State says pols missed deadline to have their day in court
Sen. Rob C. Sampson, R-Wolcott, and his predecessor, Joe Markley, were itching for a legal debate over political speech and campaign finance law. All they got Tuesday before the Connecticut Supreme Court were arguments over missed deadlines.
They say the State Elections Enforcement Commission violated their First Amendment rights by imposing fines of $5,000 on Sampson and $2,000 on Markley over campaign mailers promoting them in 2014 as reliable defenders against the policies of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a Democrat.
At issue was the question of whether the mailers were just a benefit to Sampson and Markley, who disagreed with Malloy on everything from taxation to criminal justice? Or did they also benefit Tom Foley, the Republican nominee for governor in 2014?
The state cannot limit a candidates advocacy, especially highly effective advocacy, merely because a communication might have an effect on another candidates election, their lawyers argued in a brief to the court. The First Amendment guarantees a candidates right to speak without legislative limit on behalf of his own candidacy.
Read more: https://ctmirror.org/2019/10/22/state-says-pols-missed-deadline-to-have-their-day-in-court/