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Steve Chabot

Coverage of Steve Chabot in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Jun 30 · 14:26 UTCMost recent: Jun 30 · 15:37 UTC
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  • POLITICSJun 30 · 15:37 UTCSCOTUSBLOG
    Justices strike down campaign finance law

    The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 to strike down federal limits on coordinated spending by political parties with candidates, citing First Amendment violations. The decision in National Republican Senatorial Committee v. Federal Election Commission overturned the 2001 Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Committee ruling. Justices Kavanaugh (majority) and Kagan (dissent) highlighted opposing views on free speech and democratic integrity.

  • POLITICSJun 30 · 14:32 UTCKOAA NBC5 COLORADO SPRINGS
    Supreme Court strikes down limits on party spending in federal elections, backing Republican appeal

    The Supreme Court eliminated limits on political party spending in federal elections, reversing a 50-year-old law. A Republican-led lawsuit, including Vice President JD Vance, challenged these limits, which were previously upheld in 2001. The decision aligns with the 2010 Citizens United ruling and shifts campaign finance rules, allowing parties to spend freely in coordination with candidates.

  • POLITICSJun 30 · 14:27 UTCKSTP ABC MINNEAPOLIS
    Supreme Court strikes down limits on party spending in federal elections, backing Republican appeal

    The Supreme Court eliminated limits on coordinated political party spending in federal elections, overturning a 50-year-old law. The decision, driven by a Republican-led lawsuit including Vice President JD Vance, expands spending rights previously limited to prevent circumvention of individual contribution caps.

  • POLITICSJun 30 · 14:26 UTCCOURTHOUSE NEWS
    SCOTUS shatters party-candidate spending limits for GOP

    The Supreme Court struck down campaign spending limits between political parties and candidates, a challenge led by GOP figures including JD Vance and Steve Chabot. The decision impacts the Federal Election Campaign Act's donation caps, which Republicans argue violate the First Amendment. The ruling follows prior cases like Citizens United and McCutcheon that reshaped campaign finance regulations.

Steve Chabot · Dossier · The Nexus