NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is being done in
connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued. The syllabus constitutes no
part
of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the
convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S.
321, 337.
____________________
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
v.
AKINS ET AL.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
No. 96-1590.
Argued January 14, 1998-Decided June 1, 1998
The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (FECA) seeks to remedy corruption of the
political process. As relevant here, it imposes extensive
recordkeeping and disclosure requirements upon "political committee[s]," which
include "any committee, club, association or other group of persons which
receives" more than $1,000 in "contributions" or "which makes"
more than $1,000 in "expenditures" in any given year, 2 U. S. C. §431(4)(A)
(emphasis
added), "for the purpose of influencing any election for Federal office,"
§§431(8)(A)(i), (9)(A)(i). Assistance given to help a particular candidate will not
count toward the $1,000 "expenditure" ceiling if it takes the form of a
"communication" by a "membership organization or corporation" "to
its members"-as
long as the organization is not "organized primarily for the purpose of influencing
[any individual's] nomination . . . or election." §431(9)(B)(iii). Respondents,
voters with views often opposed to those of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC), filed a compliant with petitioner Federal Election
Commission (FEC), asking the FEC to find that AIPAC had violated FECA and, among other
things, to order AIPAC to make public the information that
FECA demands of political committees. In dismissing the complaint, the FEC found that
AIPAC's communications fell outside FECA's membership
communications exception. Nonetheless, it concluded, AIPAC was not a "political
committee" because, as an issue-oriented lobbying organization, its major
purpose was not the nomination or election of candidates. The District Court granted the
FEC summary judgment when it reviewed the determination, but the
en banc Court of Appeals reversed on the ground that the FEC's major purpose test
improperly interpreted FECA's definition of a political committee. The
case presents this Court with two questions: (1) whether respondents had standing to
challenge the FEC's decision, and (2) whether an organization falls
outside FECA's definition of a "political committee" because "its major
purpose" is not "the nomination or election of candidates."
Held:
1. Respondents, as voters seeking information to which they believe FECA entitles them,
have standing to challenge the FEC's decision not to bring an
enforcement action. Pp. 6-14.
(a) Respondents satisfy prudential standing requirements. FECA specifically provides that
"[a]ny person" who believes FECA has been violated may file a
complaint with the FEC, §437g(a)(1), and that "[a]ny party aggrieved" by an FEC
order dismissing such party's complaint may seek district court review of
the dismissal, §437g(8)(A). History associates the word "aggrieved" with a
congressional intent to cast the standing net broadly-beyond the commonlaw
interests and substantive statutory rights upon which "prudential" standing
traditionally rested. E.g., FCC v. Sanders Brothers Radio Station, 309 U. S. 470.
Moreover, respondents' asserted injurytheir failure to obtain relevant information-is
injury of a kind that FECA seeks to address. Pp. 6-8.
(b) Respondents also satisfy constitutional standing requirements. Their inability to
obtain information that, they claim, FECA requires AIPAC to make public
meets the genuine "injury in fact" requirement that helps assure that the court
will adjudicate "[a] concrete, living contest between adversaries." Coleman v.
Miller, 307 U. S. 433, 460 (Frankfurter, J., dissenting). United States v. Richardson, 418
U. S. 166, distinguished. The fact that the harm at issue is widely
shared does not deprive Congress of constitutional power to authorize its vindication in
the federal courts where the harm is concrete. See Public Citizen v.
Department of Justice, 491 U. S. 440, 449-450. The informational injury here, directly
related to voting, the most basic of political rights, is sufficiently
concrete. Respondents have also satisfied the remaining two constitutional standing
requirements: The harm asserted is "fairly traceable" to the FEC's decision
not to issue its complaint, and the courts in this case can "redress" that
injury. Pp. 8-14.
(c) Finally, FECA explicitly indicates a congressional intent to alter the traditional
view that agency enforcement decisions are not subject to judicial review.
Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U. S. 821, 832, distinguished. P. 14.
2. Because of the unusual and complex circumstances in which the case arises, the second
question presented cannot be addressed here, and the case must
be remanded. After the FEC determined that many persons belonging to AIPAC not were not
"members" underFEC regulations, the Court of Appeals
overturned those regulations in another case, in part because it thought they defined
membership organizations too narrowly in light of an organization's First
Amendment right to communicate with its members. The FEC's new "membership
organization" rules could significantly affect the interpretative issue
presented by Question Two. Thus, the FEC should proceed to determine whether or not
AIPAC's expenditures qualify as "membership communications"
under the new rules, and thereby fall outside the scope of "expenditures" that
could qualify it as a "political committee." If it decides that the
communications
here do not qualify, then the lower courts can still evaluate the significance of the
communicative context in which the case arises. If, on the other hand, it
decides that they do qualify, the matter will become moot. Pp. 14-18.
101 F. 3d 731, vacated and remanded.
BREYER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which REHNQUIST, C. J., and STEVENS,
KENNEDY, SOUTER, and GINSBURG, JJ., joined.
SCALIA, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which O'CONNOR and THOMAS, JJ., joined.
____________________
____________________
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the preliminary
print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of
Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, of any
typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made before the
preliminary
print goes to press.
JUSTICE BREYER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) has determined that the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC) is not a "political committee" as defined
by the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, 86 Stat. 11, as amended, 2 U. S. C. §431(4)
(FECA), and, for that reason, the Commission has refused to
require AIPAC to make disclosures regarding its membership, contributions, and
expenditures that FECA would otherwise require. We hold that
respondents, a group of voters, have standing to challenge the Commission's determination
in court, and we remand this case for further proceedings.
