How Citizens United Put Democracy on the Auction Block
What the Court called free speech helped create a system where money speaks first and citizens speak second.
Citizens United and the Democracy Money Bought
In theory, democracy is supposed to give every citizen a voice. In practice, Citizens United helped create a system where some voices come with a multimillion-dollar amplifier. The 2010 Supreme Court ruling was framed as a defense of free speech, but it most effectively protected wealthy interests' ability to spend extraordinary sums to shape elections from the outside.
For ordinary Americans, that shift has not been abstract. It has meant living in a political system where money talks louder than need, where donor-funded groups can saturate the public square while regular voters are left hoping their ballot can compete with somebody else’s fortune. To understand why so many people feel democracy no longer works for them, you have to understand what Citizens United was, how it changed the system, and why the damage is still unfolding.
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What Citizens United Actually Was
Before getting into the damage, one point matters most. Citizens United was not a law passed by Congress. It was a Supreme Court ruling. The decision came down on January 21, 2010, in a case brought by a conservative nonprofit called Citizens United against the Federal Election Commission. The group wanted to air and promote a film attacking Hillary Clinton during the 2008 presidential primary season, and the legal fight centered on whether federal campaign-finance law could block such corporate-funded electioneering communications.
How did we get here? See our recent reporting here:
A lot of people talk about Citizens United as if it were the moment Congress opened the floodgates. It was not. The Supreme Court struck down key limits that had restricted corporations from spending general treasury funds on certain political messages close to elections. The Court also left disclosure and disclaimer requirements in place and did not disturb the ban on direct corporate contributions.
In plain English, the Court said corporations and unions could spend money on political advocacy on their own, so long as that spending was considered independent rather than a direct contribution to a candidate. The FEC defines an independent expenditure as spending that expressly supports or opposes a candidate and is not coordinated with that candidate, campaign, or party, and says those expenditures are not subject to amount limits.
That distinction is the hinge of the whole story. The ruling did not say a corporation could hand a candidate an unlimited donation. It removed major restrictions on outside political spending, and that change reshaped the system voters have been living under ever since.
How It Changed the Rules
The easiest way to understand Citizens United is to focus on one distinction: direct contributions versus independent spending. Federal law still limits how much money people can give directly to a candidate’s campaign. However, outside groups can spend unlimited sums on their own if the spending remains legally separate from the campaign.
That is where the Court changed the system. In 2010, the Supreme Court ruled that the government could not bar corporations and unions from using general treasury funds for independent political expenditures and certain electioneering communications. If the spending was legally “independent,” the Court said the First Amendment protected it.
On paper, that sounds technical. In practice, it transformed the scale of outside political influence. The law kept insisting there was a line between a campaign and the groups spending money to help it. Yet once unlimited outside spending became protected, that supposedly separate lane became one of the most powerful forces in modern politics. The result was not just more speech. It was a more purchasable reach, more repetition, and more ability for wealthy interests to shape what voters see and hear before they ever cast a ballot.
How That Turned Into the Super PAC and Dark Money Era
The immediate consequence of Citizens United was not simply more money in politics. It was a new legal infrastructure for moving that money. Brennan Center analysis says the role of wealthy donors, corporations, and special interests ballooned after Citizens United and related rulings, helping create the modern super PAC era.
That is why Citizens United matters even to readers who have never read a court opinion. It helped create the political world they already recognize: elections flooded with outside ads, donor-funded groups operating around candidates, and enormous sums poured in from the outside as long as the spending is labeled “independent.” On paper, that word sounds like a safeguard. In practice, it became the channel through which big money could move on a much larger scale.
Then there is dark money, which made the system even less transparent. The Brennan Center reported that dark money groups, nonprofits, and shell companies poured more than $1.9 billion into the 2024 federal election cycle, calling it the most secretive federal cycle since Citizens United.
Secrecy weakens accountability. A voter can judge a message differently if they know who paid for it, but when enormous sums move through layers of outside groups, the public is often asked to absorb political influence without clearly seeing where it came from. The problem is no longer just that wealthy interests have a louder voice. It is that they can often obscure the source of that voice while using it to shape elections on an industrial scale.
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Who Benefited and Who Did Not
The people who benefited most from Citizens United were not ordinary voters. They were the people and institutions that already had what politics rewards most: money, networks, and access. The ruling let corporations and unions spend unlimited sums independently, and the broader post-Citizens United framework gave wealthy donors and major outside organizations far more room to shape campaigns from the outside.
Regular citizens did not lose the right to vote, donate, volunteer, or organize. What they lost was anything resembling balance. A teacher, warehouse worker, retiree, or single parent may have one vote and a few dollars to spare. A billionaire or donor network can finance a flood of ads, bankroll outside groups, and shape the political conversation at a scale ordinary people cannot touch. That is the core democratic injury. Equal citizenship survives in theory while practical influence concentrates upward.
The same pattern shows up in dark money. When billions can move through outside groups without full donor disclosure, the people best positioned to benefit are those who can afford to spend at scale while remaining harder to trace. The public, by contrast, is left trying to judge campaigns and narratives without fully seeing who is paying to shape them.
The division is not hard to understand. The winners are the people who can convert wealth into political reach. The losers are ordinary Americans who are told they still have an equal political voice, even as they live in a system where some actors can spend fortunes amplifying their own.
What This Means for the Average American
For the average American, the damage of Citizens United is not just more campaign ads or uglier mailers. The more serious damage is that it helped make the government even more responsive to the people with the most money and less responsive to the people living with the consequences. Wealthy donors, corporations, unions, and outside groups can keep pouring huge sums into the political system, election after election.
