One provision of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971
(Act), 2 U.S.C. § 441a(d)(3), limits the amount that the
national committee and state committees of a political party may
spend in connection with the general election of a candidate for
the United States Senate or House of Representatives. Petitioner
National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) is a political
committee organized to support Republican candidates for the
Senate. Although the Act authorizes the NRSC to contribute up to a
certain amount to such candidates, it is not authorized to make
expenditures on their behalf. The Federal Election Commission
(FEC), however, has permitted the NRSC to act as agent of national
and state party committees in making expenditures on their behalf.
When certain state Republican Party committees designated the NRSC
as their agent for § 441a(d)(3) expenditure purposes, the
respondent Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee filed a
complaint with the FEC, asserting that the NRSC's agreements with
the state committees were contrary to § 441a(d)(3). The FEC
dismissed the complaint, concluding that there was "no reason to
believe" that the agreements violated the Act. On review, the
District Court granted the FEC's motion for summary judgment,
holding that the FEC's decision was not "arbitrary, capricious, an
abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." The
Court of Appeals reversed on the ground that the "plain language"
of § 441a(d)(3) precluded the agency agreements between state
committees and the NRSC.
Held: Section 441a(d)(3) does not expressly or by
necessary implication foreclose the use of agency agreements, such
as are at issue here, and the FEC thus acted within the authority
vested in it by Congress when it determined to permit such
agreements. Pp.
454 U. S.
31-43.
(a) While 441a(d)(3) does not authorize the NRSC to make
expenditures in its own right, it does not follow that it may not
act as agent of a
Page 454 U. S. 28
committee that is expressly authorized to make expenditures.
Nothing in the statute suggests that a state committee may not
designate another committee to be its alter ego and to act in its
behalf for the purposes of § 441a(d)(3). Nor does the
legislative history of the Act purport to disapprove agency
arrangements. Pp.
454 U. S.
31-36.
(b) Under the standard of whether the FEC's construction of the
Act was "sufficiently reasonable" to be accepted by a reviewing
court, the District Court was correct in accepting the FEC's
judgment. The FEC's view that the agency agreements were logically
consistent with § 441a(a)(4) -- which authorizes the transfer
of funds among national, state, and local committees of the same
party -- is acceptable. And the FEC's interpretation of §
441a(d)(3) is not inconsistent with any discernible purpose of the
Act. Pp.
454 U. S.
36-42.
212 U.S.App.D.C. 374, 660 F.2d 773, reversed.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court. STEVENS,
J., filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
454 U. S.
43.
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, 86 Stat. 11, as
amended, 2 U.S.C. § 431
et seq. (1976 ed. and Supp.
IV), limits the contributions that may be made to candidates or
political committees in an election for federal office. One
provision of the Act, § 441a(d), authorizes limited
expenditures by the national and state committees of a political
party in connection with a general election campaign for federal
office. After authorizing such expenditures, which otherwise would
be impermissible, [
Footnote 1]
the section specifies the amount a
Page 454 U. S. 29
national committee may spend in connection with a Presidential
campaign, § 441a(d)(2), and limits the amount that national
and state committees of a political party may spend in connection
with the general election campaign of a candidate for the Senate or
the House of Representatives, § 441a(d)(3). In this
litigation, we examine whether § 441a(d)(3) is violated when a
state committee of a political party designates the national
senatorial campaign committee of that party as its agent for the
purpose of making expenditures allowed by the Act.
I
The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) is a
political committee organized specifically to support Republican
candidates in elections for the United States Senate. Although the
NRSC is authorized by § 441a(h) to contribute up to $17,500 to
a candidate for election to the Senate, it is not given authority
by § 441a(d) to make expenditures on behalf of such
candidates, and it is the position of the Federal Election
Commission, the agency charged with enforcement of the Act, that
the NRSC may not do so on its own account. The Commission, however,
has permitted the NRSC to act as the agent of national and state
party committees in making expenditures on their behalf.
