'Bradley A. Smith' is an
American political scientist. Smith is a former Commissioner, Vice Chairman and Chairman of the
Federal Election Commission (FEC) and currently serves as Professor of Law at
Capital University Law School in
Columbus, Ohio.
[1] A
Michigan native, Mr. Smith received a
B.A.,
cum laude from
Kalamazoo College in
Kalamazoo, Michigan in
1980, and his
J.D.,
cum laude from
Harvard Law School in
1990.
A Republican, he was nominated to a Republican-designated seat on the FEC on
February 9,
2000 by then-
President Bill Clinton to a six year term and confirmed to the post by the
United States Senate on
May 24,
2000. Before his nomination to the FEC in 2000, Smith was seen as one of the leading experts in
campaign finance in America, and has often expressed strong views against
campaign finance reform, with his writings on campaign finance and election issues having appeared in noted publications like the ''Yale Law Journal'', the ''University of Pennsylvania Law Review'' and the ''Harvard Journal of Legislation''. He had also been called on to serve as a witness before the
United States House of Representatives and
United States Senate on matters of campaign finance.
[2]
In
2001, Princeton University Press published Smith's book,
Unfree Speech: The Folly of Campaign Finance Reform in which he argued that most regulations on campaign finance are unconstitutional. When first nominated to the FEC there was a strong objection to his nomination from reform advocates. The
libertarian magazine ''
Reason'' noted that virtually all reform advocates, "agreed that he was the wrong person for the job".
[3] His nomination, however, received strong support from groups and organizations opposed to regulating campaign finance, including, in addition to ''Reason'', the ''Wall Street Journal'', the
Cato Institute, and others.
As Commissioner and Chairman of the FEC, Smith remained controversial, particularly in
2004, when as Chairman he bucked the Republican Party and refused to support new regulations of so-called "
527 groups," organizations largely unregulated by campaign finance laws that were generally believed to favor Democratic Presidential candidate
John Kerry.
[3] After leaving the FEC, Smith founded a non-profit organization, the
Center for Competitive Politics, to promote pro-freedom views on campaign finance reform. Smith is also a Senior Fellow at the
Goldwater Institute, a member of the Board of Scholars at the
Mackinac Center for Public Policy, and a member of the Board of Trustees of the
Buckeye Institute for Public Policy Solutions. He serves on the Advisory Board
[5] of the
Institute for Law and Politics at the
University of Minnesota Law School.
Smith, a
Catholic, lives in Ohio with his wife and youngest daughter. Another daughter is away at college.
References
1. Faculty Bios
2. Bradley_A._Smith
3. 101 People Who Are Really Screwing America, , Jack, Huberman, Nation Books, ,
4. 101 People Who Are Really Screwing America, , Jack, Huberman, Nation Books, ,
5. Advisory Board
External Links
★
Center for Competitive Politics