McCutcheon v. FEC
McCutcheon rose to national prominence when he filed a lawsuit against the
Federal Election Commission (FEC) in 2012. McCutcheon specifically challenged the FEC's “aggregate contribution limits,” which had imposed a cap on contributions an individual could make over a two-year period to national parties, federal candidates, and PACs related to presidential, Senate, and House races. With the help of campaign finance expert Dan Backer, other attorneys, and the
Republican National Committee, McCutcheon's case rose to the Supreme Court. In 2014, the Court ruled in McCutcheon's favor by a 5-4 margin, claiming the FEC's aggregate contribution limits violated his First Amendment rights.
Politico described the outcome as “McCutcheon's victory lap,” calling him the “new face of money in politics.” In 2014, McCutcheon published a book, titled
Outsider Inside the Supreme Court: A Decisive First Amendment Battle, about his Supreme Court case. He also worked with legal scholar Ron Collins on his 2014 book,
When Money Speaks: The McCutcheon Decision, Campaign Finance Laws, and the First Amendment, which includes interviews with McCutcheon. == Political activity ==