McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission ( 2012 )


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  •                                  UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    SHAUN MCCUTCHEON, et al.,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.                                Civil Action No. 12cv1034(JEB)(JRB)(RLW)
    FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION,                           Three-Judge Court
    Defendant.
    Before: BROWN, Circuit Judge; WILKINS, District Judge; and BOASBERG, District Judge.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BROWN, Circuit Judge:
    Congress enacted the Federal Elections Campaign Act of 1971 (FECA) to “promote fair
    practices in the conduct of election campaigns for Federal political offices.” Pub. L. No. 92-225,
    preamble, 
    86 Stat. 3
    , 3 (1972). Since 1972, the law has changed significantly. The current iteration of
    FECA imposes contribution limits stratified to track both the identity of the contributor and the
    identity of the receiver. Individuals, however, cannot necessarily contribute as much as they might
    wish within these limits; they, and only they, must comply with a second regulatory tier: a set of
    aggregate contribution limits. 2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(3). Plaintiffs Shaun McCutcheon and the
    Republican National Committee (“RNC”) now challenge these aggregate limits as unconstitutional.
    We reject their challenge.
    I.      Background
    A. Legal Background
    In 1974, Congress amended FECA to prohibit persons from contributing more than $1,000
    to any political candidate, individuals from contributing more than an aggregate of $25,000 in any
    calendar year, and political committees from contributing more than $5,000 to any political
    1
    candidate. FECA Amendments of 1974 § 101, Pub. L. No. 93-443, 
    88 Stat. 1263
    , 1263. The
    Supreme Court ultimately upheld these contribution limits in the face of a First Amendment
    challenge, though it struck down FECA’s expenditure limits. Buckley v. Valeo, 
    424 U.S. 1
    , 58 (1976)
    (per curiam) (summarizing holdings). A few months after the Buckley Court handed down its
    decision, Congress amended the FECA to distinguish (1) between contributions by persons and
    contributions by multicandidate political committees, and (2) among contributions to candidates and
    their authorized committees, contributions to national political party committees, and contributions
    to all other political committees. FECA Amendments of 1976 §§ 111, 201, Pub. L. No. 94-283, 
    90 Stat. 475
    , 486-87. Congress left the $25,000 aggregate limit on individuals’ contributions untouched,
    however, until the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (“BCRA”), which replaced the $25,000
    aggregate limit with the bifurcated limiting scheme that Plaintiffs now challenge. Section 307, Pub.
    L. No. 107-155, 
    116 Stat. 81
    , 102-03. There are thus two sets of contribution limits: base limits
    calibrated to the identity of the contributor regulating how much the contributor may give to
    specified categories of recipients, and a set of aggregate limits regulating the total amount an
    individual may contribute in any two-year election cycle. Some (but not all) of these limits are
    periodically indexed for inflation. See 2 U.S.C. § 441a(c).
    The default base limits apply to contributions by “persons,” that is, individuals, partnerships,
    committees, associations, corporations, unions, and other organizations. See 2 U.S.C. 431(11)
    (defining “person”). FECA currently prohibits persons from contributing more than $2,500 per
    election to any given candidate or that candidate’s agent or authorized committee; more than
    $30,800 in any calendar year to each of a national political party’s national committee, House
    campaign committee, and Senate campaign committee; more than $10,000 in any calendar year to a
    state party political committee; and more than $5,000 in any calendar year to any other political
    2
    committee. 2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(1); 
    11 C.F.R. § 110.1
    (b)-(d); 
    76 Fed. Reg. 8,368
    , 8,370 (Feb. 14, 2011)
    (indexing for inflation).
    These base contribution limits do not limit how much a contributor can contribute as long
    as the contributions remain within the limits for each recipient. Under the base contribution limits,
    for example, an individual might contribute $3.5 million to one party and its affiliated committees in
    a single election cycle.1 The aggregate limits prevent this. During each two-year period starting in an
    odd-numbered year, no individual may contribute more than an aggregate of $46,200 to candidates
    and their authorized committees or more than $70,800 to anyone else. 2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(3); 76 Fed.
