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Campaign Finance 101

This training session provides an overview of campaign finance laws and resources, clarifies clerk responsibilities, discusses political committees and their registration, contribution limitations, disclosure requirements, reporting contributions and expenditures, termination of committees, and enforcement of report filing and other violations. Please note that this summary does not cover all details and should not be considered as legal advice.

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Campaign Finance 101

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  1. Campaign Finance 101 AMCA Election Training July 2019 For City and Town Clerks Presented by Cris Meyer City Attorney, City of Phoenix

  2. OVERVIEW • The Law and Resources • Overview of All Clerk Responsibilities • Political Committees • Registration of Political Committees • Contribution Limitations

  3. OVERVIEW • Disclosure in Campaign Literature & Advertisements • Reporting Contributions & Expenditures • Termination of Committees • Enforcement of Report Filing • Enforcement of Other Violations

  4. CONTENT • Duties and issues for local filing officers • NOT details on contribution & expenditures • Offered in SOS Workshops for candidates • Only a Summary – does not cover all details • Always refer to statutes • Not legal advice

  5. THE LAW – Legal Counsel • Important to consult with your attorney • Campaign Finance regulation increasingly complex • Law and duties unclear in many cases – conflicts exist • Legal opinions differ – know your attorney’s position • Responding to Questions • Interpreting unclear law is often legal advice • Filing officer role – provide information, not advice • An opponent or public could challenge your advice • Appropriate response - "You need to discuss that with your attorney or campaign advisor."

  6. THE LAW • Arizona Constitution Art VII, Sec 16 • Arizona Revised Statutes (ARS) Title 16, Chapter 6 • Election Procedures Manual (SOS) Chapter 8 – Campaign Finance

  7. THE LAW Arizona Constitution, Art VII, Sec 16 “The legislature, at its first session, shall enact a law providingfor a general publicity, before and after election, ofall campaign contributions to, and expenditures of campaign committees and candidates for public office.”

  8. THE LAW ARS - Title 16, Chapter 6 • Campaign Finance (Article I) • §16-901 through §16-938 • Clean Elections (Article II) • §16-940 through §16-961 • Not applicable to cities and towns

  9. THE LAW – New Organization Arizona Revised Statutes - Title 16, Chapter 6 Campaign Finance (Article I) • Article 1 – Definitions, §16-901 • Art. 1.1 – Establishment of Committee, §16-905 – 908 • Art. 1.2 – Contributions, §16-911 – 917 • Art. 1.3 – Expenditures, §16-921 – 922 • Art. 1.4 – Reporting and Disclosure, §16-925 – 928 • Art. 1.5 – Biennial Financial Adjustments, §16-931 • Art. 1.6 – Committee Termination, §16-933 – 934 • Art. 1.7 – Enforcement, §16-937 – 938

  10. THE LAW - Resources • Arizona Election Law Pamphlet • Gray Book (Oct 2018), 2019 Supplement (Oct) • Constitution • Title 16 (Elections and Campaign Finance) • Title 19 (Initiative, Referendum & Recall) • Title 38 (Public Officers) (Filing, Resignation, Vacancy, Financial Disclosure) • TIP • In Book, line thru sections updated in Supplement

  11. THE LAW - Resources • Attorney General Opinions (Advisory, not Law) • Secretary of State (materials online) • Election Procedures Manual (Provisions are Law) • Must be updated by Dec 31 of odd years (New 2019) • Campaign Finance Handbook (2018) • League of Cities and Towns • Municipal Election Manual (MEM) • Campaign Finance Reports Handbook • League General Counsel Opinions

  12. LAW – Purpose & Limits • Purpose of Regulation • Public disclosure of contributions & expenditures • Protect public contributions from misuse • Limit big money influence in candidate races (declining) • Limitation on Regulation • First Amendment (political speech) • U.S. Supreme Court decisions – Striking restrictions on spending, upholding disclosure – Exploring when anonymity / non-disclosure is necessary • Arizona has followed Court on spending, but has also reduced disclosure (not required by Court decisions)

  13. LAW - Enforcement • Public Disclosure of Information • Public, candidates & media identify issues • Voters enforce by casting ballots • Filing Officers Enforce Report Filing • Ensures that public disclosure occurs • Filing Officers Enforce Other CF Violations • Determine “reasonable cause” • Increased Clerk Role – sole authority to initiate! • Complaints being used as campaign tactic

