Twelve other states have at least some kind of aggregate limit on the books. They include Alaska, Connecticut, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, New York, Rhode Island, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming, according to data compiled by the Center for Competitive Politics, a campaign finance organization that filed an amicus brief in support of overturning the federal aggregation limits.

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“If other states do not issue similar statements [to Massachusetts], and any of these state aggregate limits are challenged, it’s highly likely that they would be declared unconstitutional, according to the precedent set by the Court in McCutcheon,” CCP wrote in a memo provided to reporters.

A spokesman for the Connecticut State Elections Enforcement Commission told the CT Mirror it was evaluating whether the ruling could affect the $30,000 aggregate limit on gifts that Nutmeg State residents can contribute. A spokesman for the Maine Commission on Governmental Ethics and Election Practices said it, too, was reviewing Maine’s $25,000 cap on donations. In Maryland, the director of campaign finance and candidacy at the Board of Elections told the Baltimore Sun he was reviewing whether it would affect the state’s $10,000 aggregate limit.

Donald McGahn, a Republican campaign finance attorney at Patton Boggs and a former chairman of the Federal Election Commission, said in an e-mail that the McCutcheon ruling would reverberate through state election laws. State limits on the amounts of money parties can raise, imposed by the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, better known as McCain-Feingold, are likely the next on the judicial chopping block, McGahn said.

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“The McCain-Feingold restrictions on state and local parties are still there, yet the rationale for upholding all those limitations that was offered in McConnell v. FEC is gone,” McGahn said, referring to the 2003 case that upheld most of the McCain-Feingold legislation. “[It’s] only a matter of time before those party restrictions fall.”