    Reg. at 8,370. Of that $70,800, no more than $46,200 may be contributions to political committees
    that are not national political party committees. 2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(3); 76 Fed. Reg. at 8,370. These
    aggregate limits, which amount to a total biennial limit of $117,000, 
    11 C.F.R. § 110.5
    (b); 76 Fed.
    Reg. at 8,370, thus prevent individuals from contributing the statutory maximum to more than
    eighteen candidates.
    FECA includes a number of provisions designed to prevent evasion of the various limits.
    First, anyone who contributes more than permitted may be subject to civil or criminal penalties. 2
    U.S.C. § 437g(a), (d). Second, indirect contributions, such as earmarked contributions to an
    intermediary, are deemed contributions to that candidate. 2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(8). Third, FECA
    prohibits contributions made in the name of someone else. 2 U.S.C. § 441f. Finally, contributions
    made or received by more than one “affiliated” committee are deemed to have been made or
    received by the same committee. 2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(5); 
    11 C.F.R. §§ 100.5
    (g), 110.3.
    1        As amici Campaign Legal Center and Democracy 21 explain, because primary and general elections
    held during the same calendar year count as separate elections, 
    11 C.F.R. §§ 100.2
    , 110.1(j), an individual
    might contribute $5,000 to each of a party’s House and Senate candidates, $30,800 to each of a party’s three
    federal party committees each year, and $10,000 to each of a party’s fifty state committees a year.
    McCutcheon does not dispute this calculation. This $3.5 million, moreover, does not include contributions to
    PACs, a sum that would equal $5,000 multiplied by whatever number of PACs an individual desires to give
    to.
    3
    B. Factual and Procedural Background
    McCutcheon is an Alabama resident eligible to vote in a U.S. presidential election. Thus far,
    during the 2011-2012 election cycle, he has contributed a total of $33,088 to sixteen different
    candidates in amounts ranging from $1,776 to $2,500 per election; $1,776 to each of the RNC, the
    National Republican Senatorial Committee (“NRSC”), and the National Republican Congressional
    Committee (“NRCC”); $2,000 to a nonparty political committee (the Senate Conservatives Fund);
    and $20,000 to the federal account of a state party committee (the Alabama Republican Party).
    McCutcheon, however, wants to contribute more. He wants to contribute $1,776 to twelve other
    candidates and enough money to the RNC, NRSC, and NRCC to bring his total contributions up to
    $25,000 each. Doing either of these, however, would violate the aggregate limits: the additional
    candidate contributions would amount to aggregate candidate contributions of $54,400, and the
    additional party committee contributions would amount to aggregate contributions of $75,000 to
    national party committees. McCutcheon assures us he intends to repeat these donation patterns
    during future election cycles.
    The RNC, meanwhile, wishes to receive contributions from individuals like McCutcheon
    that would be permissible under the base limits but violate the aggregate limit on contributions to
    party committees. Because of the aggregate limit, the RNC has both refused and returned
    contributions. The RNC believes that others would contribute to the RNC but for the limit.
    According to the verified complaint, the RNC does not control either the NRSC or the NRCC.
    Plaintiffs challenge both the $46,200 aggregate limit on candidate contributions and the
    $70,800 aggregate limit on other contributions under the First Amendment. They challenge the
    $46,200 aggregate limit for being “unsupported by any cognizable government interest . . . at any
    level of review” and for being unconstitutionally low. They challenge the $70,800 aggregate limit
    facially, as applied to contributions up to $30,800 per calendar year to national party committees,
    4
    and for being too low, both facially and as applied to contributions to national party committees.