I
In light of our disposition of this case, we believe it necessary to describe its
procedural background in some detail. As commonly understood, the Federal
Election Campaign Act seeks to remedy any actual or perceived corruption of the political
process in several importantways. The Act imposes limits upon the
amounts that individuals, corporations, "political committees" (including
political action committees), and political parties can contribute to a candidate for
federal political office. §§441a(a), 441a(b), 441b. The Act also imposes limits on the
amount these individuals or entities can spend in coordination with a
candidate. (It treats these expenditures as "contributions to" a candidate for
purposes of the Act.) §441a(7)(B)(i). As originally written, the Act set limits upon
the total amount that a candidate could spend of his own money, and upon the amounts that
other individuals, corporations, and "political committees" could
spend independent of a candidate-though the Court found that certain of these
last-mentioned limitations violated the First Amendment. Buckley v. Valeo,
424 U. S. 1, 39-59 (1976) (per curiam); Federal Election Comm'n v. National Conservative
Political Action Comm., 470 U. S. 480, 497 (1985); cf.
Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Comm. v. Federal Election Comm'n, 518 U. S. 604,
613-619 (1996) (opinion of BREYER, J.).
This case concerns requirements in the Act that extend beyond these better-known
contribution and expenditure limitations. In particular the Act imposes
extensive recordkeeping and disclosure requirements upon groups that fall within the Act's
definition of a "political committee." Those groups must register
with the FEC, appoint a treasurer, keep names and addresses of contributors, track the
amount and purpose of disbursements, and file complex FEC reports
that include lists of donors giving in excess of $200 per year (often, these donors may be
the group's members), contributions, expenditures, and any other
disbursements irrespective of their purposes. §§432-434.
The Act's use of the word "political committee" calls to mind the term
"political action committee," or "PAC," a term that normally refers to
organizations that
corporations or trade unions might establish for the purpose of making contributions or
expenditures that the Act would otherwise prohibit. See §§431(4)(B),
441b. But, in fact, the Act's term "political committee" has a much broader
scope. The Act states that a "political committee" includes "any committee,
club,
association or other group of persons which receives" more than $1,000 in
"contributions" or "which makes" more than $1,000 in
"expenditures" in any given
year. §431(4)(A) (emphasis added).
This broad definition, however, is less universally encompassing than at first it may
seem, for later definitional subsections limit its scope. The Act defines the
key terms "contribution" and "expenditure" as covering only those
contributions and expenditures that are made "for the purpose of influencing any
election for
Federal office." §§431(8)(A)(i), (9)(A)(i). Moreover, the Act sets forth detailed
categories of disbursements, loans, and assistancein-kind that do not count
as a "contribution" or an "expenditure," even when made for
election-related purposes. §§431(8)(B), (9)(B). In particular, assistance given to help
a particular
candidate will not count toward the $1,000 "expenditure" ceiling that qualifies
an organization as a "political committee" if it takes the form of a
"communication" by an organization "to its members"-as long as the
organization at issue is a "membership organization or corporation" and it is
not "organized
primarily for the purpose of influencing the nomination . . . or election, of any
individual." §431(9)(B)(iii).
This case arises out of an effort by respondents, a group of voters with views often
opposed to those of AIPAC, to persuade the FEC to treat AIPAC as a
"political committee." Respondents filed a complaint with the FEC, stating that
AIPAC had made more than $1,000 in qualifying "expenditures" per year, and
thereby became a "political committee." 1 Record, Exh. B, p. 4. They added
thatAIPAC had violated the FEC provisions requiring "political committee[s]" to
register and to make public the information about members, contributions, and expenditures
to which we have just referred. Id., at 2, 9-17. Respondents also
claimed that AIPAC had violated §441b of FECA, which prohibits corporate campaign
"contribution[s]" and "expenditure[s]." Id., at 2, 16-17. They asked
the FEC to find that AIPAC had violated the Act, and, among other things, to order AIPAC
to make public the information that FECA demands of a
"political committee." Id., at 33-34.
AIPAC asked the FEC to dismiss the complaint. AIPAC described itself as an issue-oriented
organization that seeks to maintain friendship and promote
goodwill between the United States and Israel. App. 120; see also Brief for AIPAC as
Amicus Curiae (AIPAC Brief) 1, 3. AIPAC conceded that it lobbies
elected officials and disseminates information about candidates for public office. App.
43, 120; see also AIPAC Brief 6. But in responding to the §441b
charge, AIPAC denied that it had made the kinds of "expenditures" that matter
for FECA purposes (i.e., the kinds of election-related expenditures that
corporations cannot make, and which count as the kind of expenditures that, when they
exceed $1,000, qualify a group as a "political committee").
To put the matter more specifically: AIPAC focused on certain "expenditures"
that respondents had claimed were election-related, such as the costs of
meetings with candidates, the introduction of AIPAC members to candidates, and the
distribution of candidate position papers. AIPAC said that its spending
on such activities, even if electionrelated, fell within a relevant exception. They
amounted, said AIPAC, to communications by a membership organization with
its members, App. 164-166, which the Act exempts from its definition of
"expenditures," §431(9)(B)(iii). In AIPAC's view, these communicationstherefore
did not violate §441b's corporate expenditure prohibition. 2 Record, Doc. No. 19, pp.
2-6. (And, if AIPAC was right, those expenditures would not count
towards the $1,000 ceiling on "expenditures" that might transform an ordinary
issue-related group into a "political committee." §431(4)).
The FEC's General Counsel concluded that, between 1983 and 1988, AIPAC had indeed funded
communications of the sort described. The General
Counsel said that those expenditures were campaign related, in that they amounted to
advocating the election or defeat of particular candidates. App.