Page 454 U. S. 30
In February, 1977, in response to an inquiry submitted late in
1976, the Commission issued an Advisory Opinion, 1976-108, that it
would be consistent with the Act for the NRSC to spend its own
funds in support of congressional candidates as the designated
agent of the Republican National Committee (RNC). In April, 1977,
the Commission issued a regulation, 11 CFR § 110.7(a)(4)
(1981), which provides that the national party committees may make
expenditures in the general election campaign for President
"through any designated agent, including state and subordinate
party committees." On the basis of this regulatory authority, the
National Committee of the Democratic Party entered into an
agreement specifying the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
(DSCC) as its agent for the expenditure of authorized funds in
Senate campaigns. In 1978, certain state Republican Party
committees designated the NRSC as their agent for § 441a(d)(3)
expenditure purposes. [
Footnote
2] Complaints were filed with the Commission challenging this
practice as inconsistent with the Act. In dismissing these
complaints, the Commission twice ruled by unanimous votes that the
agency arrangements were not forbidden by the Act.
In re
National Republican Senatorial Committee, Federal Election
Commission Matter Under Review (MUR) 780 (Jan.19, 1979);
In re
National Republican Senatorial Committee, Federal Election
Commission MUR 820 (June 17, 1979). In 1980, certain state
committees again designated the NRSC as their agent, and on May 19,
the DSCC filed its complaint with the Commission asserting that the
NRSC's agreements with the state committees were contrary to §
441a(d)(3). The complaint did not challenge the contemporaneous
agency agreement under which the NRSC acted as the agent of the RNC
in connection with the latter's expenditures under 441a(d).
Page 454 U. S. 31
After considering the report of its General Counsel, the
Commission unanimously dismissed the complaint, concluding that
there was "no reason to believe" that the agreements violated the
Act.
The DSCC petitioned for review in the District Court for the
District of Columbia pursuant to § 437g(a)(8). [
Footnote 3] That court granted the
Commission's motion for summary judgment, concluding that the
decision of the Commission was not "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse
of discretion or otherwise not in accordance with law."
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee v. Federal Election
Comm'n, No. 80-1903 (DC Aug. 28, 1980) (reprinted at App. to
Pet. for Cert. of NRSC B4). On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit granted the NRSC leave to intervene
and reversed the judgment of the District Court after concluding
that the "plain language of Section 441a(d)(3) precludes" the
agency agreements between state committees and the NRSC. 212
U.S.App.D.C. 374, 383, 660 F.2d 773, 782. We granted the petitions
for certiorari filed by the Commission and the NRSC, 450 U.S. 964
(1981), and we now reverse the judgment of the Court of
Appeals.
II
Although the Court of Appeals first addressed whether and to
what extent it should defer to the Commission's construction of the
Act, 212 U.S.App.D.C. at 377, 660 F.2d at 776, this discussion and
the conclusion that little or no deference was due the Commission
were pointless if the court was correct that the agency agreements
violated the plain language of the Act as well as the statutory
purposes revealed by the legislative history. The interpretation
put
Page 454 U. S. 32
on the statute by the agency charged with administering it is
entitled to deference,
NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co.,
416 U. S. 267,
416 U. S. 275
(1974);
Udall v. Tallman, 380 U. S.
1,
380 U. S. 16
(1965), but the courts are the final authorities on issues of
statutory construction. They must reject administrative
constructions of the statute, whether reached by adjudication or by
rulemaking, that are inconsistent with the statutory mandate or
that frustrate the policy that Congress sought to implement.
SEC v. Sloan, 436 U. S. 103,
436 U. S. 118
(1978);
FMC v. Seatrain Lines, Inc., 411 U.
S. 726,
411 U. S.
745-746 (1973);
Volkswagenwerk v. FMC,
390 U. S. 261,
390 U. S. 272
(1968);
NLRB v. Brown, 380 U. S. 278,
380 U. S. 291
(1965). Accordingly, the crucial issue at the outset is whether the
Court of Appeals correctly construed the Act. For the reasons that
follow, we disagree with the Court of Appeals. As we understand the
Act and its legislative history, § 441a(d)(3) does not
foreclose the use of agency agreements. The Commission thus acted
within the authority vested in it by Congress when it determined to
permit such agreements.
