Financing of Presidential Election Campaigns

Financing of Presidential Election Campaigns

Financing of Presidential Election Campaigns

In Legislation

Financing of Presidential Election Campaigns in the U.S. Code: Title 26, Subtitle H

The current, permanent, in-force federal laws regulating financing of presidential election campaigns are compiled in the United States Code under Title 26, Subtitle H. It constitutes “prima facie” evidence of statutes relating to Taxes (including financing of presidential election campaigns) of the United States. The reader can further narrow his/her legal research of the general topic (in this case, Presidential Campaign Financing of the US Code, including financing of presidential election campaigns) by chapter and subchapter.

Resources

See also

Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act; Buckley v. Valeo; Federal Election Campaign Act; McConnell v. Federal Election Commission

Further Readings

Austin, R.; Tjernström, M. (Eds.). (2003). Funding of political parties and election campaigns. Stockholm: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance.
Corrado, A.; Mann, T. E.; Ortiz, D.; Potter, T. (2005). The new campaign finance sourcebook. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.
Gunlicks, A. (Ed.). (1993). Campaign and party finance in North America and Western Europe. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Hayward, A. Rethinking campaign finance prohibitions. Engage, 6, (2005). 62-69.
Jones, C. A.; Tedesco, J.; Chanslor, M. (1999). Political television in evolving European democracies: Political, media, and legal system issues. In Kaid, L. (Ed.), Television and politics in evolving European democracies (pp. 11-32). Comstock, NY: Nova Science.
Smith, B. A. (2003). Unfree speech: The folly of campaign finance reform. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.


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