    Plaintiffs also ask this Court for a preliminary injunction to enjoin Federal Election Commission
    (“FEC”) enforcement of the aggregate limits. We consolidated the preliminary injunction hearing
    with the hearing on the merits and now resolve both issues.
    II.     Discussion
    A. Level of Scrutiny
    Both contribution limits and expenditure limits implicate “the most fundamental” First
    Amendment interests, but each does so in a different way. Buckley, 
    424 U.S. at 14
    . The Supreme
    Court has accordingly applied different levels of scrutiny to each: expenditure limits are subject to
    strict scrutiny, while contribution limits will be valid as long as they satisfy “the lesser demand of
    being closely drawn to match a sufficiently important interest.” McConnell v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 
    540 U.S. 93
    , 136 (2003) (quoting Fed. Election Comm’n v. Beaumont, 
    539 U.S. 146
    , 162 (2003)), overruled on
    other grounds by Citizens United v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 
    130 S. Ct. 876
    , 913 (2010). The Court has never
    repudiated this distinction. See Ariz. Free Enter. Club's Freedom Club PAC v. Bennett, 
    131 S. Ct. 2806
    ,
    2817 (2011) (distinguishing between scrutiny of contributions and expenditures).
    Plaintiffs argue that the aggregate limits must be subject to strict scrutiny because laws
    burdening political speech are subject to strict scrutiny and the aggregate limits “similarly ‘burden’
    First Amendment rights.” This syllogism is rooted in Buckley itself. The Buckley Court did not
    unequivocally hold that political expenditures are speech. Rather, it drew on the fact that “virtually
    every means of communicating ideas in today’s mass society requires the expenditure of money” to
    hold that “[a] restriction on the amount of money a person or group can spend on political
    communication during a campaign necessarily reduces the quantity of expression by restricting the
    number of issues discussed, the depth of their exploration, and the size of the audience reached.”
    
    424 U.S. at 19
    . Thus, the Court suggested, contribution limits might sometimes implicate rights of
    5
    expression in more than a “marginal” way, like a spiking seismograph at the onset of an earthquake.
    More recently, Citizens United proclaimed that “[l]aws that burden political speech are ‘subject to
    strict scrutiny,’ 
    130 S. Ct. at 898
    , and this Court relied on that principle to preliminarily enjoin the
    FEC from enforcing limits on contributions to a political committee interested in making
    independent expenditures, Carey v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 
    791 F. Supp. 2d 121
    , 125, 128 (D.D.C.
    2011).2 Although we acknowledge the constitutional line between political speech and political
    contributions grows increasingly difficult to discern, we decline Plaintiffs’ invitation to anticipate the
    Supreme Court’s agenda. See Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/Am. Express, Inc., 
    490 U.S. 477
    , 484 (1989)
    (“If a precedent of this Court has direct application in a case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected
    in some other line of decisions, the Court of Appeals should follow the case which directly controls,
    leaving to this Court the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.”). Every contribution limit may
    “logically reduce[] the total amount that the recipient of the contributions otherwise could spend,”
    but for now, “this truism does not mean limits on contributions are simultaneously considered limits
    on expenditures that therefore receive strict scrutiny.” Republican Nat’l Comm. v. Fed. Election Comm’n,
    
    698 F. Supp. 2d 150
    , 156 (D.D.C. 2010), aff’d, 
    130 S. Ct. 3544
     (2010) (mem.); see Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 909
     (declining to “reconsider whether contribution limits should be subjected to rigorous
    First Amendment scrutiny”).
    Plaintiffs try to escape the consequences of lesser scrutiny by arguing that the aggregate
    limits are actually expenditure limits, not contribution limits. Because § 441a(a)(1) already establishes
    base contribution limits, they say, “added biennial contribution limits are more appropriately deemed
    expenditure limits, subject to strict scrutiny.” They are wrong. The difference between contributions
    and expenditures is the difference between giving money to an entity and spending that money
    2       We note contributions for independent expenditures are a different beast altogether. The Carey court
    was constrained by the D.C. Circuit’s recent decision in SpeechNow.org v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 
    599 F.3d 686
    (D.C. Cir. 2010), holding unconstitutional contribution limits to independent expenditure groups. 