Section 441a(d)(3) provides as follows:
"The national committee of a political party, or a State
committee of a political party, including any subordinate committee
of a State committee, may not make any expenditures in connection
with the general election campaign of a candidate for Federal
office in a State who is affiliated with such party which exceeds
-- "
"(A) in the case of a candidate for election to the office of
Senator, or of Representative from a State which is entitled to
only one Representative, the greater of -- "
"(i) 2 cents multiplied by the voting age population of the
State (as certified under subsection (e) of this section); or"
"(ii) $20,000; and"
"(B) in the case of a candidate for election to the office of
Representative, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner in any other
State, $10,000. "
Page 454 U. S. 33
It is evident from its terms that the section does not, in so
many words, forbid the state or national party to designate agents
for expenditure purposes. This much is common ground. The Court of
Appeals, however, held that, because § 441a(d)(3) permits
expenditures in congressional campaigns to be made by national and
state committees of the political parties, including subordinate
committees of the latter, and because the NRSC was neither a
national committee [
Footnote 4]
nor a state committee, it should not be permitted to make
expenditures under any arrangement "by which the special authority
of a named entity is transferred to another." 212 U.S.App.D.C. at
380, 660 F.2d at 779. Obviously, § 441a(d)(3) does not permit
the NRSC to make expenditures in its own right. But, contrary to
the Court of Appeals, it does not follow that the NRSC may not act
as an agent of a committee that is expressly authorized to make
expenditures. In the nature of things, a committee must act through
its employees and agents, as the Court of Appeals recognized, and
nothing in the statute suggests that a state committee may not
designate another committee to be its alter ego and to act in its
behalf for the purposes of § 441a(d)(3). To foreclose such an
arrangement on the grounds that the named agent is not one of the
authorized spenders under § 441a(d)(3) would foreclose all
agency agreements regardless of the identity of the agent and
regardless of the terms of the agency. [
Footnote 5] Nothing in the Act demands that the choices
available to the state committee should be so severely
restricted.
Page 454 U. S. 34
If the Court of Appeals is correct that any arrangement is
forbidden by which an authorized committee empowers another to
exercise its spending authority, then neither of the national
committees could legally enter into agency relationships with its
congressional campaign committees. Yet both have regularly done so,
and respondent DSCC does not challenge these arrangements. Indeed,
the DSCC accepts the Commission's regulation, 11 CFR § 110.7
(1981) [
Footnote 6] as valid
and interprets that regulation as authorizing the agency agreements
which have existed between the parties' national committees and the
Republican and Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committees. [
Footnote 7] Moreover, when the
Commission, as required by law, [
Footnote 8] submitted the regulation to Congress, neither
House expressed disapproval.
Despite this indication that Congress does not look unfavorably
upon the NRSC's sharing in the spending authority
Page 454 U. S. 35
of § 441a(d)(3), the Court of Appeals reads such
disapproval into Congress' failure to explicitly provide for such
arrangements. To bolster its argument, the court points to §
441a(h), [
Footnote 9] which
directly authorizes the national party committees, including the
Republican or Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committees, to
contribute up to $17,500 to a senatorial candidate. This argument,
if accepted, would only underline that the NRSC may not make
additional expenditures on its own account. It does not answer the
question whether a state committee may exercise its statutory
spending authority by designating the NRSC as its agent for this
purpose. [
Footnote 10]
Neither does the legislative history of the Act purport to
disapprove agency arrangements. The Court of Appeals refers to the
defeat of the Brock Amendment, which would have exempted
congressional campaign committees such as the NRSC from the Act's
expenditure limits. [
Footnote
11] 212 U.S.App.D.C. at 381, 660 F.2d at 80. But rejection of a
proposal to permit congressional campaign committees to make
expenditures in their own right does not necessarily affect their
capacity to perform agency functions. Moreover, insofar as the
intent of Congress is reflected in its failure to adopt a proposed
amendment, a contrary -- and indeed stronger -- inference can be
found in the rejection by the 96th Congress of an amendment that
would have expressly
Page 454 U. S. 36
prohibited the movement of funds between state and national
committees of a political party. [
Footnote 12]
It is clear enough to us, without saying more, that the statute
does not expressly or by necessary implication foreclose the agency
agreements at issue in this case. But neither does it expressly
permit or require such agreements. If this were a direct
enforcement action, rather than the review of a decision by the
administrative agency charged with the enforcement of the statute,
it may be that a court could defensibly arrive at the conclusion
that agency agreements of this kind should be forbidden. It may
also be that the Commission could have construed the statute to
forbid the agreements, and that a court would have accepted such a
construction by the agency. But that is not this case. The
Commission, in dismissing the DSCC's complaint, has determined that
agency agreements are not contrary to law, and the question is
whether the courts should defer to this judgment as a permissible
construction of the Act, or instead disregard the agency's view and
proceed to construe the statute based on its own view of what would
best serve the purpose and policy of the Act.
