SENATE BILL No. 207

 

 

February 16, 2005, Introduced by Senators HARDIMAN, STAMAS, GARCIA, OLSHOVE, GOSCHKA, JELINEK and JACOBS and referred to the Committee on Government Operations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     A bill to amend 1976 PA 388, entitled

 

"Michigan campaign finance act,"

 

by amending section 6 (MCL 169.206), as amended by 2003 PA 69, and

 

by adding section 48.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 6. (1) "Expenditure" means a payment, donation, loan, or

 

promise of payment of money or anything of ascertainable monetary

 

value for goods, materials, services, or facilities in assistance

 

of, or in opposition to, the nomination or election of a candidate,

 

or the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot question.

 


Expenditure includes, but is not limited to, any of the following:

 

     (a) A contribution or a transfer of anything of ascertainable

 

monetary value for purposes of influencing the nomination or

 

election of a candidate or the qualification, passage, or defeat of

 

a ballot question.

 

     (b) Except as provided in subsection (2)(f) or (g), an

 

expenditure for voter registration or get-out-the-vote activities

 

made by a person who sponsors or finances the activity or who is

 

identified by name with the activity.

 

     (c) Except as provided in subsection (2)(f) or (g), an

 

expenditure made for poll watchers, challengers, distribution of

 

election day literature, canvassing of voters to get out the vote,

 

or transporting voters to the polls.

 

     (d) Except as provided in subsection (2)(a), (b), or (c), an

 

expenditure made for an automated telephonic communication to an

 

elector regarding a candidate or a ballot question.

 

     (2) Expenditure does not include any of the following:

 

     (a) An expenditure for communication by a person with the

 

person's paid members or shareholders and those individuals who can

 

be solicited for contributions to a separate segregated fund under

 

section 55.

 

     (b) An expenditure for communication on a subject or issue if

 

the communication does not support or oppose a ballot question or

 

candidate by name or clear inference.

 

     (c) An expenditure for the establishment, administration, or

 

solicitation of contributions to a separate segregated fund or

 

independent committee.

 


     (d) An expenditure by a broadcasting station, newspaper,

 

magazine, or other periodical or publication for a news story,

 

commentary, or editorial in support of or opposition to a candidate

 

for elective office or a ballot question in the regular course of

 

publication or broadcasting.

 

     (e) An offer or tender of an expenditure if expressly and

 

unconditionally rejected or returned.

 

     (f) An expenditure for nonpartisan voter registration or

 

nonpartisan get-out-the-vote activities made by an organization

 

that is exempt from federal income tax pursuant to section

 

501(c)(3) of the internal revenue code,  of 1986, 26 U.S.C. 501 26

 

USC 501, or any successor statute.

 

     (g) An expenditure for nonpartisan voter registration or

 

nonpartisan get-out-the-vote activities performed pursuant to

 

chapter XXIII of the Michigan election law, 1954 PA 116, MCL

 

168.491 to 168.524, by the secretary of state and other

 

registration officials who are identified by name with the

 

activity.

 

     (h) An expenditure by a state central committee of a political

 

party or a person controlled by a state central committee of a

 

political party for the construction, purchase, or renovation of 1

 

or more office facilities in Ingham county if the facility is not

 

constructed, purchased, or renovated for the purpose of influencing

 

the election of a candidate in a particular election. Items

 

excluded from the definition of expenditure under this subdivision

 

include expenditures approved in federal election commission

 

advisory opinions 1993-9, 2001-1, and 2001-12 as allowable

 


expenditures under the federal election campaign act of 1971,

 

Public Law 92-225, 2 U.S.C. 431 to 434, 437, 437c to 439a, 439c,

 

441a to 441h, and 442 to 455 2 USC 431 to 455, and regulations

 

promulgated under that act, regardless of whether those advisory

 

opinions have been superseded.

 

     Sec. 48. (1) Except for an automated telephonic communication

 

by or in behalf of an individual acting independently and not as an

 

agent for a candidate or a committee, an automated telephonic

 

communication to an elector that relates to an election, a

 

candidate, or a ballot question shall clearly state the identity of

 

the person paying for the communication. If the communication

 

described in this subsection relates to a candidate and is an

 

independent expenditure not authorized in writing by a candidate's

 

candidate committee, the communication shall clearly state the

 

following disclaimer: "Not authorized by a candidate committee". If

 

the communication described in this subsection relates to a

 

candidate and is not an independent expenditure, but is paid for by

 

a person other than the candidate to whom it is related, the

 

communication shall clearly state the following disclaimer:

 

"Authorized by (name of candidate or name of candidate committee)".

 

     (2) A person that is not a committee that makes a

 

communication described in subsection (1) for a candidate or a

 

committee shall provide all of the following information to the

 

secretary of state:

 

     (a) The identity of the person.

 

     (b) The address and telephone number where the person can be

 

contacted during ordinary business hours.

 


     (c) The name of each candidate or committee for which the

 

person has made a communication to which this subsection applies.

 

     (3) For each month in which a person makes a communication to

 

which subsection (2) applies, the person shall provide the

 

information required by subsection (2) to the secretary of state on

 

or before the fifteenth day of the following month.

 

     (4) The secretary of state shall make the information provided

 

under this section available to the public.

 

     (5) A person who knowingly violates this section is guilty of

 

a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000.00.