The Supreme Court removed the federal limit on how much a political party may spend in direct coordination with its own candidates on Tuesday 30 June, ruling 6-3 that the caps violate the First Amendment. The decision in NRSC v. FEC takes effect at once and runs for the four months of campaign that remain in the 2026 cycle 1. Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote for the majority; Justices Kagan, Sotomayor and Jackson dissented. We had flagged the case as the term's likeliest rewrite of campaign-finance rules when the Court agreed to hear it .
The caps had held party coordinated spending with a named candidate to between $65,300 and $130,600 in a House race, and up to $4m in a Senate race, this cycle. They formed one wall of the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA), the post-Watergate framework Congress built in the 1970s to curb the flow of money into campaigns. The ruling tears that wall down at once.
Tim Scott, who chairs the Republican Senate committee, called the decision 'a decisive First Amendment victory'; the Democratic chairs Kirsten Gillibrand and Ken Martin called it 'a win for billionaire donors' 2. The case turned on speech doctrine that would have split this way in any term, so reading partisan intent into the vote overstates it. Freed from the caps, party committees can now pour unlimited coordinated money into their candidates' races, and Republicans hold more cash to spend at every committee tier. Democratic lawyers had fought the caps even while their committees posted record fundraising this spring , yet Democrats meet the new rules from the weaker cash position.
The deregulation follows a five-decade line the Court has drawn through campaign-finance law, from Buckley v. Valeo in 1976 to Citizens United in 2010. Where Citizens United freed outside groups to spend, NRSC v. FEC frees the parties themselves to spend hand-in-hand with their candidates, pulling money back toward the committees at the centre of each campaign.
