Campaign finance reform to crack down on ... bloggers?
Bradley Smith says that the freewheeling days of political blogging and online punditry are over.
In just a few months, he warns, bloggers and news organizations could
risk the wrath of the federal government if they improperly link to a
campaign's Web site. Even forwarding a political candidate's
pressrelease to a mailing list, depending on the details, could be
punished by fines.
Smith should know. He's one of the six commissioners at the Federal
Election Commission, which is beginning the perilous process of
extending a controversial 2002 campaign finance law to the Internet.
In 2002, the FEC exempted the Internet by a 4-2 vote, but U.S. District
Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly last fall overturned that decision. "The
commission's exclusion of Internet communications from the coordinated
communications regulation severely undermines" the campaign finance
law's purposes, Kollar-Kotelly wrote.
Smith and the other two Republican commissioners wanted to appeal the
Internet-related sections. But because they couldn't get the three
Democrats to go along with them, what Smith describes as a "bizarre"
regulatory process now is under way.
Free
speech in America is officially dead. Oh, and if you think
Democrats value your free speech rights any more than Republicans do,
take a close look at the last paragraph.
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Posted on 2005-03-03 16:32:43.0
by matthew@triggerfinger.org
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