III
The Court of Appeals determined that the Commission's
construction of the Act was entitled to no deference
whatsoever.
Page 454 U. S. 37
While acknowledging that deference is often appropriately given
to an agency's interpretation of its governing statute, the court
refused to accord that deference here because of what it perceived
as the lack of a reasoned and consistent explanation by the
Commission in support of its decision. We agree that the
thoroughness, validity, and consistency of an agency's reasoning
are factors that bear upon the amount of deference to be given an
agency's ruling.
See Adamo Wrecking Co. v. United States,
434 U. S. 275,
434 U. S. 287,
n. 5 (1978);
Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.
S. 134,
323 U. S. 140
(1944). We do not agree, however, that the Commission failed to
merit that deference in this case.
Initially, we note that the Commission is precisely the type of
agency to which deference should presumptively be afforded.
Congress has vested the Commission with "primary and substantial
responsibility for administering and enforcing the Act,"
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1,
424 U. S. 109
(1976), providing the agency with "extensive rulemaking and
adjudicative powers."
Id. at
424 U. S. 110.
It is authorized to "formulate general policy with respect to the
administration of this Act," § 437d(a)(9), and has the "sole
discretionary power" to determine in the first instance whether or
not a civil violation of the Act has occurred. 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 112,
n. 153. Moreover, the Commission is inherently bipartisan, in that
no more than three of its six voting members may be of the same
political party, § 437c(a)(1), and it must decide issues
charged with the dynamics of party politics, often under the
pressure of an impending election. For these reasons, Congress
wisely provided that the Commission's dismissal of a complaint
should be reversed only if "contrary to law." §
437g(a)(8).
The Commission's position on the question before us is clear.
Since 1976, it consistently has adhered to its construction of
441a(d)(3) as not forbidding intraparty agency agreements. The
Commission has on three separate occasions, all by unanimous votes,
rejected the DSCC's claim.
Page 454 U. S. 38
On each occasion, the Commission followed the recommendation of
its General Counsel. In his first report, [
Footnote 13] the General Counsel emphasized the
absence of any specific statutory prohibition of the agency
arrangements, and also relied on § 441a(a)(4), [
Footnote 14] which permits unlimited
transfer of funds among state and national political committees of
the same party. The second report, [
Footnote 15] without rejecting any of the earlier
arguments, also drew support from a Commission regulation approving
similar agency agreements between national level committees.
[
Footnote 16] The third
report, [
Footnote 17] issued
in this case, added an analysis of § 441a(d)(3), reviewed the
legislative history, and took note of the fact that Congress had
recently amended the Act with knowledge of the Commission's
construction of § 441a(d)(3), and had let that construction
stand. Unlike the Court of Appeals, we find the differences in
emphasis in the three reports of little significance. All reach the
same conclusion, none rejects the arguments of the others.
[
Footnote 18] The Commission
consistently has upheld the agency agreements; the fact that
Commission Counsel has had the luxury of a number of sound
arguments on which to base his opinions does not detract from the
deference due the agency's interpretations. [
Footnote 19]
Page 454 U. S. 39
Hence, in determining whether the Commission's action was
"contrary to law," the task for the Court of Appeals was not to
interpret the statute as it thought best, but rather the narrower
inquiry into whether the Commission's construction was
"sufficiently reasonable" to be accepted by a reviewing court.
Train v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 421 U. S.
60,
421 U. S. 75
(1975);
Zenith Radio Corp. v. United States, 437 U.
S. 443,
437 U. S. 450
(1978). To satisfy this standard, it is not necessary for a court
to find that the agency's construction was the only reasonable one,
or even the reading the court would have reached if the question
initially had arisen in a judicial proceeding.
Ibid.; Udall v.
Tallman, 380 U.S. at
380 U. S. 16;
Unemployment Compensation Comm'n v. Aragon, 329 U.
S. 143,
329 U. S. 153
(1946). Under this standard, we think the District Court was
correct in accepting the Commission's judgment.
As we have said, § 441a(d) does not expressly or by
implication forbid agency agreements. Although the Court of Appeals
and the DSCC are of the view that, since the section specifically
authorized only two committees -- the national and state party
committees -- to make campaign expenditures, no other committee
could make such expenditures either on its own account or on behalf
of others. But the opposite reading makes equal sense: Congress,
having written the statute so precisely, would have made clear that
expenditures
Page 454 U. S. 40
by other committees, whether by agency or otherwise, were
prohibited.