106-108. He added that these expenditures were "likely to have crossed the $1,000
threshold." Id., at 146. At the same time, the FEC closed the door to
AIPAC's invocation of the "communications" exception. The FEC said that,
although it was a "close question," these expenditures were not membership
communications, because that exception applies to a membership organization's
communications with its members, and most of the persons who belonged to
AIPAC did not qualify as "members" for purposes of the Act. App. to Pet. for
Cert. 97a-98a; see also App. 170-173. Still, given the closeness of the issue,
the FEC exercised its discretion and decided not to proceed further with respect to the
claimed "corporate contribution" violation. App. to Pet. for Cert. 98a.
The FEC's determination that many of the persons who belonged to AIPAC were not
"members" effectively foreclosed any claim that AIPAC's
communications did not count as "expenditures" for purposes of determining
whether it was a "political committee." Since AIPAC's activities fell outside
the
"membership communications" exception, AIPAC could not invoke that exception as
a way of escaping the scope of the Act's term "political committee" and
the Act's disclosure provisions, which that definition triggers.
The FEC nonetheless held that AIPAC was not subjectto the disclosure requirements, but for
a different reason. In the FEC's view, the Act's definition of
"political committee" includes only those organizations that have as a
"major purpose" the nomination or election of candidates. Cf. Buckley v. Valeo,
424 U.
S., at 79. AIPAC, it added, was fundamentally an issue-oriented lobbying organization, not
a campaign-related organization, and hence AIPAC fell outside
the definition of a "political committee" regardless. App. 146. The FEC
consequently dismissed respondents' complaint.
Respondents filed a petition in Federal District Court seeking review of the FEC's
determination dismissing their complaint. See §§437g(8)(A), 437g(8)(C).
The District Court granted summary judgment for the FEC, and a divided panel of the Court
of Appeals affirmed. 66 F. 3d 348 (CADC 1995). The en banc
Court of Appeals reversed, however, on the ground that the FEC's "major purpose"
test improperly interpreted the Act's definition of a "political committee."
101 F. 3d 731 (CADC 1997). We granted the Government's petition for certiorari, which
contained the following two questions:
"1. Whether respondents had standing to challenge the Federal Election Commission's
decision not to bring an enforcement action in this case.
"2. Whether an organization that spends more than $1,000 on contributions or
coordinated expenditures in a calendar year, but is neither controlled by
a candidate nor has its major purpose the nomination or election of candidates, is a
'political committee' within the meaning of the [Act]." Brief for
Petitioner I.
We shall answer the first of these questions, but not the second.
II
The Solicitor General argues that respondents lackstanding to challenge the FEC's decision
not to proceed against AIPAC. He claims that they have failed to
satisfy the "prudential" standing requirements upon which this Court has
insisted. See, e.g., National Credit Union Admin. v. First National Bank & Trust
Co., 522 U. S. ___, ___ (1998) (slip op., at 7) (NCUA); Association of Data Processing
Service Organizations, Inc. v. Camp, 397 U. S. 150, 153
(1970) (Data Processing). He adds that respondents have not shown that they "suffe[r]
injury in fact," that their injury is "fairly traceable" to the FEC's
decision, or that a judicial decision in their favor would "redres[s]" the
injury. E.g., Bennett v. Spear, 520 U. S. ___, ___(1997) (slip op., at 6) (internal
quotation marks omitted); Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U. S. 555, 560-561 (1992).
In his view, respondents' District Court petition consequently
failed to meet Article III's demand for a "case" or "controversy."
We do not agree with the FEC 's "prudential standing" claim. Congress has
specifically provided in FECA that "[a]ny person who believes a violation of this
Act . . . has occurred, may file a complaint with the Commission." §437g(a)(1). It
has added that "[a]ny party aggrieved by an order of the Commission
dismissing a complaint filed by such party . . . may file a petition" in district
court seeking review of that dismissal. §437g(8)(A). History associates the word
"aggrieved" with a congressional intent to cast the standing net broadly-beyond
the common-law interests and substantive statutory rights upon which
"prudential" standing traditionally rested. Scripps-Howard Radio, Inc. v. FCC,
316 U. S. 4 (1942); FCC v. Sanders Brothers Radio Station, 309 U. S.
470 (1940); Office of Communication of the United Church of Christ v. FCC, 359 F. 2d 994
(CADC 1966) (Burger, J.); Associated Industries of
New York State v. Ickes, 134 F. 2d 694 (CA2 1943) (Frank, J.). Cf. Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U. S. C. §702 (stating that those "suffering legal
wrong" or "ad-versely affected or aggrieved . . . within the meaning of a
relevant statute" may seek judicial review of agency action).
Moreover, prudential standing is satisfied when the injury asserted by a plaintiff "
'arguably [falls] within the zone of interests to be protected or regulated by
the statute . . . in question.' " NCUA, supra, at ___ (slip op., at 7) (quoting Data
Processing, supra, at 153). The injury of which respondents complain-their
failure to obtain relevant information-is injury of a kind that FECA seeks to address.
Buckley, supra, at 66-67 ("political committees" must disclose
contributors and disbursements to help voters understand who provides which candidates
with financial support). We have found nothing in the Act that
suggests Congress intended to exclude voters from the benefits of these provisions, or
otherwise to restrict standing, say, to political parties, candidates, or
their committees.
