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Published on March 15, 2004
by Stephen Ansolabehere, James M. Snyder Jr., and Michiko Ueda
File Under: Contributions & Limits, Political Parties
Election Law Journal, Spring 2004
This paper uses event study methodology to measure whether firms that gave soft money to political parties received excessively high rates of returns from their contributions. [Authors] measure the excess returns of firms that gave large amounts of soft money and firms that gave no soft money, and changes in those excess returns around five key events in the approval of the Bi-Partisan Campaign Reform Act: the House of Representatives passes BCRA, the Senate passes BCRA, the President announces his intention to sign BCRA, the Supreme Court hears oral arguments, and the Court announced its decision to uphold the Act. These actions, especially the Court’s decision, involved considerable uncertainty, and in some cases went against the conventional wisdom. Other studies have found that stock market prices do respond to surprising political events, such as the death of the powerful Senator Henry Jackson of Washington. [Authors] find that the five events surrounding the BCRA had no noticeable effect on the valuation of Fortune 500 firms that gave large amounts of soft money, relative to the firms that gave no soft money.