We also find acceptable the Commission's view that the agency
agreements were logically consistent with § 441a(a)(4). That
section authorizes the transfer of funds among national, state, and
local committees of the same party. There can be little question
but that the section applies to the National Republican Senatorial
Committee, as that Committee is part of the Republican Party
organization. [
Footnote 20]
Under that provision, by using direct money transfers, instead of
an agency agreement, the national committee could write a check to
the state committee for the same amount that it would otherwise
have spent directly under the agency agreement. That being so, we
agree with the dissent below that the difference is "purely one of
form, not substance." 212 U.S.App.D.C. at 386, 660 F.2d at 785.
Money transferred to the state committee presumably would be
spent as the state committee decided. Agency
Page 454 U. S. 41
agreements, by comparison, might allow the NRSC to determine
what expenditures to make on behalf of the state committees. The
Court of Appeals made much of this, asserting that the agency
arrangements, unlike § 441a(a)(4) transfers, reduced the state
committees to "legal shells." The court overlooks that the NRSC
easily could insist that funds transferred to a state committee be
utilized in a certain manner. Conversely, state committees could
retain or share control over how § 441a(d)(3) spending
authority is exercised by writing conditions into the agency
agreement. More fundamentally, state committees are not obligated
to enter into agency agreements in the first place. The delegation
of spending authority is an option, not a requirement, and it is an
option resting entirely with the state committees.
Finally, the Commission's interpretation is not inconsistent
with any discernible purpose of the Act. In
Buckley v.
Valeo, we recognized that the primary interest served by the
Act is the prevention of corruption and the appearance of
corruption spawned by the real or imagined coercive influence of
large financial contributions on candidates' positions and on their
actions if elected to office. 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 25. It
has not been suggested that this basic purpose of the Act is
compromised by agency arrangements. Since the limitations on the
amount that can be spent under the Act apply with equal force
whether a state committee exercises its authority directly or
transfers it to one of the party's national committees, an agency
arrangement does not permit the expenditure of a single additional
dollar.
Section 441a(d)(3) fits into the general scheme by assuring that
political parties will continue to have an important role in
federal elections. [
Footnote
21] Although the DSCC would transform this purpose into the
more specific objective of stimulating political parties at the
state level, none of the limited legislative
Page 454 U. S. 42
history concerning the provision supports this view. [
Footnote 22] The legislative
discussion of preserving a role for political parties did not
differentiate between the state and national branches of the party
unit. It is hardly unreasonable to suppose that the political
parties were fully capable of structuring their expenditures so as
to achieve the greatest possible return. Agency agreements may
permit all party committees to benefit from fundraising, media
expertise, and economies of scale. In turn, effective use of party
resources in support of party candidates may encourage candidate
loyalty and responsiveness to the party. Indeed, the very posture
of these cases betrays the weakness of respondent's argument -- an
argument that, at bottom, features one of the two great American
political parties insisting that its rival requires judicial
assistance in discovering how a legislative enactment operates to
its benefit.
Thus, the absence of a prohibition on the agency arrangements at
issue, the lack of a clearly enunciated legislative purpose to that
effect, and indeed, the countervailing existence of a transfer
mechanism whose presence is difficult to reconcile with the
interpretation urged by the Court of Appeals, prevent us from
finding that the Commission's determination
Page 454 U. S. 43
was "contrary to law." Therefore, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals is
Reversed.
* Together with No. 8112
National Republican Senatorial
Committee v. Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, et al.,
also on certiorari to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
Expenditures by party committees are known as "coordinated"
expenditures, and are subject to the monetary limits of §
441a(d).
See 6 FEC Record, No. 11, p. 6 (Nov.1980). Party
committees are considered incapable of making "independent"
expenditures in connection with the campaigns of their party's
candidates. The Commission has, by regulation, forbidden such
"independent" expenditures by the national and state party
committees, 11 CFR § 110.7(B)(4) (1981), and has indicated in
this litigation that the congressional campaign committees fall
within that prohibition.
See Brief for Petitioner Federal
Election Commission in No. 80-2074 (CADC), p. 10, n. 5 ("[p]arty
committees . . . are deemed incapable of making independent
expenditures"); Brief for Petitioner in No. 80-939. p. 38 ("NRSC is
a party committee"). Thus, as he Commission admits:
"Absent § 441a(d), party committees could make no
expenditures whatsoever in connection with the Congressional
campaign of their party's candidates."