  14. Summary of Clerk Responsibilities • “Filing Officer” for campaign finance documents for your city or town • Keep old documents for retention period! ($500 TES) • Assign Committee ID numbers & keep Log • Must provide Notice of CF laws and Statement of Org to applicants for Initiative, Referendum & Recall petitions (also provide Title 19 Pamphlet)

  15. Summary of Clerk Responsibilities • Receive Campaign Finance Documents • Campaign Financing & Reporting Statement • Statement they have read campaign finance law • Candidates – with nomination paper (part of form) • Committee officers – with registration (in SO form) • Committee Registration Documents • Statement of Org only (No $500 Exemption anymore) • Termination Statements • Periodic Reports • Contribution & Expenditure Reports • If No Activity – report! (Summary page, check box)

  16. Summary of Clerk Responsibilities • Electronic Filing • Filing officer must provide e-filing option • Online database not required (yet) • May comply by using fillable pdf forms filed by email or upload • May comply by opting into State system when available to cities and towns (2021?)

  17. Summary of Clerk Responsibilities • Post CF Documents on Internet • Who must Post documents on Internet? • ALL filing officers (before 2016, only if Pop over 2500) • What Documents must be Posted? • ALL campaign finance statements and reports • Registrations, Terminations, Reports • Posting NOT Required for other documents • Financial Disclosure Statements (Yet) (Some Post) • Where to Post • On city / town web site (all have)

  18. Summary of Clerk Responsibilities • Enforce Campaign Finance Reporting • Determine Failure to File (Report filed on time?) • Send Failure to File Notices (By email within 5 days) • Refer to attorney if not filed within 30 days • Enforcement of other CF Violations • Written complaint from 3rd party now required • Only Filing Officer authorized to initiate investigations • If determine “reasonable cause” to believe someone is violating CF law, must notify attorney • City / Town Attorney is Enforcement Officer • Attorney issues Notices of Violation

  19. Responsibility Issues • Compliance is ultimately the responsibility of the candidates & committees • Law & scope of duties unclear • Interpretation and opinions differ • Some actions not required, but are appropriate for the Clerk role and further the purposes of the law • Example: Sending reminders of filing deadlines

  20. Political Committees • Definition – “Committee” means: • A Candidate Committee • A Political Action Committee (PAC) • A Political Party • Must register as a committee if meet the requirements in §16-905

  21. Political Committees Candidate Committee - Cities and Towns New 2018 – HB 2078 • A candidate must register a committee IF: • The candidate receives contributions or makes expenditures (in any combination) of at least $500 in connection with that candidacy • Any combination: Receive $250 and spend it! • $500 does NOT increase $100 in Jan odd years • Candidate limited to 1 committee for same office during an election cycle

  22. Political Committees Candidate Committees (Except cities/towns) • Candidate must register a committee IF: • The candidate receives contributions or makes expenditures (in any combination) of at least $1200 in connection with that candidacy • “Any combination” - If receive $600 and spend it! • $1200 increases $100 in Jan odd years (2019) • Candidate limited to 1 committee for same office during an election cycle

  23. Political Committees Political Action Committee (PAC) • Applies to ALL jurisdictions – including cities/towns • An entity must register as a PAC IF: • Entity is organized for the “primary purpose” of influencing an election; AND • Entity knowingly receives contributions or makes expenditures (in any combination) of at least $1200 in connection with any election during a calendar year • “Any combination” of spend / receive $1200 • If receive $600 and spend it – required to register • $1200 threshold increases $100 in Jan odd years • Increased from $1100 to $1200 in Jan 2019

  24. Political Committees Political Action Committee (Cont) • “Primary purpose” is to influence elections • Excludes many entities - Chamber, Trade Assn • §16-905(D) provides presumption of when it IS • §16-905(E) lists when it is NOT (501 Charitable orgs) • During a “calendar year” (not an election cycle) • Entity can receive / spend $1199 annually even if its primary purpose is influencing elections, and not have to register or report ($2398 during an election cycle) • Amount low for state, significant in smaller jurisdictions

  25. Political Committees Political Action Committee (Cont) • Separate Segregated Fund • Corporations & Labor orgs cannot contribute to candidates • May establish a fund to receive voluntary contributions from employees to use for contributions to candidates • A Fund must register as a PAC • Permitted contributions by Corp & Labor Org • Contributions / expenditures on ballot measures • Independent Expenditures in candidate elections • Not required to “register” or provide notices of expenditures • Instead, IE activity reported on a schedule of a CF report

  26. Political Committees? • Specific Situations . . . is it a committee? • A candidate? • Individual (not a candidate) acting alone? • Corporation that makes independent expenditures supporting a candidate? • Business / organization involved in a ballot measure? • A person or entity that files an argument on a ballot measure & pays deposit?

