting coordinated party expenditure limits might also be relevant following an April 2014 U.S. Supreme Court decision in McCutcheon v. FEC. The McCutcheon case, which concerned now-invalidated aggregate limits on contributions to political parties, is not centrally related to coordinated party expenditures. However, post-McCutcheon, some might argue that providing parties with increased limits (or none) on coordinated party expenditures is a logical extension of their newfound ability to solicit donors who previously would have been unable to contribute to as many party committees as they wished. Additional discussion of McCutcheon and potential party fundraising implications appears in other CRS products.38

Footnotes

1.

For a discussion of campaign finance policy generally, see CRS Report R41542, The State of Campaign Finance Policy: Recent Developments and Issues for Congress, by [author name scrubbed].

2.

52 U.S. C. §30116(a), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §441a(a)). Effective September 1, 2014, the Office of Law Revision Counsel announced that parts of federal election law were being "reclassif[ied]" to a new Title 52 of the U.S. Code. The citations in this updated report reflect the new and former citations for reader convenience. For background on the reclassification, see Office of Law Revision Counsel, "Editorial Reclassification," at http://uscode.house.gov/editorialreclassification/t52/index.html.

3.

Federal Election Commission (FEC) regulations define "coordinated" as "cooperation, consultation or concert with, or at the request or suggestion of, a candidate, a candidate's authorized committee, or a political party committee." 11 C.F.R. §109.20.

4.

Senate limits are based primarily on VAP, whereas House limits are based primarily on a flat allocation. Specifically, the limits for Senate candidates and House candidates in single-district states are the greater of 2 cents multiplied by the VAP, adjusted for inflation, or $20,000, adjusted for inflation. The limit for House candidates in multi-district states is $10,000 (the 1974 base amount) plus adjustments for inflation, which have greatly increased the current limits over base amounts. See 52 U.S. C. §30116(d)(3), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §441a(d)(3)).

5.

For 2014 limits, see Federal Election Commission, "Price Index Adjustments for Expenditure Limitations and Lobbyist Bundling Disclosure Threshold," 79 Federal Register 7190-7192, February 6, 2014. If a joint expenditure designation between state and national parties were in place, the spending party, relying on both parties' limits, could spend $189,000 and $5.6 million respectively.

6.

52 U.S. C. §30116(d)(3), 30116(c), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §§441a(d)(3), 441a(c)). If a joint expenditure designation between state and national parties were in place, the spending party, relying on both parties' limits, could spend $94,400 and $189,000 respectively.

7.

This portion of the report was written by [author name scrubbed], Legislative Attorney.

8.

424 U.S. 1 (1976). For further discussion of Buckley and Colorado I and II, see CRS Report RL30669, The Constitutionality of Campaign Finance Regulation: Buckley v. Valeo and Its Supreme Court Progeny, by [author name scrubbed].

9.

52 U.S. C. §30101, (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §431 et seq).

10.

For further discussion, see CRS Legal Sidebar WSLG909, Campaign Finance Law: What is a "Coordinated Communication" versus an "Independent Expenditure"?, by [author name scrubbed].

11.

52 U.S. C. §30101(17), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §431(17)).

12.

52 U.S. C. §30101(8)(A)(i), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §431(8)(A)(i)).

13.

Buckley, 424 U.S. at 24.

14.

Id. at 59.

15.

Id. at 39.

16.

518 U.S. 604 (1996).

17.

52 U.S. C. §30116(d)(3), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §441a(d)(3)).

18.

See Colorado I, 518 U.S. at 612.

19.

Id. at 614, 615, 618, 622-623.

20.

Id. at 617 (citing Buckley, 424 U.S. at 45-46; NCPAC, 479 U.S. at 498).

21.