Given the language of the statute and the nature of the injury, we conclude that Congress,
intending to protect voters such as respondents from suffering the
kind of injury here at issue, intended to authorize this kind of suit. Consequently,
respondents satisfy "prudential" standing requirements. Cf. Raines v. Byrd,
521 U. S. ___, ___, n. 3 (1997) (slip op., at 8, n. 3) (explicit grant of authority to
bring suit "eliminates any prudential standing limitations and significantly
lessens the risk of unwanted conflict with the Legislative Branch").
Nor do we agree with the FEC or the dissent that Congress lacks the constitutional power
to authorize federal courts to adjudicate this lawsuit. Article III, of
course, limits Congress' grant of judicial power to "cases" or
"controversies." That limitation means that respondents must show, among other
things, an "injury
in fact"-a requirement that helps assure that courts will not "pass upon . . .
abstract, intellectual problems," but adjudicate "concrete,living contest[s]
between
adversaries." Coleman v. Miller, 307 U. S. 433, 460 (1939) (Frankfurter, J.,
dissenting); see also Bennett, supra, at ___, (slip op., at 11); Lujan, supra, at
560-561. In our view, respondents here have suffered a genuine "injury in fact."
The "injury in fact" that respondents have suffered consists of their inability
to obtain information-lists of AIPAC donors (who are, according to AIPAC, its
members), and campaign-related contributions and expenditures-that, on respondents' view
of the law, the statute requires that AIPAC make public. There is
no reason to doubt their claim that the information would help them (and others to whom
they would communicate it) to evaluate candidates for public office,
especially candidates who received assistance from AIPAC, and to evaluate the role that
AIPAC's financial assistance might play in a specific election.
Respondents' injury consequently seems concrete and particular. Indeed, this Court has
previously held that a plaintiff suffers an "injury in fact" when the
plaintiff fails to obtain information which must be publicly disclosed pursuant to a
statute. Public Citizen v. Department of Justice, 491 U. S. 440, 449
(1989) (failure to obtain information subject to disclosure under Federal Advisory
Committee Act "constitutes a sufficiently distinct injury to provide standing
to sue"). See also Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U. S. 363, 373-374 (1982)
(deprivation of information about housing availability constitutes
"specific injury" permitting standing).
The dissent refers to United States v. Richardson, 418 U. S. 166 (1974), a case in which a
plaintiff sought information (details of Central Intelligence
Agency expenditures) to which, he said, the Constitution's Accounts Clause, Art. I, §9,
cl. 7, entitled him. The Court held that the plaintiff there lacked Article
III standing. Id., at 179-180. The dissent says that Richardson and this case are
"indistinguishable." Post, at 6. But as the parties' briefs suggestfor they do
not mention Richardson-that case does not control the outcome here.
Richardson's plaintiff claimed that a statute permitting the CIA to keep its expenditures
nonpublic violated the Accounts Clause, which requires that "a regular
Statement and Account of the Receipts and Expenditures of all public Money shall be
published from time to time." Richardson, 418 U. S., at 167-169. The
Court held that the plaintiff lacked standing because there was "no 'logical nexus'
between the [plaintiff's] asserted status of taxpayer and the claimed failure of
the Congress to require the Executive to supply a more detailed report of the [CIA's]
expenditures." Id., at 175; see also id., at 174 (quoting Flast v. Cohen,
392 U. S. 83, 102 (1968), for the proposition that in "taxpayer standing" cases,
there must be "a logical nexus between the status asserted and the claim
sought to be adjudicated").
In this case, however, the "logical nexus" inquiry is not relevant. Here, there
is no constitutional provision requiring the demonstration of the "nexus" the
Court
believed must be shown in Richardson and Flast. Rather, there is a statute which, as we
previously pointed out, supra, at 7-8, does seek to protect
individuals such as respondents from the kind of harm they say they have suffered, i.e.,
failing to receive particular information about campaign-related
activities. Cf. Richardson, supra, at 178, n. 11.
The fact that the Court in Richardson focused upon taxpayer standing, id., at 171-178, not
voter standing, places that case at still a greater distance from the
case before us. We are not suggesting, as the dissent implies, post, at 4-6, that
Richardson would have come out differently if only the plaintiff had asserted
his standing to sue as a voter, rather than as a taxpayer. Faced with such an assertion,
the Richardson court would simply have had to consider whether "the
Framers . . . ever imagined that general directives [of the Constitution] . . . would be
subject to enforcement by an individual citizen." Richardson, supra, at
178, n.11 (emphasis added). But since that answer (like the answer to whether there was
taxpayer standing in Richardson) would have rested in significant
part upon the Court's view of the Accounts Clause, it still would not control our answer
in this case. All this is to say that the legal logic which critically
determined Richardson's outcome is beside the point here.
The FEC's strongest argument is its contention that this lawsuit involves only a
"generalized grievance." (Indeed, if Richardson is relevant at all, it is
because of
its broad discussion of this matter, see id., at 176-178, not its basic rationale.) The
Solicitor General points out that respondents' asserted harm (their failure
to obtain information) is one which is " 'shared in substantially equal measure by
all or a large class of citizens.' " Brief for Petitioner 28 (quoting Warth v.
Seldin, 422 U. S. 490, 499 (1975)). This Court, he adds, has often said that
"generalized grievance[s]" are not the kinds of harms that confer standing.
Brief
for Petitioner 28; see also Lujan, 504 U. S., at 573-574; Allen v. Wright, 468 U. S. 737,
755-756 (1984); Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans
United for Separation of Church and State, Inc., 454 U. S. 464, 475-479 (1982);
Richardson, supra, at 176-178; Frothingham v. Mellon, decided
with Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U. S. 447, 487 (1923); Ex parte Levitt, 302 U. S. 633,
634 (1937) (per curiam). Whether styled as a constitutional
or prudential limit on standing, the Court has sometimes determined that where large
numbers of Americans suffer alike, the political process, rather than the
judicial process, may provide the more appropriate remedy for a widely shared grievance.
