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Citizens United v. FEC

Citizens United v. FEC was a Supreme Court case surrounding campaign finance and corporate involvement in politics. The Federal Election Commission was created in 1971 and greatly regulated the amount of campaign finance political candidates were able to receive. By 2002, the Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act (McCain-Feingold Act) restricted organizations from financing issue-based advertisements on behalf of candidates. This Citizens United v FEC summary explains how Citizens United released a million dollar ad against Hillary Clinton. Before the film aired, Citizens United challenged the McCain-Feingold Act, stating that money was a form of Free Speech, which is protected by the First Amendment. The Supreme Court ruled the McCain-Feingold Act as unconstitutional, but stated that corporations still cannot give money directly to political candidates.

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Five Year License
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A license for five years on a non-exclusive, worldwide-basis for digital educational use only in a single product or service. Does not include promotional or broadcast / VOD usage. Contact us for custom licensing options. licensing@makematic.com
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Extended Ten Year License
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An extended license for ten years on a non-exclusive, worldwide-basis for digital educational use only in a single product or service. Does not include promotional or broadcast / VOD usage. Contact us for custom licensing options. licensing@makematic.com
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Production Year

2024

Age Groups

  1. 11-14 year old
  2. 14-18 year old

Subtitles

SRT


 
 
 
 
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