See id. at 614-615 (citing FEC v. National Conservative Political Action Committee (NCPAC), 479 U.S. 238 (1985)). Relying on Colorado I, in May 2014, the Republican National Committee and Libertarian Party of Indiana filed separate suits in federal district court arguing that FECA's prohibition on political parties establishing independent expenditure-only (IE-only) accounts, also known as super PACs, is unconstitutional. Plaintiffs argue that in view of the Supreme Court holding that independent expenditures do not create a risk of quid pro quo corruption, and that political parties cannot be prohibited from making independent expenditures, the government has no valid interest in preventing parties from establishing IE-only accounts or limiting contributions that are made for such spending. See Complaint at 7-10, Rufer v. Federal Election Commission, No. 1:14-cv-00837 (D.D.C. May 21, 2014); Complaint, Republican National Committee v. Federal Election Commission, No. 1:14-cv-00853, (D.D.C. May 23, 2014).

22.

533 U.S. 431 (2001).

23.

Generally, when a statute is challenged "facially," a plaintiff is arguing that under all circumstances, the statute operates unconstitutionally. By contrast, an "as-applied" challenge involves a plaintiff arguing that a statute is unconstitutional as applied to the facts of a particular case or to a party.

24.

Colorado II, 533 U.S. at 464.

25.

P.L. 107-155.

26.

Codified at 52 U.S. C. §30116(d)(4), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §441a(d)(4)).

27.

540 U.S. 93, 213 (2003), overruled in part by Citizens United v. FEC, 558 U.S. 310, 365-66 (2010) (finding that the portion of McConnell that upheld BCRA's restriction on independent spending for "electioneering communications" relied on an anti-distortion interest that the Court rejected as unconvincing and insufficient).

28.

See id. at 217.

29.

558 U.S. 310 (2010). For further discussion of Citizens United, see CRS Report R41045, The Constitutionality of Regulating Corporate Expenditures: A Brief Analysis of the Supreme Court Ruling in Citizens United v. FEC, by [author name scrubbed].

30.

52 U.S. C. §30118, (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §441b).

31.

See Cao v. FEC, 619 F.3d 410, 431 (5th Cir. 2010), cert. denied 131 S. Ct. 1718 (2011) (holding, among other things, that in accordance with the Supreme Court's decision in Colorado II, limits on coordinated party expenditures are constitutional).

32.

See Citizens United, 558 U.S. at 345 (quoting Buckley, 424 U.S. at 47).

33.

See, for example, Kenneth P. Doyle, "McConnell Ends Bid to Ease Campaign Law As Part of Omnibus Appropriations Measure," Daily Report for Executives, December 3, 2014, p. A-11; and Burgess Everett, "One Last Try; Senate Dems Push Campaign Finance Reform." Politico.com, December 2, 2014, http://www.politico.com/story/2014/12/senate-democrats-campaign-finance-reform-113275.html.

34.

Some of the data in this version of the report may vary from previously released FEC data. This discrepancy is due to changes in the way in which the FEC calculates various receipts and disbursements in current statistical releases compared with previous election cycles. In March 2014, the FEC adjusted the cited data table and affixed the following explanation to the table: "To maintain consistency with how they had been calculated in prior years, the totals in this table ... were revised on March 27, 2014 to include transfers between party committees and transfers between party committees' federal and nonfederal accounts that had been inadvertently excluded from the original calculations, and to exclude sums representing the Levin share of Federal Election Activity that had been inadvertently included in the original calculations." CRS takes no position on these changes and will continue to monitor the data for future amendments.

35.

On relationships between campaign actors, see, for example, David A. Dulio, For Better or Worse? How Political Consultants are Changing Elections in the United States (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2004); Paul S. Herrnson, Congressional Elections: Campaigning at Home and in Washington (Washington: Congressional Quarterly Press, 2004); and Robin Kolodny, Pursuing Majorities: Congressional Campaign Committees in American Politics (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1998).

36.

For additional discussion, see CRS Report R42042, Super PACs in Federal Elections: Overview and Issues for Congress, by [author name scrubbed].

37.

52 U.S. C. §30116(a)(8), (formerly codified at 2 U.S.C. §441a(a)(8)).

38.

See CRS Report R43334, Campaign Contribution Limits: Selected Questions About McCutcheon and Policy Issues for Congress, by [author name scrubbed]; CRS Legal Sidebar WSLG873, Supreme Court Strikes Overall Limits on Campaign Contributions in McCutcheon, by [author name scrubbed]; and CRS Report R43719, Campaign Finance: Constitutionality of Limits on Contributions and Expenditures, by [author name scrubbed].