Warth, supra, at 500; Schlesinger v. Reservists Comm. to Stop
the War, 418 U. S. 208, 222 (1974); Richardson, 418 U. S., at 179; id., at 188-189
(Powell, J., concurring); see also Flast, supra, at 131 (Harlan, J.,
dissenting).
The kind of judicial language to which the FEC points, however, invariably appears in
cases where the harm at issue is not only widely shared, but is also of
an abstract and indefinite nature-for example, harm to the "common concern for
obedience to law." L. Singer & Sons v. Union Pacific R. Co., 311 U. S.
295, 303 (1940); see also Allen, 468 U. S., at 754; Schlesinger, 418 U. S., at 217. Cf.
Lujan, supra, at 572-578 (injury to interest in seeing that certain
procedures are followed not normally sufficient by itself to confer standing);
Frothingham, supra, at 488 (party may not merely assert that "he suffers in
some indefinite way in common with people generally"); Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co.,
310 U. S. 113, 125 (1940) (plaintiffs lack standing because they have
failed to show injury to "a particular right of their own, as distinguished from the
public's interest in the administration of the law"). The abstract nature of the
harm-for example, injury to the interest in seeing that the law is obeyed-deprives the
case of the concrete specificity that characterized those controversies
which were "the traditional concern of the courts at Westminster," Coleman, 307
U. S., at 460 (Frankfurter, J., dissenting); and which today prevents a
plaintiff from obtaining what would, in effect, amount to an advisory opinion. Cf. Aetna
Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth, 300 U. S. 227, 240-241 (1937).
Often the fact that an interest is abstract and the fact that it is widely shared go hand
in hand. But their association is not invariable, and where a harm is
concrete, though widely shared, the Court has found "injury in fact." See Public
Citizen, 491 U. S., at 449-450 ("[T]he fact that other citizens or groups of
citizens might make the same complaint after unsuccessfully demanding disclosure . . .
does not lessen [their] asserted injury"). Thus the fact that a political
forum may be more readily available where an injury is widely shared (while counseling
against, say, interpreting a statute as conferring standing) does not, by
itself, automatically disqualify an interest for Article IIIpurposes. Such an interest,
where sufficiently concrete, may count as an "injury in fact." This conclusion
seems particularly obvious where (to use a hypothetical example) large numbers of
individuals suffer the same common-law injury (say, a widespread mass
tort), or where large numbers of voters suffer interference with voting rights conferred
by law. Cf. Lujan, supra, at 572; Shaw v. Hunt, 517 U. S. 899, 905
(1996). We conclude that similarly, the informational injury at issue here, directly
related to voting, the most basic of political rights, is sufficiently concrete and
specific such that the fact that it is widely shared does not deprive Congress of
constitutional power to authorize its vindication in the federal courts.
Respondents have also satisfied the remaining two constitutional standing requirements.
The harm asserted is "fairly traceable" to the FEC's decision about
which respondents complain. Of course, as the FEC points out, Brief for Petitioner 29-31,
it is possible that even had the FEC agreed with respondents' view
of the law, it would still have decided in the exercise of its discretion not to require
AIPAC to produce the information. Cf. App. to Pet. for Cert. 98a
(deciding to exercise prosecutorial discretion, see Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U. S. 821
(1985), and "take no further action" on §441b allegation against
AIPAC). But that fact does not destroy Article III "causation," for we cannot
know that that the FEC would have exercised its prosecutorial discretion in this
way. Agencies often have discretion about whether or not to take a particular action. Yet
those adversely affected by a discretionary agency decision
generally have standing to complain that the agency based its decision upon an improper
legal ground. See, e.g., Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.
S. 136, 140 (1967) (discussing presumption of reviewability of agency action); Citizens to
Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U. S. 402, 410
(1971). If a reviewing court agrees that the agency misinterpreted the law, it will
setaside the agency's action and remand the case-even though the agency
(like a new jury after a mistrial) might later, in the exercise of its lawful discretion,
reach the same result for a different reason. SEC v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.
S. 80 (1943). Thus respondents' "injury in fact" is "fairly traceable"
to the FEC's decision not to issue its complaint, even though the FEC might reach the
same result exercising its discretionary powers lawfully. For similar reasons, the courts
in this case can "redress" respondents' "injury in fact."
Finally, the FEC argues that we should deny respondents standing because this case
involves an agency's decision not to undertake an enforcement action-an
area generally not subject to judicial review. Brief for Petitioner 23, 29. In Heckler,
this Court noted that agency enforcement decisions "ha[ve] traditionally
been 'committed to agency discretion,' " and concluded that Congress did not intend
to alter that tradition in enacting the APA. Heckler, supra, at 832; cf. 5
U. S. C. §701(a) (courts will not review agency actions where "statutes preclude
judicial review," or where the "agency action is committed to agency
discretion by law"). We deal here with a statute that explicitly indicates the
contrary.
In sum, respondents, as voters, have satisfied both prudential and constitutional standing
requirements. They may bring this petition for a declaration that the
FEC's dismissal of their complaint was unlawful. See 2 U. S. C. §437g(8)(A).
III
The second question presented in the FEC's petition for certiorari is whether an
organization that otherwise satisfies the Act's definition of a "political
committee," and thus is subject to its disclosure requirements, nonetheless falls
outside that definition because "its major purpose" is not "the nomination
or
election of candidates." The question arises because this Court, in Buckley, said:
"[T]o fulfill the purposes of the Act [the term 'political committee'] need only
encompass organizations that are under the control of a candidate or the
major purpose of which is the nomination or election of a candidate." 424 U. S., at
79.