    Id. at 695
    .
    6
    directly on advocacy. Contribution limits are subject to lower scrutiny because they primarily
    implicate the First Amendment rights of association, not expression, and contributors remain able to
    vindicate their associational interests in other ways, Buckley, 
    424 U.S. at 22, 28
    ; the limits primarily
    implicate associational rights rather than rights of expression because they impose only a “marginal”
    restriction on the contributor’s “ability to engage in free communication,” 
    id. at 20
    ; they impose only
    a marginal restriction on a contributor’s expressive ability because the expressive value of a
    contribution derives from the “undifferentiated, symbolic act of communicating,” 
    id. at 21
    ; and the
    expressive value of contributions are limited because “the transformation of contributions into
    political debate involves speech by someone other than the contributor,” 
    id.
     The aggregate limits do
    not regulate money injected directly into the nation’s political discourse; the regulated money goes
    into a pool from which another entity draws to fund its advocacy. See Cal. Med. Ass’n v. Fed. Election
    Comm’n, 
    453 U.S. 182
    , 195-96 (1981) (rejecting “speech by proxy” argument that limit on
    contributions to political committee is actually expenditure limit “because it restricts the ability of
    [the contributor] to engage in political speech through a political committee”). To break the chain of
    legal consequences tied to that fact would require a judicial act we are not empowered to perform.
    B. The Merits
    The government may justify the aggregate limits as a means of preventing corruption or the
    appearance of corruption, or as a means of preventing circumvention of contribution limits imposed
    to further its anticorruption interest.3 Buckley, 
    424 U.S. at 26-27, 38
    . The Supreme Court has
    recognized no other governmental interest “sufficiently important to outweigh the First Amendment
    interests implicated by contributions for political speech.” SpeechNow.org, 
    599 F.3d at 692
    .
    3         Even after Citizens United, a number of other circuits continue to recognize anticorruption and
    anticircumvention as valid government interests. They likewise continue to recognize the government’s
    interest in preventing the appearance of corruption. See, e.g., United States v. Danielczyk, 
    683 F.3d 611
    , 618 (4th
    Cir. 2012); Ognibene v. Parkes, 
    671 F.3d 174
    , 187, 195 & n.21 (2d Cir. 2011); Wis. Right to Life State Political
    Action Comm. v. Barland, 
    664 F.3d 139
    , 153 (7th Cir. 2011); Thalheimer v. City of San Diego, 
    645 F.3d 1109
    , 1118,
    1124-25 (9th Cir. 2011).
    7
    “Corruption,” though, is a narrow term of art: “Elected officials are influenced to act contrary to
    their obligations of office by the prospect of financial gain to themselves or infusions of money into
    their campaigns. The hallmark of corruption is the financial quid pro quo: dollars for political favors.”
    Fed. Election Comm’n v. Nat’l Conservative Political Action Comm., 
    470 U.S. 480
    , 497 (1985). Influence
    over or access to elected officials does not amount to corruption. Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 910
    (“Democracy is premised on responsiveness.” (quoting McConnell, 
    540 U.S. at 297
     (Kennedy, J.,
    concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part))).
    Citizens United left unclear the constitutionally permissible scope of the government’s
    anticorruption interest. It both restricted the concept of quid-pro-quo corruption to bribery, see 
    130 S. Ct. at 908
     (“The practices Buckley noted would be covered by bribery laws if a quid pro quo
    arrangement were proved.”), and suggested that there is a wheeling-and-dealing space between pure
    bribery and mere influence and access where elected officials are “corrupt” for acting contrary to
    their representative obligations, see 
    id. at 911
     (stating that there would be “cause for concern” if
    elected officials “succumb to improper influences,” “surrender their best judgment,” and “put
    expediency before principle” because of independent expenditures). Yet if anything is clear, it is that
    contributing a large amount of money does not ipso facto implicate the government’s anticorruption
    interest. The government’s assertion that large contributions “could easily exert a corrupting
    influence on the democratic system” and would present “the appearance of corruption that is
    ‘inherent in a regime of large individual financial contributions’” simply sweeps too broadly.