Brief for Petitioner Federal Election Commission in No. 80-2074
(CADC), p. 10, n. 5.
[
Footnote 2]
In the 1978 senatorial elections, the NRSC spent a total of
$2,770,995 under the combined spending authority of the national
and state party committees. Jt.App. in No. 80-2074 (CADC), p.
105.
[
Footnote 3]
This section provides that "[a]ny party aggrieved" by the
Commission's dismissal of a complaint may petition the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia, which "may
declare that the dismissal of the complaint or the action, or the
failure to act, is contrary to law" and order the Commission to
conform with the court's declaration.
[
Footnote 4]
The RNC, not the NRSC, is the "national committee" as defined by
2 U.S.C. § 431(14) (1976 ed., Supp. IV): "the organization . .
. responsible for the day-to-day operation of such political party
at the national level."
[
Footnote 5]
The Court of Appeals' suggests that it is misleading to
characterize the agreements as ones of "agency" because the state
committees do not direct how funds are to be raised and spent. We
do not understand the lack of such control to be inherent in these
arrangements, nor dispositive in deciding whether such agreements
can be made under the Act.
See infra at
454 U. S. 41.
See also n 6,
infra.
[
Footnote 6]
The regulation, 11 CFR § 110.7(a)(1) (1981), allows the
"national committee of a political party [to] make expenditures
in connection with the general election campaign of any candidate
for President . . . affiliated with the party,"
up to "an amount equal to 2 cents multiplied by the voting age
population of the United States," the amount authorized by §
441a(d)(2). These expenditures may be made "through any designated
agent, including State and subordinate committees." The regulation
goes on to authorize the national committee to make expenditures on
behalf of congressional and senatorial candidates of the party.
While the regulation directly authorizes transfers of spending
authority only with respect to Presidential campaign expenditures,
the significance of the regulation is that it clearly demonstrates
that § 441a(d) expenditures do not have to be made directly by
the committee specified in the statute.
[
Footnote 7]
In its brief before the Court of Appeals, the DSCC expressly
stated that it "does not challenge this regulation or the NRSC's
role as agent of the Republican National Committee."
See
Brief for Appellant DSCC in No. 80-2074 (CADC), p. 20, n. 16.
[
Footnote 8]
The Act requires that, before prescribing any rule or
regulation, the Commission shall transmit the proposed rule and an
accompanying statement to the Senate and the House. If neither
House disapproves the proposed rule within 30 legislative days, the
Commission may proceed to issue the rule. § 438(d).
[
Footnote 9]
Section 441a(h) authorizes the "Republican or Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee, or the national committee of a
political party, or any combination of such committees" to
contribute "not more than $17,500" to a senatorial candidate.
[
Footnote 10]
By its terms, the provision does not restrict a senatorial
campaign committee from making expenditures on behalf of other
committees.
[
Footnote 11]
During the 1974 legislative debates, Senator Brock proposed an
amendment that would have exempted congressional campaign
committees from the expenditure limitations of the Act. 120
Cong.Rec. 9549-9551 (1974). The Senate initially adopted the
amendment, but reversed itself five days later.
Id. at
10062-10064.
[
Footnote 12]
Section 113 of H.R. 11315 would have prohibited any "movement of
funds" between
"the political committees of a national political party
(including House and Senate congressional campaign committees of
such party) and the political committees of a State committee of a
political party . . . for the purpose of making contributions to,
or expenditures on behalf of, any candidate for Federal
office."
H.R. 11315, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. (1978). The House rejected a
rule for consideration of the bill, 124 Cong.Rec. 7872-7880 (1978).
The basis for the rejection may be seen in various comments
attacking the bill. Representative Stockman saw the proposed
amendment as a "fundamental assault on . . . the continued
meaningful role of our political parties."
Id. at 7875.
Representative Mikva stated that he "deeply regret[ted] that the
committee . . . saw fit to change the party financing."
Id. at 7876.
[
Footnote 13]
See First General Counsel's Report, MUR 780 (Jan.19,
1978).
[
Footnote 14]
This section provides that the limitations on contributions to
and by political committees found in §§ 441a(a)(1) and
(2)
"do not apply to transfers between and among political
committees which are national, State, district, or local committees
(including any subordinate committee thereof) of the same political
party."