Political money does not just buy airtime. It buys reach, repetition, pressure, access, and fear. It helps decide which issues dominate a campaign, which candidates get protected, which attacks get amplified, and which ideas become politically dangerous to oppose. The Brennan Center says Citizens United ushered in massive increases in outside political spending and further tilted influence toward wealthy donors and corporations.
For ordinary people, that shows up where politics hits daily life: wages, health care, taxes, housing, labor rights, consumer protections, and environmental enforcement. Political scientists Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page found that economic elites and business-oriented organized interests have substantial independent influence on U.S. policy, while average citizens have little or no independent influence. That study is broader than Citizens United itself, but it helps explain why a money-heavy system feels so distant from daily needs.
That is the kitchen-table consequence of Citizens United. People still get a vote. What they increasingly do not get is anything close to an equal say in the machinery that shapes what government does after the election is over.
The Democratic Damage
The deepest harm of Citizens United is not just that it made campaigns more expensive or more aggressive. The deeper harm is that it pushed American democracy further away from political equality and closer to a system in which wealth functions as a second, louder form of citizenship. The ruling removed major restrictions on outside political spending by corporations and unions, and the legal structure that followed normalized an unlimited world of outside spending.
Democracy is supposed to mean more than the formal right to cast a ballot. It is supposed to mean that citizens have a meaningful chance to influence the system they live under. However, when some individuals and organizations can spend vast sums to shape campaigns, messages, and public perception, equality thins out in practice, even if it survives on paper. Gilens and Page’s research helps explain why a money-saturated political system leaves so many Americans feeling unheard.
The secrecy problem makes that injury worse. The Brennan Center reported that dark money groups, nonprofits, and shell companies poured nearly $2 billion into the 2024 federal election cycle, calling it the most secretive federal cycle since Citizens United. When the public cannot fully see who is funding major influence campaigns, accountability weakens and trust thins.
That is why Citizens United did more than alter campaign-finance doctrine. It helped deepen a democratic imbalance many Americans already feel in their bones: the sense that government listens better to wealth than to need, and that the people living with the consequences have less power than the people paying to shape the debate.
Why Citizens United Is A Problem
Citizens United is not just a controversial case from over a decade ago sitting quietly in a law-school textbook. It remains controlling law, and the system it helped build is still shaping federal elections. The FEC still states that independent expenditures are not subject to spending limits, and the Brennan Center reports that dark money spending reached a record level in the 2024 cycle.
The damage is not historical. It is current. Record dark money spending is not the footprint of a dead ruling. It is the footprint of a system still shaping who gets heard, who gets protected, and who gets drowned out.
A Democracy Where Money Speaks First
Citizens United was sold as a ruling about free speech. What it helped build, in practice, was a political system in which the people with the most money gained a far greater ability to shape elections, public debate, and, ultimately, public policy. The Supreme Court removed major restrictions on outside political spending by corporations and unions, and that decision helped open the modern era of unlimited outside spending.
That would be troubling enough if the effects were only theoretical. They are not. Dark money in the 2024 federal election cycle reached a record amount, and the Brennan Center says the decision further tilted political influence toward wealthy donors and corporations.
For ordinary Americans, that means living under a democracy that still promises equal citizenship while operating through profoundly unequal influence. People still get one vote, but some people also get a financial megaphone powerful enough to shape what everyone else sees, hears, and fears during an election. Over time, that does not just distort campaigns. It distorts the relationship between the public and the government that is supposed to answer to it.
That is why Citizens United is dangerous. It was not just a legal ruling. It was a structural shift in whose voice carries the farthest in American politics. And the more that the system rewards money over people, the more democracy starts to feel less like self-government and more like a marketplace where influence is sold to the highest bidder.
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Sources:
Brennan Center for Justice. “Citizens United, Explained.” Last modified January 29, 2025.
Brennan Center for Justice. “Dark Money Hit a Record High of $1.9 Billion in 2024 Federal Races.” May 7, 2025.
Federal Election Commission. “Citizens United v. FEC.” Accessed April 18, 2026
Federal Election Commission. “SpeechNow.org v. FEC.” Accessed April 18, 2026.
Federal Election Commission. “Understanding Independent Expenditures.” Accessed April 18, 2026.
Supreme Court of the United States. Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S. 310 (2010). January 21, 2010.
Gilens, Martin, and Benjamin I. Page. “Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens.” Perspectives on Politics 12, no. 3 (2014): 564–81.







This was one of the most political, egregious SCOTUS rulings in our country's history. The right side of this court is not comprised of "judges" as much as it is political operatives, beginning right at the top. John Roberts was, in 2000, down in Florida "overseeing" the election and "counting" votes (meaning throwing black and blown votes into the Bay of Biscayne). There is no way our founding fathers meant for money, or corporations to actually have a vote! This gives corporations and wealthy individuals two separate vehicles for influence, i.e., their personal support and financial assistance as well as their corporate support and financial backing. This is clearly a violation of the Constitution. There are cretins that need to be removed from the court and disbarred.
Unfortunately, 'CITIZENS UNITED' is NOT a suddenly new 21st century concept. Historically our country was, from the beginning, run by the wealthy. With the somewhat exception of Benjamin Franklin the FOUNDING FATHERS were all wealthy. The common person had very little say in our government. Black men had NO say; women had 'say' only via their husband. A working man had 'say' only as much as he befriended a wealthy neighbor either by working for or selling to the elite.