    McCutcheon alleges that he has “deeply held principles regarding government and public policy,”
    believing that “the United States is slowly but surely losing its character as an exceptional nation that
    stands for liberty and limited government under the Constitution.” He wants to contribute to a
    number of candidates “who are interested in advancing the cause of liberty.” Supporting general
    principles of governance does not bespeak corruption; such is democracy. “It is in the nature of an
    8
    elected representative to favor certain policies, and, by necessary corollary, to favor the voters and
    contributors who support those policies.” Citizens United, 
    130 S. Ct. at 910
     (quoting McConnell, 
    540 U.S. at 297
     (quoting McConnell, 
    540 U.S. at 297
     (Kennedy, J., concurring in the judgment in part and
    dissenting in part))).
    Plaintiffs do not, however, challenge the base contribution limits,4 so we may assume they
    are valid expressions of the government’s anticorruption interest. And that being so, we cannot
    ignore the ability of aggregate limits to prevent evasion of the base limits. See Buckley, 
    424 U.S. at 38
    (upholding the $25,000 aggregate limit as “no more than a corollary of the basic individual
    contribution limitation that we have found to be constitutionally valid”). Circumvention, after all,
    can be “very hard to trace.” Fed. Election Comm’n v. Colo. Republican Fed. Campaign Comm., 
    533 U.S. 431
    , 462 (2001) [“Colorado II”]; see McConnell, 
    540 U.S. at 165, 224
     (explaining that “[m]oney, like
    water, will always find an outlet,” and Congress has learned “the hard lesson of circumvention”
    from “the entire history of campaign finance regulation”). Eliminating the aggregate limits means an
    individual might, for example, give half-a-million dollars in a single check to a joint fundraising
    committee comprising a party’s presidential candidate, the party’s national party committee, and
    most of the party’s state party committees. After the fundraiser, the committees are required to
    divvy the contributions to ensure that no committee receives more than its permitted share, 
    11 C.F.R. §§ 102.6
    (a)(1), 110.3(c)(2), but because party committees may transfer unlimited amounts of
    money to other party committees of the same party, the half-a-million-dollar contribution might
    nevertheless find its way to a single committee’s coffers. 2 U.S.C. § 441a(a)(4); 
    11 C.F.R. §§ 102.6
    (a)(1)(ii), 110.3(c)(1). That committee, in turn, might use the money for coordinated
    expenditures, which have no “significant functional difference” from the party’s direct candidate
    4        We take no position on whether plaintiffs could have done so. See McConnell, 
    540 U.S. at 229
     (“This
    Court has no power to adjudicate a challenge to the FECA [contribution] limits because challenges to the
    constitutionality of FECA provisions are subject to direct review before an appropriate en banc court of
    appeals . . . not in the three-judge District Court convened pursuant to BCRA § 403(a).”)).
    9
    contributions. Colorado II, 
    533 U.S. at 460
    . The candidate who knows the coordinated expenditure
    funding derives from that single large check at the joint fundraising event will know precisely where
    to lay the wreath of gratitude.