[
Footnote 15]
See First General Counsel's Report, MUR 820 (June 19,
1978).
[
Footnote 16]
See 11 CFR § 110.7 (1981),
supra,
n 6.
[
Footnote 17]
See First General Counsel's Report, MUR 1234 (July
11.1980).
[
Footnote 18]
The assertion by the Court of Appeals that the Commission has
disavowed the relevance of 11 CFR § 110.7 (1981) in its brief
before that court, 212 U.S.App.D.C. 374, 378, 660 F.2d 773, 777, is
belied by its incorporation in the Commission's brief before this
Court.
See Brief for Petitioner in No. 939, p. 35.
[
Footnote 19]
Nor does the fact that the Commission, following its customary
practice, did not expressly adopt the General Counsel's report in
announcing its decision "depriv[e] a reviewing court of any
Commission record on which to base a deferential consideration."
212 U.S.App.D.C. at 378, n. 3, 660 F.2d at 777, n. 3. The Court of
Appeals previously has held that the General Counsel's report to
the Commission is sufficient to support the Commission's dismissal
of a complaint.
See Hampton v. Federal Election Comm'n, 2
Fed.Elec.Camp.Fin.Guide (CCH) � 9036, pp. 50,439-50,440 (DC
1977),
aff'd, No. 77-1546 (CADC July 21, 1978). In this
case, the General Counsel's report was made public simultaneously
with the Commission's ruling. It was the third occasion on which
the Commission followed the General Counsel's advice in this
matter. Even without an express statement, it is sufficiently clear
that the staff report provides the basis for the Commission's
action.
[
Footnote 20]
Section 441a(a)(4) applies to
"political committees which are national, state, district or
local committees (including any subordinate committee thereof) of
the same political party."
The DSCC does not challenge the applicability of the transfer
provision to national senatorial committees. At one point, the
Court of Appeals refused to address the issue for that reason.
See 212 U.S.App.D.C. at 382, 660 F.2d at 781 (the "issue
was not joined before this court"). At another point, however, the
court expressed "some doubt" whether 441a(a)(4) encompasses
congressional committees. Surely that doubt must be minimal in
light of the broad scope of the statutory language, the fact that
senatorial campaign committees are identifiable as part of their
respective party.
See Cong.Rec. 9552 (1974) (remarks of
Sen. Baker), and the Congress' clear intent to include such
committees within the scope of §§ 441a(a)(1)(2), to which
§ 441a(a)(4) serves as an exception.
See
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 94-1057, p. 58 (1976) ("the term
political
committee established or maintained by a national political party'
includes the Senate and House Campaign Committees"). A committee
"established or maintained" by a national party would appear to
fall squarely within the reach of § 441a(a)(4). Indeed, if
congressional campaign committees were not considered as part of
the national party, their ability to make independent expenditures
would seem to escape any limitation prescribed by the Act.
See n 1,
supra.
[
Footnote 21]
See S.Rep. No. 93-689, p. 7 (1974), reprinted in
Legislative History of the Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments
of 1974, p. 103 (1977).
[
Footnote 22]
It should be remembered that the section was considered at a
time when Congress contemplated total public funding of general
election campaigns for federal office.
See § 101, S.
3044, 93d Cong., 2d Sess., 71-78 (1974). In that context,
statements in Congress about the need to preserve the role of party
committees,
see, e.g., 120 Cong.Rec. 34372 (1974) (remarks
of Sen. Cannon);
id. at 35136 (remarks of Rep. Frenzel),
are properly read as expressing concern over the function of
political parties under public campaign finance, rather than
concern with the role of state committees
vis-a-vis party
committees at the national level. Thus, by allowing for the pooling
of campaign funds, agency agreements increase party resources "to
conduct
party-wide election efforts." S.Rep. No. 93-689,
supra, at 8, reprinted in Legislative History of the
Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments of 1974,
supra,
at 104.
JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring.
The issue presented in this case is whether the National
Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) violated the Federal
Election Campaign Act, 2 U.S.C. 441
et seq. (1976 ed. and
Supp. IV), by making expenditures that state political committees
are authorized to make under § 441a(d)(1). Section 441a(d)(1)
authorizes
"the national committee of a political party and a State
committee of a political party, including any subordinate committee
of a State committee,"
to make certain expenditures in connection with a candidate's
general election campaign, subject to defined limitations.
