- Posted June 14, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Retired Justice John Paul Stevens: Supreme Court may regret Citizens United ruling
By Kimberly Atkins
Dolan Media Newswires
BOSTON, MA--Retired Justice John Paul Stevens said his former colleagues may be ruing the day the Citizens United v. FEC decision was handed down.
In a speech last night at the University of Arkansas, Stevens said the Supreme Court will soon have to decide whether the decision, which held that the right of corporations, unions and other groups to make unlimited super PAC contributions in election campaigns is protected by the First Amendment, also applies to foreign groups including terrorist organizations.
Stevens said based on the words "not true" famously uttered by Justice Samuel A. Alito, Jr. in response to President Barack Obama's criticism of the Citizens United decision at the 2010 State of the Union address, "there will not be five votes" to extend Citizens United to foreign entities.
"The court must then explain its abandonment of, or at least qualify reliance upon, the proposition that the identity of the speaker is an impermissible basis for regulating campaign speech," Stevens said, according to CNN's Bill Mears. "It will be necessary to explain why the First Amendment provides greater protection for some nonvoters than that of other nonvoters.
Entire contents copyrighted © 2012 by The Dolan Company. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is expressly forbidden.
Published: Thu, Jun 14, 2012
headlines Ingham County
- State Bar’s SOLACE program supports members of the legal community in crisis??
- U-M alum eyes a career in employment law field?
- ICBA Bench-Bar Conference set Feb. 28
- Dykema marks 100 years, launches yearlong Centennial celebration
- Homecoming: Michigan native cemented her legal roots at special ceremony
headlines National
- A wave of lawsuits has resulted from online comments after Charlie Kirk’s assassination
- Goldman Sachs top lawyer resigns after emails show Jeffrey Epstein friendship
- Failed indictment of 6 Democratic lawmakers blamed on Jeanine Pirro-picked prosecutors
- Federal judges may address ‘illegitimate forms of criticism and attacks,’ according to new ethics opinion
- Senate GOP aims to reveal companies funding lawsuits
- Bad Bunny’s ‘love conquering hate’ message at Super Bowl reiterated by judge sentencing assaulter