The Court reiterated in Federal Election Comm'n v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc.,
479 U. S. 238, 252, n. 6 (1986):
"[A]n entity subject to regulation as a 'political committee' under the Act is one
that is either 'under the control of a candidate or the major purpose of
which is the nomination or election of a candidate.' "
The FEC here interpreted this language as narrowing the scope of the statutory term
"political committee," wherever applied. And, as we have said, the FEC's
General Counsel found that AIPAC fell outside that definition because the nomination or
election of a candidate was not AIPAC's "major purpose." App.
146.
The en banc Court of Appeals disagreed with the FEC. It read this Court's narrowing
construction of the term "political committee" as turning on the First
Amendment problems presented by regulation of "independent expenditures" (i.e.,
"an expenditure by a person expressly advocating the election or defeat of
a clearly identified candidate which is made without cooperation or consultation with any
candidate," §431(17)). 101 F. 3d, at 741. The Court of Appeals
concluded that the language in this Court's prior decisions narrowing the definition of
"political committee" did not apply where the special First Amendment
"independent expenditure" problem did not exist. Id., at 742-743.
The Solicitor General argues that this Court's narrowing definition of "political
committee" applies not simply in the context of independent expenditures, but
across theboard. We cannot squarely address that matter, however, because of the unusual
and complex circumstances in which this case arises. As we
previously mentioned, supra, at 4-5, the FEC considered a related question, namely,
whether AIPAC was exempt from §441b's prohibition of corporate
campaign expenditures, on the grounds that the so-called "expenditures" involved
only AIPAC's communications with its members. The FEC held that the
statute's exception to the "expenditure" definition for communications by a
"membership organization" did not apply because many of the persons who
belonged to AIPAC were not "members" as defined by FEC regulation. The FEC
acknowledged, however, that this was a "close question." App. to Pet. for
Cert. 98a; see also App. 144-146, 170-171. In particular, the FEC thought that many of the
persons who belonged to AIPAC lacked sufficient control of
the organization's policies to qualify as "members" for purposes of the Act.
A few months later, however, the Court of Appeals overturned the FEC's regulations
defining "members," in part because that court thought the regulations
defined membership organizations too narrowly in light of an organization's "First
Amendment right to communicate with its 'members.'" Chamber of
Commerce v. Federal Election Comm'n, 69 F. 3d 600, 605 (CADC 1995). The FEC has
subsequently issued proposed rules redefining "members."
Under these rules, it is quite possible that many of the persons who belong to AIPAC would
be considered "members." If so, the communications here at
issue apparently would not count as the kind of "expenditures" that can turn an
organization into a "political committee," and AIPAC would fall outside the
definition for that reason, rather than because of the "major purpose" test. 62
Fed. Reg. 66832 (1997) (proposed 11 CFR Parts 100 and 114).
The consequence for our consideration of Question Two now is that the FEC's new rules
defining "membershiporganization" could significantly affect the
interpretive issue presented by this question. If the Court of Appeals is right in saying
that this Court's narrowing interpretation of "political committee" in
Buckley reflected First Amendment concerns, 101 F. 3d, at 741, then whether the
"membership communications" exception is interpreted broadly or
narrowly could affect our evaluation of the Court of Appeals claim that there is no
constitutionally driven need to apply Buckley's narrowing interpretation in
this context. The scope of the "membership communications" exception could also
affect our evaluation of the Solicitor General's related argument that First
Amendment concerns (reflected in Buckley's narrowing interpretation) are present whenever
the Act requires disclosure. In any event, it is difficult to decide
the basic issue that Question Two presents without considering the special communicative
nature of the "expenditures" here at issue, cf. United States v.
CIO, 335 U. S. 106, 121 (1948) (describing relation between membership communications and
constitutionally protected rights of association). And, a
considered determination of the scope of the statutory exemption that Congress enacted to
address membership communications would helpfully inform our
consideration of the "major purpose" test.
The upshot, in our view, is that we should permit the FEC to address, in the first
instance, the issue presented by Question Two. We can thereby take
advantage of the relevant agency's expertise, by allowing it to develop a more precise
rule that may dispose of this case, or at a minimum, will aid the Court in
reaching a more informed conclusion. In our view, the FEC should proceed to determine
whether or not AIPAC's expenditures qualify as "membership
communications," and thereby fall outside the scope of "expenditures" that
could qualify it as a "political committee." If the FEC decides that despite its
new
rules, the communications here do not qualify for thisexception, then the lower courts, in
reconsidering respondents' arguments, can still evaluate the
significance of the communicative context in which the case arises. If, on the other hand,
the FEC decides that AIPAC's activities fall within the "membership
communications" exception, the matter will become moot.
For these reasons, the decision of the Court of Appeals is vacated, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom JUSTICE O'CONNOR and JUSTICE THOMAS join, dissenting.
The provision of law at issue in this case is an extraordinary one, conferring upon a
private person the ability to bring an Executive agency into court to compel
its enforcement of the law against a third party. Despite its liberality, the
Administrative Procedure Act does not allow such suits, since enforcement action is
traditionally deemed "committed to agency discretion by law." 5 U. S. C.
§701(a)(2); Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U. S. 821, 827-835 (1985). If provisions
such as the present one were commonplace, the role of the Executive Branch in our system
of separated and equilibrated powers would be greatly reduced,
and that of the Judiciary greatly expanded.