  27. Political Committees? • Specific Situations . . . is it a committee? • Business or organization whose primary purpose is influencing elections that spends more than $1200 to support or oppose a ballot measure? • A person or entity that files an argument on a ballot measure & pays deposit? • A public utility spending its own money supporting its franchise measure?

  28. Political Committees - Definition • When to raise question about committee. . . • Inquiry about candidacy (always upon 1st contact) • Inquiry about making contributions to candidates • Inquiry about initiative, referendum or recall (1st contact) • Upon filing an argument on a ballot measure • Not for filing argument, but may be other activities • Inquiry about making contributions to influence a ballot measure

  29. Political Committee Registration When to Register? • Within 10 days of qualifying as a committee • Not required before engaging in activity • Accepting contributions or making expenditures • Distributing campaign literature or ads • Circulating petitions (Not required by CF law) • But . . . signatures on Initiative and Referendum petitions invalid

  30. Political Committee Registration How to Register? • File Statement of Organization with Filing Officer • Stmt Org is now the ONLY registration document • No $500 Threshold Exemption Statement • Upon registration, PAC may engage in any lawful activity • Not required to establish separate committees for different activities (e.g. circulate petition, support candidates) • Not required to identify activities on registration statement • Note: A person or entity must track all activity and report on its first report after qualifying as a committee

  31. Candidate Committees • Candidate may be chairman and treasurer • Committee name must include candidate name (first or last) • Committee name must include office if candidate has committees for multiple offices • Candidate may have only one committee for same office during same election cycle • No longer required to designate a committee for each election (can only have one) • No Exploratory Committees anymore

  32. Other Political Committees • Chairman & Treasurer must be different people • Committee name must identify the "sponsoring" organization, if any • Committees registered outside of AZ • Unclear if / how register in AZ (old provision repealed) • Probably can register in AZ • No statute regarding using money received before register in AZ so probably can

  33. Ballot Measure Committees • Most special requirements for committees acting to support or oppose a ballot measure repealed • Committee name not required to include: • The petition serial number (or Prop number) • Whether committee supports or opposes the measure • Committees can spend on any measures • Committees now must report activity on ballot measures in campaign finance reports • Report must identify the ballot measure to which each transaction relates

  34. Recall Committees • Is a Recall committee a ballot measure committee? • Statue unclear, but AG Opinion advises No • Recall is not a ballot measure (results in a candidate election, not a Prop on a ballot) • A recall committee is a committee to influence a candidate election • Implications • Contribution limitations would apply to recall committees if not a ballot measure committee • Corporate money would also be prohibited

  35. Standing Political Committees • Eligibility to be “Standing” Committee • Active in more than 1 jurisdiction (for “1 yr” repealed) • File a Statement of Organization with the SOS and a copy in each jurisdiction in which the committee is active • Registration Statement no longer has to be notarized • Only SOS assigns ID number • Also needs to file copy of amended Stmt of Org in each jurisdiction • Files Reports only with the Secretary of State • Standing Committees cannot sponsor candidate or other committees

  36. Penalty for Failure to Register Civil Penalty • Presumptive penalty is the amount received or expended while not registered • Penalty can be up to 3 times the amount received or expended while not registered if there are special circumstances • Special circumstances include the severity, extent and willfulness of the violation

  37. Penalty for Failure to Register Initiative & Referendum petition sigs invalid? • Title 16 • Committee registration only required if meet requirements (Primary purpose, exceed $1200) • Title 19 • Must register when file application for petition • Filing officer cannot accept application without a Stmt Org • Signatures invalid if obtained before committee registered • Consult with your attorney • Safest for proponent to register to circulate a petition • Title 19 (more specific provision) probably trumps Title 16

  38. Penalty for Failure to Register Recall petition signatures invalid? • Title 16 • Only required to register a committee if meet the requirements in Title 16 (primary purpose, exceed $1200 in calendar year) • Title 19 • Recall different than Init and Ref - §19-202 (in 2016) • Applicant NOT required to file Stmt Org with application • Filing officer can accept petition without registration • No provision that Recall signatures are invalid if obtained before committee registered