See § 441a(d)(3). Since the NRSC clearly is not "the
national committee of a political party," [
Footnote 2/1] or "a State committee of a political
party, including any subordinate committee of a State committee,"
[
Footnote 2/2] it is clear that
nothing in § 441a(d)(3) limits the permissible expenditure of
funds by the NRSC.
The NRSC is, however, a "political committee" as that term is
defined in the statute. [
Footnote
2/3] Section 441a(a)(2)(A) provides
Page 454 U. S. 44
that no multicandidate political committee may make
contributions to a candidate that exceed $5,000. [
Footnote 2/4] Section 441a(h) provides, however,
that
"amounts totaling not more than $17,500 may be contributed to a
candidate for nomination for election, or for election, to the
United States Senate during the year in which an election is held
in which he is such a candidate, by the Republican or Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee. . . ."
No section of the statute directly limits
expenditures
by the Republican or Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committees.
[
Footnote 2/5] However, §
441a(a)(7)(B)(i) provides that
"expenditures made by any person in cooperation, consultation,
or concert, with, or at the request or suggestion of, a candidate,
his authorized political committees, or their agents, shall be
considered to be a contribution to such candidate."
Thus, the only way that,the NRSC could be said to have violated
the statute in this case is if it made expenditures "in
cooperation, consultation, or concert" with a candidate that
exceeded $17,500. The record discloses that the NRSC, in several
instances, made expenditures that exceeded $17,500. As I understand
the record, however, it does not demonstrate that these
expenditures were made in cooperation, consultation, or concert
with the candidates. The record simply is silent on this point.
The only way that the NRSC could be said to have violated the
statute, therefore, is if, as a matter of law, it is incapable of
making expenditures that are not made in cooperation,
Page 454 U. S. 45
consultation, or concert with a candidate. In other words, the
NRC could not be said to have violated the statute unless the NRC
is deemed as a matter of law to be an agent of the candidate on
whose behalf it expends funds. If this is the case, however, it
would appear to me to follow almost automatically that the NRSC may
act as an agent for the state committees in spending the amounts
that state committees are authorized to spend by § 441a(d),
since state committees are largely controlled by the state
candidates that they serve. It would seem incongruous to hold that
the NRSC
must be treated as an agent of a candidate when
it makes expenditures, but
may not act as a lawful agent
of that candidate's state committee.
I concur fully in the conclusion of the Court that the agency
relationship utilized in this case does not violate the Act, and I
join its opinion subject only to the caveat that I am not entirely
sure that the expenditures at issue in this case "otherwise would
be impermissible,"
ante at
454 U. S. 28,
and n. 1. I assume,
arguendo, that this is so, for
otherwise petitioners would bear absolutely no burden to justify
the expenditures made in this case. [
Footnote 2/6]
[
Footnote 2/1]
Section 431(14) defines the term "national committee" as
"the organization which, by virtue of the bylaws of a political
party, is responsible for the day-to-day operation of such
political party at the national level, as determined by the
Commission."
2 U.S.C. 431(14) (1976 ed., Supp. IV).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Section 431(16) defines the term "State committee" as
"the organization which, by virtue of the bylaws of a political
party, is responsible for the day-to-day operation of such
political party at the State level, as determined by the
Commission."
2 U.S.C. § 431(15) (1976 ed., Supp. IV).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Section 431(4) defines the term "political committee" as--
"(A) any committee, club, association, or other group of persons
which receives contributions aggregating in excess of $1,000 during
a calendar year or which makes expenditures aggregating in excess
of $1,000 during a calendar year. . . ."
2 U.S.C. § 431(4) (1976 ed., Supp. IV).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Section 441a(a)(2)(A) provides:
"No multicandidate political committee shall make contributions
-- "
"(A) to any candidate and his authorized political committees
with respect to any election for Federal office which, in the
aggregate. exceed $5,000."
2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(2)(A).
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Act carefully distinguishes between "contributions" and
"expenditures."
See § 431(8) (defining the term
"contribution"); § 431(9) (defining the term
"expenditure").
[
Footnote 2/6]
Moreover, this case would have been much easier for me to decide
if the parties had begun their presentations with an appropriate
explanation of the relevant provisions of the statute instead of an
unstated assumption that is not entirely obvious.