Because this provision is so extraordinary, we should be particularly careful not to
expand it beyond its fair meaning. In my view the Court's opinion does that.
Indeed, it expands the meaning beyond what the Constitution permits.
I
It is clear that the Federal Election Campaign Act doesnot intend that all persons filing
complaints with the Commission have the right to seek judicial review
of the rejection of their complaints. This is evident from the fact that the Act permits a
complaint to be filed by "[a]ny person who believes a violation of this
Act . . . has occurred," 2 U. S. C. §437g(a)(1) (emphasis added), but accords a
right to judicial relief only to "[a]ny party aggrieved by an order of the
Commission dismissing a complaint filed by such party," 2 U. S. C. §437g(a)(8)(A)
(emphasis added). The interpretation that the Court gives the latter
provision deprives it of almost all its limiting force. Any voter can sue to compel the
agency to require registration of an entity as a political committee, even
though the "aggrievement" consists of nothing more than the deprivation of
access to information whose public availability would have been one of the
consequences of registration.
This seems to me too much of a stretch. It should be borne in mind that the agency action
complained of here is not the refusal to make available information
in its possession that the Act requires to be disclosed. A person demanding provision of
information that the law requires the agency to furnish-one demanding
compliance with the Freedom of Information Act or the Advisory Committee Act, for
example-can reasonably be described as being "aggrieved" by the
agency's refusal to provide it. What the respondents complain of in this suit, however, is
not the refusal to provide information, but the refusal (for an allegedly
improper reason) to commence an agency enforcement action against a third person. That
refusal itself plainly does not render respondents "aggrieved" within
the meaning of the Act, for in that case there would have been no reason for the Act to
differentiate between "person" in subsection (a)(1) and "party
aggrieved" in subsection (a)(8). Respondents claim that each of them is elevated to
the special status of a "party aggrieved" by the fact that the requested
enforcement action (if it was successful)would have had the effect, among others, of
placing certain information in the agency's possession, where
respondents, along with everyone else in the world, would have had access to it. It seems
to me most unlikely that the failure to produce that effect-both a
secondary consequence of what respondents immediately seek, and a consequence that affects
respondents no more and with no greater particularity than it
affects virtually the entire population-would have been meant to set apart each respondent
as a "party aggrieved" (as opposed to just a rejected complainant)
within the meaning of the statute.
This conclusion is strengthened by the fact that this citizen-suit provision was enacted
two years after this Court's decision in United States v. Richardson,
418 U. S. 166 (1974), which, as I shall discuss at greater length below, gave Congress
every reason to believe that a voter's interest in information helpful to
his exercise of the franchise was constitutionally inadequate to confer standing.
Richardson had said that a plaintiff's complaint that the Government was
unlawfully depriving him of information he needed to "properly fulfill his
obligations as a member of the electorate in voting" was "surely the kind of a
generalized grievance" that does not state an Article III case or controversy. Id.,
at 176.
And finally, a narrower reading of "party aggrieved" is supported by the
doctrine of constitutional doubt, which counsels us to interpret statutes, if possible, in
such fashion as to avoid grave constitutional questions. See United States ex rel.
Attorney General v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U. S. 366, 408
(1909); Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Florida Gulf Coast Building & Constr. Trades
Council, 485 U. S. 568, 575 (1988). As I proceed to discuss, it
is my view that the Court's entertainment of the present suit violates Article III. Even
if one disagrees with that judgment, however, it is clear from Richardson
that the question is a close one, so that the statute ought not be interpreted to present
it.
II
In Richardson, we dismissed for lack of standing a suit whose "aggrievement" was
precisely the "aggrievement" respondents assert here: the Government's
unlawful refusal to place information within the public domain. The only difference, in
fact, is that the aggrievement there was more direct, since the
Government already had the information within its possession, whereas here the respondents
seek enforcement action that will bring information within the
Government's possession and then require the information to be made public. The plaintiff
in Richardson challenged the Government's failure to disclose the
expenditures of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), in alleged violation of the
constitutional requirement, Art. I, §9, cl. 7, that "a regular Statement and
Account of the Receipts and Expenditures of all public Money shall be published from time
to time." We held that such a claim was a nonjusticiable
"generalized grievance" because "the impact on [plaintiff] is plainly
undifferentiated and common to all members of the public." 418 U. S., at 176-177
(internal
quotation marks and citations omitted).
It was alleged in Richardson that the Government had denied a right conferred by the
Constitution, whereas respondents here assert a right conferred by
statute-but of course "there is absolutely no basis for making the Article III
inquiry turn on the source of the asserted right." Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
504 U. S. 555, 576 (1992). The Court today distinguishes Richardson on a different basis-a
basis that reduces it from a landmark constitutional holding to a
curio. According to the Court, "Richardson focused upon taxpayer standing, . . . .
not voter standing." Ante, at 10. In addition to being a silly distinction,
given the weighty governmental purpose underlying the "generalized grievance"
prohibition-viz., to avoid "something inthe nature of an Athenian democracy or
a New England town meeting to oversee the conduct of the National Government by means of
lawsuits in federal courts," 418 U. S., at 179-this is also a
distinction that the Court in Richardson went out of its way explicitly to eliminate. It
is true enough that the narrow question presented in Richardson was "
'[w]hether a federal taxpayer has standing,' " id., at 167, n. 1. But the Richardson
Court did not hold only, as the Court today suggests, that the plaintiff failed
to qualify for the exception to the rule of no taxpayer standing established by the
"logical nexus" test of Flast v. Cohen, 392 U. S. 83 (1968).