    Gratitude, of course, is not itself a constitutionally-cognizable form of corruption, Republican
    Nat’l Comm., 
    698 F. Supp. 2d at 158
    , and it may seem unlikely that so many separate entities would
    willingly serve as conduits for a single contributor’s interests. But it is not hard to imagine a situation
    where the parties implicitly agree to such a system, see Colorado II, 
    533 U.S. at 459
     (upholding limits
    on coordinate spending as a means of preventing circumvention of contribution limits because of
    “informal bookkeeping” practices by which, among other things, “[d]onors would be told the
    money they contributed could be credited to any Senate candidate”), and there is no reason to think
    the quid pro quo of an exchange depends on the number of steps in the transaction, see McConnell,
    
    540 U.S. at 155
     (“[T]here is no meaningful separation between the national party committees and the
    public officials who control them.”). The Supreme Court has rejected the argument that Congress
    cannot restrict coordinated spending as an anticircumvention measure because there are “better
    crafted safeguards” in place like the earmarking rules. Colorado II, 
    533 U.S. at 462
    . We follow the
    Court’s lead and conceive of the contribution limits as a coherent system rather than merely a
    collection of individual limits stacking prophylaxis upon prophylaxis.
    Given our conclusion that the aggregate limits are justified, we reject Plaintiffs’ arguments
    that the limits are unconstitutionally low and unconstitutionally overbroad. It is not the judicial role
    to parse legislative judgment about what limits to impose. See Randall v. Sorrell, 
    548 U.S. 230
    , 248
    (2006) (plurality) (“We cannot determine with any degree of exactitude the precise restriction
    necessary to carry out the statute’s legitimate objectives. In practice, the legislature is better equipped
    to make such empirical judgments . . . .”); Colorado II, 
    533 U.S. at 446
     (“[T]he dollar amount of the
    limit need not be ‘fine tun[ed].’” (quoting Nixon v. Shrink Mo. Gov’t PAC, 
    528 U.S. 377
    , 387-88
    10
    (2000))); Buckley, 424 at 30 (“[I]f it is satisfied that some limit on contributions is necessary, a court
    has no scalpel to probe, whether, say, a $2,000 ceiling might not serve as well as $1,000.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)). Only if there are “danger signs” that the limits are not closely drawn will
    we examine the record to review the statute’s tailoring. Randall, 
    548 U.S. at 249
    ; see Buckley, 
    424 U.S. at 30
     (“Such distinctions in degree become significant only when they can be said to amount to
    differences in kind.”). We see no danger signs here. Plaintiffs’ argument depends on using “simple
    arithmetic” to translate the Vermont contribution limits invalidated in Randall to imaginary biennial
    limits on contributions to party committees and candidates. They argue that the limit on
    contributions to state party committees invalidated by Randall is equivalent to a biennial contribution
    limit of $198,389 to national party committees, which they explain is about $14,000 more than the
    total amount an individual could biennially contribute to the three committees—an amount an
    individual still cannot contribute because of the aggregate limits. They likewise argue that if an
    individual wanted to contribute equally to “one candidate of his choice in all 468 federal races” in
    2006, he would be limited to contributing $85.29 per candidate for the entire election cycle, an
    amount “far below the $200 limit held too low in Randall.” Even granting that Plaintiffs’
    methodology and results are correct,5 “the dictates of the First Amendment are not mere functions
    of the Consumer Price Index.” Shrink Mo. Gov’t PAC, 
    528 U.S. at 397
    . The effect of the aggregate
    limits on a challenger’s ability to wage an effective campaign is limited because the aggregate limits
    do not apply to nonindividuals. See Randall, 
    548 U.S. at 236, 249
     (invalidating contribution limit that
    5        Their premise that the Randall Court struck down a “$400 limit on contributions an individual may
    may make, over a two-year period, to a state party committee” distorts the Court’s description that the statute
    in question “imposes a limit of $2,000 upon the amount any individual can give to a political party during a 2-
    year general election cycle.” 
    548 U.S. at 239
    . In any event, to compare the amount of money required to reach
    the national population to the amount needed to reach just the citizens of Vermont is not a matter of a mere
    multiplier. If direct mail were the only means, such a multiplier might work. But to take a simple example,
    building a website to reach a national audience is not any more expensive than building one to reach citizens
    of a single state. As a result, Plaintiffs are wrong to create a simple ratio of money needed to reach
    Vermonters over money needed to reach all Americans.