  39. Penalty for Failure to Register Nomination petition signatures? • No statute invalidating nomination signatures obtained before registration (only in Title 19 for Init & Ref) • Filing officers have no authority to invalidate signatures • Candidate is not always required to register a committee • Registration required if candidate exceeds $500 ($1200) • Superior Court decisions • Since 2006, Superior Courts have invalidated signatures on nomination petitions if committee was not registered • No appellate court decision affirming for legal precedent • Consult with your attorney – probably let Court invalidate

  40. Statement of Organization Contents • Type committee, name, address, website, phone • Email address (must agree to receive all notices) • Candidate: Name (first or last) and office sought • PAC: Sponsor name or any common nickname • Sponsor contact information, including email • Officers names, address, occupation, employer • Statement by Chairman and Treasurer that have read all CF laws (part of form) • Designation of financial institutions to hold funds

  41. Statement of Organization • Clerk issues ID number • Notarization not required (even for standing) • All filing officers must now post copy on Internet • Amendments to SO • Required for any change in required information • Must file within 10 days after change (previously 5) • No specified penalty in law for failure to amend timely

  42. Treasurer Duties • Principal officer – has virtually all duties • Authorize all expenditures, keep records • Track details of all contributions and expenditures • File Reports • Use best efforts to obtain donor info • At least 1 documented written or oral attempt • Preserve committee records - 2 years • Maintain separate segregated bank accounts • Personal money, Recall, Corporate / Other contributions • Must produce records required to be kept • At request of filing or enforcement officer

  43. Contribution Limits • Limits apply to contributions to Candidates ONLY! • And possibly Recall committees (per AG Opinion) • Current Limit: $6,450 per election cycle • Limits increase $100 in Jan of odd years • Limits apply to an election cycle, not the term office • In 2015 and 2016, applied to term office (4 year cycle) • Cycle is two years – General (2nd) to General (2nd) • Cycle includes the primary and general elections • There are two election cycles in a four-year term • Candidates can accept up to the limit every two years

  44. Contribution Limits “Election Cycle” - §16-901(18) • Regular scheduled elections • Two year period between General (2nd) Elections • Start and end dates aligned with CF reporting periods • Ends last day of calendar quarter of the election (Nov or May) • Begins first day of next calendar quarter (Jan 1 or July 1) • For Fall elections, ends Dec 31 after election, next begins Jan 1 • For Spring, ends June 30 after May election, next begins July 1

  45. Contribution Limits “Election Cycle” - §16-901(18) • For Special Election • From date election called to last day of calendar quarter when election held • For Recall Election • From when issue serial # to the end of the “Recall” (Certify insufficient, resignation, or election date) • Contributions for recall can’t be used for other elections

  46. Contribution Limits No Limits on: Cumulative total amount an individual can give to all candidates Total a candidate can receive from PACs Amount candidate’s own money used Foreign Contributions prohibited (Fed law) Includes anything of value (info about opponent)

  47. Contribution Limits Candidate Committees • No limit on amount candidate committees can transfer to other committees for same candidate • Exception – City / town candidates can’t transfer to committee for a state office • Transfers are contributions – individual donor limits apply • Candidate committees can contribute to other political committees (other than candidate) • Candidate committee can’t give to other candidates • Except – if terminating, can contribute surplus to other candidates

  48. Contribution Limits Candidate Committee Transfers • A candidate committee can transfer money to other committees for the same candidate without limit • Exception: City / town candidate committee can’t transfer to a candidate committee for a state office • City / town candidates can transfer to committee for county office (but then cannot transfer for a state office for 2 years) • Efforts to amend to remove the restriction in 2018 & 2019 unsuccessful

  49. Contribution Limits “Excess” Contributions – CAN Committee • Candidates can’t knowingly accept more than limit • If unknowingly accept an “Excess Contribution” • Must refund excess within 60 days; OR • May reattribute the excess to a different donor if both of the following apply: • The contribution was from an individual; and • The contributor authorizes the committee to reattribute the excess to another individual • The other individual must be a joint account holder on the instrument used to make the contribution

  50. Contribution Limits PAC Contributions • Limit for PAC: $6450 • Limit for Mega PAC (state qualified): $12,900 (2X) • PAC contributions to candidates • Only with money received from individuals, partnerships, political committees or political party • Not with money from corporations, labor org Political Party Contributions • A political party can’t give to non-partisan candidates (only to “nominees” of a party)

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