A federal judge ruled Tuesday that Montana’s requirement that political committees disclose their campaign spending is constitutional. U.S. District Judge Dana Christensen sided with the state in a new decision, and dismissed a case brought last year by the National Association for Gun Rights. He wrote that the public’s right to know who is financing political campaigns vastly outweighs the minimal burden imposed on committees required to report the information. The Virginia nonprofit organization originally argued it wanted to send political mailings on gun issues without registering as a political committee. The organization said it advances the “God-given right” to keep and bear arms.
It argued, with the October court filing, that it wanted to spend $20,000 to send postcards criticizing Steve Bullock’s record on gun rights when he was running for governor, an office he ultimately won. And it expects to send similar mailings in the 2014 and 2016 election cycles.
It argued the requirement to file paperwork was an unconstitutional restriction of speech and unconstitutionally overbroad. The judge rejected the argument and sided with the attorney general office’s request to dismiss the case.
“It goes without saying that Montana voters are interested in who is financing political campaigns,” the judge wrote. “The reporting and disclosure requirements for incidental committees are necessary for defendants to regulate groups and candidates’ compliance with Montana’s election laws.”
Full Article: Judge rules Montana campaign disclosure law constitutional.