    11
    imposed a burden on First Amendment rights “disproportionately severe” to the government’s
    legitimate interests because the limits “harm[ed] the electoral process by preventing challengers from
    mounting effective campaigns against incumbent officeholders, thereby reducing democratic
    accountability”); Buckley, 
    424 U.S. at 21
     (suggesting the contribution limits would be problematic if
    they “prevented candidates and political committees from amassing the resources necessary for
    effective advocacy”). And in any event, individuals remain able to volunteer, join political
    associations, and engage in independent expenditures. See Wagner v. Fed. Election Comm’n, Civ. Action
    No. 11-1841(JEB), 
    2012 WL 1255145
    , at *9 (D.D.C. Apr. 16, 2012) (“There is even less need for the
    Court to interfere with legislative judgments where the persons affected by the ban have other
    meaningful avenues for political association and expression.”).
    Plaintiffs’ overbreadth challenge consists of the conclusory assertions that the aggregate
    limits substantially inhibit protected speech and association “not only in an absolute sense, but also
    relative to the scope of the law’s plainly legitimate applications,” and that “there is no ‘scope of . . .
    plainly legitimate applications’” since neither political party proliferation nor movement of
    “massive” amounts of money through party committees or PACs to candidates is now possible. The
    Buckley Court rejected challenges that the contribution limits are overbroad because most
    contributors are not seeking a quo for their quid and the base contribution limit is “unrealistically
    low.” 
    424 U.S. at 30
    . Aside from these two claims, which we join the Buckley Court in rejecting,
    Plaintiffs do not explain how the aggregate limits potentially regulate both protected and unprotected
    conduct. See Virginia v. Hicks, 
    539 U.S. 113
    , 119 (2003) (tracing the overbreadth doctrine to “concern
    that the threat of enforcement of an overbroad law may deter or ‘chill’ constitutionally protected
    speech”); Hill v. Colorado, 
    530 U.S. 703
    , 731-32 (2000) (emphasizing that the overbreadth doctrine
    permits litigants to challenge a statute because of a “judicial prediction or assumption that the
    statute’s very existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from constitutionally
    12
    protected speech or expression”); Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 
    413 U.S. 601
    , 610-12 (1973) (explaining the
    overbreadth doctrine as a tool for circumventing an otherwise prohibitory standing doctrine).
    Plaintiffs’ overbreadth argument is essentially a severability claim, but because we conclude that
    nothing needs to be severed, this argument fails.
    Plaintiffs raise the troubling possibility that Citizens United undermined the entire
    contribution limits scheme, but whether that case will ultimately spur a new evaluation of Buckley is a
    question for the Supreme Court, not us.
    III.   Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the Court will issue a contemporaneous Order denying Plaintiffs’
    Motion for a Preliminary Injunction and granting the FEC’s motion to dismiss.
    __________/s/_____________
    JANICE ROGERS BROWN
    United States Circuit Judge
    _________/s/______________
    ROBERT L. WILKINS
    United States District Judge
    _________/s/______________
    JAMES E. BOASBERG
    United States District Judge
    Date: September 28, 2012
    13
    ORDER AND FINAL JUDGMENT
    For the reasons set forth in the Memorandum Opinion, it is this 28th day of September,
    2012, hereby
    ORDERED that the Defendant Federal Election Commission’s motion to dismiss is
    GRANTED; it is further
    ORDERED that the Plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction is DISMISSED AS MOOT;
    and it is further
    ORDERED that final judgment be entered for the defendant.
    SO ORDERED.
    __________/s/_____________
    JANICE ROGERS BROWN
    United States Circuit Judge
    __________/s/_____________
    ROBERT L. WILKINS
    United States District Judge
    __________/s/_____________
    JAMES E. BOASBERG
    United States District Judge
    14