News Flash

WASHINGTON, United States, June 30, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - The US Supreme Court on Tuesday lifted
restrictions on the amount of money political parties can spend in coordination with individual
candidates, in a case that could impact November's midterm elections.
The conservative-dominated top court ruled 6-3 that the limits on coordinated campaign spending
violate the First Amendment to the US Constitution, which guarantees free speech rights.
The case was brought by President Donald Trump's Republican Party, which stands to potentially
benefit more from the easing of the campaign finance restrictions than Democrats.
Trump welcomed the decision in a Truth Social post.
"The Supreme Court just took restrictions off political spending!" he said. "A big win for
Republicans and, more importantly, The First Amendment!"
The six conservative justices on the Supreme Court, including the three nominated by Trump, joined
the majority opinion authored by Justice Brett Kavanaugh while the three liberals dissented.
At issue in the case were limits on the amount of money political parties can spend to support
individual candidates under the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA).
In Citizens United, a landmark 2010 case, the Supreme Court lifted restrictions on campaign spending
by corporations, unions and other outside groups.
But political parties were still restricted on how much they could spend on advertising, for example,
in coordination with individual candidates.
Supporters of the law argued that it curbs potential corruption and prevents wealthy donors from
funneling money through a political party to a candidate of their choice.
In his ruling, Kavanaugh said the campaign spending restrictions constituted a "severe infringement
on First Amendment-protected political speech."
"Whether the Democratic party, the Republican party, or other parties, all political parties and
candidates going forward can compete equally under the same rules regarding coordinated
expenditures," Kavanaugh said.
Senate Democratic minority leader Chuck Schumer condemned the court's ruling.
"Trump's MAGA Supreme Court just gave the very wealthy and big-money special interest groups the
green light to buy elections," Schumer said in a statement.
"Today's decision eviscerates one of the last fragile guardrails on coordinated political spending
and will unleash a new arms race of campaign spending, bringing in even more special interest money
to our elections."
Among those bringing the case was Vice President JD Vance, who joined when he was running for the
Senate in 2022 and is now considered a potential candidate for the Republican presidential nomination
in 2028.