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Friday, September 01, 2006

Thursday Marks The End Of Free Speech For This Election Cycle

The DC Examiner:

WASHINGTON - Something almost without precedent in America will happen Thursday. That’s the day when McCain-Feingold — aka the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 — will officially silence broadcast advertising that contains criticism of members of Congress seeking re-election in November. Before 2006, American election campaigns traditionally began in earnest after Labor Day. Unless McCain-Feingold is repealed, Labor Day will henceforth mark the point in the campaign when congressional incumbents can sit back and cruise, free of those pesky negative TV and radio spots. It is the most effective incumbent protection act possible, short of abolishing the elections themselves.

How can this possibly be, you ask? McCain-Feingold — named after the law’s main advocates, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Russ Feingold, D-Wis. — bans all broadcast political advocacy advertising that mentions candidates by name, beginning 60 days before the election. President Bush signed and the U.S. Supreme Court shockingly upheld McCain-Feingold three years ago.


Read the whole thing.

Comments

Avatar for The Whistler

John McCain speech Nazi.

The Whistler on September 1, 2006 at 08:00 am
Avatar for Dave

McCain really is bad. Next thing you know, he’ll prevent me from donating money to my favorite Congressional candidates, just because they live in a different state.

I still can’t believe you support that, Rob.

Dave on September 1, 2006 at 08:18 am
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