Supreme Court strikes down long-standing campaign finance restrictions
The ruling could give parties more room to boost candidates as Republicans hold a $125.5 million cash advantage over Democrats, officials said.
- On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that federal limits on party-candidate coordinated spending violate the First Amendment, with Justice Brett Kavanaugh striking down the 1974 Federal Election Campaign Act restrictions.
- Vice President JD Vance and Republican committees challenged the limits as unconstitutional infringements on free speech, prompting the Supreme Court to overturn its 2001 precedent that had upheld the spending caps.
- Republican committees end May with $256 million in cash and no debt, compared to Democratic counterparts holding $127 million with $18 million in debt, enabling parties to leverage their financial advantage for direct media coordination.
- Dissenting Justice Elena Kagan warned the ruling enables parties to function as an "alternative checking account" for campaigns, while Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said it gives special interest groups the "green light to buy elections."
- President Donald Trump posted the ruling a "BIG WIN FOR REPUBLICANS" on Truth Social as parties prepare for 2026 midterms, with the decision removing regulatory barriers that could fuel a new arms race of campaign spending.
127 Articles
127 Articles
The US Supreme Court, with a conservative majority, removed on Tuesday 30 June a cap on election campaign funding. The highest court justified its major decision, which could affect mid-term elections in November, by defending freedom of expression.
Supreme Court eases spending rules in win for GOP as U.S. Senate battles brew
Sen. Jon Ossoff and Congressman Mike Collins, Georgia's Democratic and Republican candidates for U.S. Senate in 2026. A U.S. Supreme Court decision could cause even more cash to pour into the race. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder and Alander Rocha/Georgia RecorderThe U.S. Supreme Court struck down federal limits on how much political parties can spend on candidates Tuesday, likely increasing the flow of cash into federal races. Republicans celebr…
Washington, United States. The U.S. Supreme Court, with a conservative majority, removed Tuesday a cap on the funding of election campaigns that could influence the mid-term elections in November.The court had already lifted in 2010 any limit on the contributions of companies and unions to election campaigns.It did the same with donations from individuals in 2014, in both cases to the great displeasure of the Democrats, who denounced the power o…
Capitol Fa - Your Illinois News Radar » Supreme Court lifts coordinated spending limits on national political parties CapitolFax.com
* Washington Post… The Supreme Court on Tuesday sided with congressional Republicans in further loosening campaign finance limits, a decision likely to upend how political parties funnel millions of dollars into TV ads in the upcoming midterm elections. In a 6-3 decision, the majority found that limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with [...]
Political parties may spend all they want after Supreme Court ruling
The Supreme Court struck down limits on campaign spending by political parties on Tuesday, in a much-anticipated decision ahead of the midterm elections. The decision opens the doors for both the Republican and Democratic parties to pour unprecedented sums into their candidates’ coffers this year. However, the move is widely considered to favor the Republicans, who have historically operated the better fund-raising machine. President Donald Tru…

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