For nearly 100 years, Montana law prohibited corporate money in politics‚ until the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision. Soon after Citizens United, the Montana Supreme Court, and then later the U.S. Supreme Court, considered a constitutional challenge to Montana’s law banning corporate political spending in a post-Citizens United challenge. Free Speech For People led a coalition of public interest groups and businesses in the filing of a friend-of-the-court brief before the Montana Supreme Court in defense of the century-old law. The Montana Supreme Court ruled in our favor and upheld the ban. When the challengers appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, we filed a brief there too. Unfortunately, the Court ignored the specific evidence of corruption from corporate political expenditures in Montana, and extended Citizens United to the states. Resources Amicus brief urging the Supreme Court to revisit the Citizens United decision and uphold Montana’s Corrupt Practices Act Press release: Amicus Brief Filed by Free Speech For People and Business Groups Urging the Supreme Court to Reverse Citizens United Press release: Montana Supreme Court Upholds State’s Century-Old Ban on Corporate Money in Elections Amicus brief in defense of Montana’s Corrupt Practices Act Press release: Coalition of Business Groups Joins Free Speech For People in Defense of Montana’s Ban on Corporate Money in Elections Give Us Our Law Back: Montana Fights to Stop Corporate Corruption Statement on the US Supreme Court’s decision striking down Montana’s Corrupt Practices Act Press Release: US Supreme Court Must Carefully Consider Montana’s Corporate Campaign Spending Ban