The plaintiff's complaint in Richardson had also alleged that he was " 'a member of
the electorate,' " Richardson, 418 U. S., at 167, n. 1, and he asserted
injury in that capacity as well. The Richardson opinion treated that as fairly included
within the taxpayer-standing question, or at least as plainly
indistinguishable from it:
"The respondent's claim is that without detailed information on CIA expenditures-and
hence its activities-he cannot intelligently follow the actions
of Congress or the Executive, nor can he properly fulfill his obligations as a member of
the electorate in voting for candidates seeking
national office.
"This is surely the kind of a generalized grievance described in both Frothingham and
Flast since the impact on him is plainly
undifferentiated and common to all members of the public." Id., at 176-177 (citations
and internal quotation omitted) (emphasis added).If
Richardson left voter-standing unaffected, one must marvel at the unaccustomed ineptitude
of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation,
which litigated Richardson, in not immediately refiling with an explicit voter-standing
allegation. Fairly read, and applying a fair understanding of
its important purposes, Richardson is indistinguishable from the present case.
The Court's opinion asserts that our language disapproving generalized grievances
"invariably appears in cases where the harm at issue is not only widely
shared, but is also of an abstract and indefinite nature." Ante, at 12.
"Often," the Court says, "the fact that an interest is abstract and the
fact that it is widely
shared go hand in hand. But their association is not invariable, and where a harm is
concrete, though widely shared, the Court has found 'injury in fact.' " Ibid.
If that is so-if concrete generalized grievances (like concrete particularized grievances)
are OK, and abstract generalized grievances (like abstract
particularized grievances) are bad-one must wonder why we ever developed the superfluous
distinction between generalized and particularized grievances at
all. But of course the Court is wrong to think that generalized grievances have only
concerned us when they are abstract. One need go no further than
Richardson to prove thatunless the Court believes that deprivation of information is an
abstract injury, in which event this case could be disposed of on that
much broader ground.
What is noticeably lacking in the Court's discussion of our generalized-grievance
jurisprudence is all reference to two words that have figured in it prominently:
"particularized" and "undifferentiated." See Richardson, supra, at
177; Lujan, 504 U. S., at 560, 560, n. 1. "Particularized" means that "the
injury must affect
the plaintiff in a personal and individual way." Id., at 560, n. 1. If the effect is
"undifferentiated and common to all members of the public," Richardson, supra,
at 177 (internal quotation marksand citations omitted), the plaintiff has a
"generalized grievance" that must be pursued by political rather than judicial
means.
These terms explain why it is a gross oversimplification to reduce the concept of a
generalized grievance to nothing more than "the fact that [the grievance] is
widely shared," ante, at 13, thereby enabling the concept to be dismissed as a
standing principle by such examples as "large numbers of individuals suffer[ing]
the same common-law injury (say, a widespread mass tort), or . . . large numbers of voters
suffer[ing] interference with voting rights conferred by law," ibid.
The exemplified injuries are widely shared, to be sure, but each individual suffers a
particularized and differentiated harm. One tort victim suffers a burnt leg,
another a burnt arm-or even if both suffer burnt arms they are different arms. One voter
suffers the deprivation of his franchise, another the deprivation of
hers. With the generalized grievance, on the other hand, the injury or deprivation is not
only widely shared but it is undifferentiated. The harm caused to Mr.
Richardson by the alleged disregard of the Statement-of-Accounts Clause was precisely the
same as the harm caused to everyone else: unavailability of a
description of CIA expenditures. Just as the (more indirect) harm caused to Mr. Akins by
the allegedly unlawful failure to enforce FECA is precisely the same
as the harm caused to everyone else: unavailability of a description of AIPAC's
activities.
The Constitution's line of demarcation between the Executive power and the judicial power
presupposes a common understanding of the type of interest
needed to sustain a "case or controversy" against the Executive in the courts. A
system in which the citizenry at large could sue to compel Executive
compliance with the law would be a system in which the courts, rather than of the
President, are given the primary responsibility to "take Care that the Laws
be faithfully executed," Art. II, §3. We do not havesuch a system because the common
understanding of the interest necessary to sustain suit has included the
requirement, affirmed in Richardson, that the complained-of injury be particularized and
differentiated, rather than common to all the electorate. When the
Executive can be directed by the courts, at the instance of any voter, to remedy a
deprivation which affects the entire electorate in precisely the same way-and
particularly when that deprivation (here, the unavailability of information) is one
inseverable part of a larger enforcement scheme-there has occurred a shift of
political responsibility to a branch designed not to protect the public at large but to
protect individual rights. "To permit Congress to convert the
undifferentiated public interest in executive officers' compliance with the law into an
'individual right' vindicable in the courts is to permit Congress to transfer
from the President to the courts the Chief Executive's most important constitutional duty.
. . ." Lujan, 504 U. S., at 577. If today's decision is correct, it is
within the power of Congress to authorize any interested person to manage (through the
courts) the Executive's enforcement of any law that includes a
requirement for the filing and public availability of a piece of paper. This is not the
system we have had, and is not the system we should desire.
* * *
Because this statute should not be interpreted to confer upon the entire electorate the
power to invoke judicial direction of prosecutions, and because if it is so
interpreted the statute unconstitutionally transfers from the Executive to the courts the
responsibility to "take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed," Art. II,
§3, I respectfully dissent.
____________________
* That holding was inescapable since, as the Court made clear in another case handed down
the same day, "the Flast nexus test is not applicable where the
taxing and spending power is not challenged" (as in Richardson it was not).
Schlesinger v. Reservists Comm. to Stop the War, 418 U. S. 208, 225, n. 15
(1974).
Copyright © 1998 by The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc., Washington D.C.