Grassroots Lobbying Laws Shut Out Ordinary Citizens from Politics
by Jason AdkinsIf the First Amendment protects anything, it protects the right of all Americans to speak to one another about politics without first having to register with the government. Unfortunately, ever-increasing layers of red tape and regulation are strangling the political speech and participation of more Americans while offering little or no benefit to the public.

One of the most pernicious attacks on the basic First Amendment rights to speak, associate and petition the government are so-called grassroots lobbying laws. (For an overview of these laws and what makes them so bad, watch this brief video: http://ij.org/ 3368.) But what bureaucrats and campaign finance reformers call “grassroots lobbying” is nothing more than one of the most basic acts of self-governance: citizens discussing issues of public importance among themselves.
As many as 36 states impose heavy burdens on grassroots political activism—burdens that discourage citizens from even bothering to participate in the political process.
For example, in Washington state, if you get together with a couple of friends and create an informal group to encourage others to contact their legislators and oppose more taxes, the government forces you to register and report the name, address, business and occupation of each of the group’s organizers, as well as the names and addresses of anyone with whom the group is working to spread its message. The state also demands to know the names and addresses of each person who contributes as little as $25 to your efforts. After the government collects this information, it makes your personal information and political activities available to anyone with a computer and access to the Internet.
Spending $500 in one month or $1,000 in three months—a couple of trips to Kinko’s to print flyers or hosting one community barbeque—will trigger the registration and reporting requirements of the law.
Put simply: A citizen who spends even relatively minor amounts of money communicating with fellow citizens must register with, and provide information to, the government regardless of whether elected officials are ever reached by the efforts.
In Washington, failure to register can lead to an investigation, significant penalties (including treble damages, the costs of the investigation and the government’s attorney’s fees), and a revocation of the ability to engage in any political activity that might qualify as “grassroots lobbying.”
Other states back up their regulations with criminal penalties. In New York, for example, the maximum criminal penalty for violating the grassroots lobbying law is $5,000 and four years in jail—the same maximum penalty as for arson or rioting. In Alabama, the maximum penalty is $30,000 and 20 years in jail—equivalent to the maximum penalty for kidnapping under state law.
The effect of laws like Washington’s is that many grassroots organizations simply forego speaking because the burdens of disclosure are so high and the costs of incorrectly reporting so steep. Average citizens are effectively shut out of the political process. This is unacceptable under the First Amendment, which unreservedly protects political speech.
It does not look like this ominous threat to free speech will recede anytime soon—instead, it appears to be on the rise.
In 2007, the U.S. Senate considered adding a grassroots lobbying registration requirement to an existing federal lobbyist disclosure law. The provision was supported by campaign finance “reformers,” who promoted it as a means to “increase transparency and provide a more accurate record of paid lobbying actions in Congress.”
A number of groups, however, successfully persuaded Congress that such a measure would be unconstitutional, and the Senate dropped the provision from the final bill.
But now, with the rise of the Tea Party movement as well as strong grassroots efforts both for and against President Obama’s health care reforms, there is a new push among the political elite and their campaign finance reform allies to regulate grassroots lobbying at the federal level.
The real irony of these so-called “lobbying” laws is that our nation’s history is replete with examples of anonymous grassroots speech and activism challenging the status quo and urging political change, beginning with the Federalist Papers. Disclosure laws like Washington’s could have stopped many initially unpopular but vitally important movements from ever starting.
Grassroots lobbying laws are nothing more than the government’s attempt to monitor, collect and disseminate information about the political activities of private citizens—something the government has no business doing in America.






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42 Comments
It is time to "Put up or Shut up"!
http://api.ning.com/files/U6kI09HfM8tuDLNV29wwddd...
If we were still part of England, the Revolution would not have a chance today. The lawyers would see to that.
Good article.
"Unfortunately, ever-increasing layers of red tape and regulation are strangling the political speech and participation of more Americans while offering little or no benefit to the public."
………and where do those ever increasing layers of red tape come from? Who see's that the laws get written?
Lawyers.
Therein lies about 75% of the problem!
Its a bit shocking to me that i've never heard of these grassroots lobbying laws. Not nearly as shocking as the law itself, or the fact that we actually allowed out politicians to pass these laws. Then again, I live in NY, so nothing is really all that unbelievable here.
Either we clean up this whole system, or we are going to be slaves to the government with no way out. Not just D.C. but the media, the judicial system as well. Too many have forgotten the Constitution, IF they knew it at all.
What is needed, is a grassroots effort to file suit and repeal a whole slew of unconstitutional laws and red tape, these should be at the top of the list.
We must keep up the good fight. Of course the elites in this country want to trample our rights, and keep US as their slave's. We will not go without resistance, which it looks like they want to find out.
http://goooh.com/home.aspx
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AP-IM7maxbI&fe...
http://www.teapartyexpress.tv/stay-connected-tea-...
Funny how Shakespeare keeps coming to mind when I start reading through laws.
It's our own fault for being asleep for the last 20+ years. The Progressive's woke-up the voters in 2008, so no excuses get out and vote these fools/criminals/liars out in Nov.
If you don't vote don't bitch!
More proof that the politicians are in politics for their personal power rather than being there to represent their constituents.
I will see them in court. Arse clown guberment is gonna have to throw mw into a FEMA camp first. And then I will still speak out.
The worst thing about these laws is they substitute political nit-picking for debate. Some pols make a fuss if their opponents didn't cross a "t" or dot an "i" rather than debate the actual issues. Last year in Colorado, a city (sorry, can't remember which) council member went after a small neighborhood group that formed to protest some zoning issue. Of course the group folded because it didn't have the cash to defend itself in court. I believe their "sin" was as the author said, spending money on printing flyers but not reporting said expenditure.
