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However, as today's editorial points out, this has not come to pass:
American elections have since been flooded with corporate money. And the court’s reasoning is proving to be wrong: Shareholders of most American companies can’t determine whether corporate campaign spending is in their best interest because they haven’t been told how the companies are spending in political races.
The New York Times urges the Securities and Exchange Commission to pass a rule requiring the disclosure of political expenditures to shareholders, citing a petitionlast week by a group of legal scholars calling for greater transparency in corporate political contributions.
For more on the pro-corporate Roberts Court, its decisions, and its upcoming cases, see our Corporate Court resource page.