AAAARRRRGH!
Big brother is definitely on the case. Does it strike anyone as coincidence that every freakin' time you read an article these days, it seems as though some new form of federal government involvement is right in the moddle of it? Why the hell would they need to get mixed up in a grss roots movement? Christ, they can't even do the damn job they're supposed to do, and they want to run more and more. Idiots.
Fred
At this point I pledge my fortune and future to resist this tyranny.
Alinsky tactics rears its ugly head to squelch the 1st Amendment rights of the citizenry.
Washington protecting, We The, SMALL, People, from being prostituted out by big money, like the whores in Washington are. Washington hates to see big money going to the small people, after all, shouldn't it be them and their lobbyist pimps that decide what the message is and where all that money should be spent. We wouldn't want the small people finding out that they have a voice and that voice can decide elections. We wouldn't want the small people joining up with big money, that could cut out the political middleman.
Note to self find a constitutional lawyer and have them explain the 1st Amendment to me as I must not understand it!
So a group of neighbors can't get together and have flyers printed, dividing the costs amongst themselves without reporting it? Who do you report it to?
These laws (along with the laws that control ballot access) are designed with one goal in mind: to keep incumbents in office for as long as possible. Limiting grassroots lobbying and restricting ballot access for third-party candidates are two of the easiest ways for the establishment to remain in power. Unsurprisingly, these laws have had broad support among both major political parties.
They had registered as a political group but didn't report a piddly expenditure as was required by the law.
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So what's to stop everyone from forming "groups" but just not registering?
A perfect example of how any cure in the form of "campaign finance reform" is worse than the disease.
The First Amendment was enacted first and foremost to protect political expression, and these laws should be greeted with even more zealous indignation than our Supreme Court has previously reserved for alleged "establishment of religion" infringements.
Any attempt to control who can say what, who can spend what, or how they must do so, beyond barring outright bribery or fraud, will create its own set of problems that will be just as bad or worse than the ills it seeks to prevent. Every layer of alleged disclosure, oversight and approval provides an opportunity to job the system and favor one's cronies (e.g. Soros' "Secretary of State" project targeting Secs of State in order to get his hands on the levers of electoral accountability).
Short of bribery or fraud, let the marketplace of ideas set the price and judge the content of political speech. It's the worst way of doing things except for all the other ones.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/jun/22/d...
I can't believe these laws exist, thanks for bringing them to my attention. What's next, any citizen (regardless of group) will be required to report everything political they say? These laws are unconstitutional and should be taken to court.
This is funny. One thing we should have learned about the federal government by now is that it doesn't try very hard to enforce it's laws. Just look at the current state of immigration in our country. What's more is the Federal Government is actually suing the state of Arizona because they made a law requiring it's own officers to enforce federal law. It's bad enough the Fed doesn't care to enforce it's own laws but it also doesn't want anyone else doing it either. Besides isn't political activism supposed to be the highest form of patriotism according to Hillary Clinton?
You can have free speech and assembly as long as you get a "permit" to do so……
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I wonder if any of these "grassroots laws" were ever challenged in court, and if
not, why not!!..They seem like they are stifling free speech and association….I
wonder if both parties wanted these laws, afterall whoever is in power at the
moment wouldn't have to be worried about us peasants, cause we are silenced!!!
Takes a bunch of cash to go to court. You would think that First Amendment rights would be something the ACLU would be interested in. Wouldn't hold my breath on that one, however. Maybe the ACLJ would be interested (that's the American Center for Law and Justice).
Makes me wonder if these laws are on the books but unenforced due to fear of being overturned in court. Any examples of people who have been prosecuted under these laws? As far as the Senate consideration, just because some senator brings the issue up doesn't mean that it has a snowball's chance in hell of passing. (Then again the Eagles reunited so who knows.)
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Lets see now….The First Amendment is the one that has been trumpeted by the left for years as their right to speak whatever the hell they wanted, no matter how seditious or traitorous it was…..dissent was Patriotic, remember? Now, when actual Americans want to step up and speak their mind with the actual truth, they find impediments in place that the left never had to concern themselves with….mainly because the left has put these impediments to free speech in place to prevent Americans from being able to stop this creeping madness that passes for Government now.
Where is the American Civil Liberties Union on this issue? Why, they are too busy suing states that have put laws in place that actually have penalties for breaking the law! Do they care about civil liberties? Not on your dog's nut sack they don't!! They are neither American, nor civil, nor do they give a damn about your liberties….but they are wiping their chins for Unions….
This entire process makes me sick. And, since Obamanomics has rendered my life pretty much in the crapper, I am too old to give a damn, and still young enough to give them pause should it come to that. And it will come to that. Soros is messing his trousers he is so excited about his prospects of control over you and me. His puppets are doing what they are told….and our liberties are slowly sinking into the muck along with our prospects of life as we knew it. Oh well….. time to get out and do what one has to do!!
What part of "Congress shall make no law…" does Congress not understand?
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[...] » Grassroots Lobbying Laws Shut Out Ordinary Citizens from Politics – Big Government [...]
[...] » Grassroots Lobbying Laws Shut Out Ordinary Citizens from Politics – Big Government [...]
[...] » Grassroots Lobbying Laws Shut Out Ordinary Citizens from Politics – Big Government [...]
[...] » Grassroots Lobbying Laws Shut Out Ordinary Citizens from Politics – Big Government [...]
Great website…
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