INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES/COMMITTEES                                             S.B. 335 & 336:

                                                                                              ANALYSIS AS ENACTED

 

 

 

 

Senate Bills 335 and 336 (as enacted)                            PUBLIC ACTS 119 & 120 of 2017

Sponsor:  Senator Dave Robertson

Senate Committee:  Elections and Government Reform

House Committee:  Elections and Ethics

 

Date Completed:  10-6-17

 

RATIONALE

 

A section of the Michigan Campaign Finance Act, Section 54(1), limits the ability of corporations and labor organizations (as well as certain other entities) to make expenditures or contributions for the election or defeat of candidates. For several decades, this section was the subject of litigation at the State and Federal levels. In a 1990 decision, Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce, the United States Supreme Court addressed a challenge to Section 54(1) and found that the law was constitutional. In 2010, however, in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Austin and decided that Federal limits on corporate independent expenditures were unconstitutional. Subject to certain exceptions, the language in Section 54(1) prohibits a corporation or labor organization from making a "contribution" or "expenditure". (Both terms refer to a payment, gift, donation, or other transfer made for the purpose of influencing the nomination or election of a candidate, the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot question, or the qualification of a new political party, but an expenditure is made for goods, materials, services, or facilities. As discussed below, contributions and expenditures are treated differently under the law and by the courts.) Other provisions of the Act allow a corporation or labor organization to contribute to candidate elections through a separate segregated fund. A corporation or labor organization also may contribute to a ballot question committee and make an independent expenditure for the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot question. (Until recently, "independent expenditure" meant an expenditure that was not made at the direction of, or under the control of, another person and that was not a contribution to a committee.)

 

After Citizens United was decided, the Michigan Chamber of Commerce sought a declaratory ruling from the Secretary of State regarding the proposed establishment of a political action committee, "MCPAC III", that would receive funds from the Chamber and from contributions solicited from people for the purpose of making a contribution to MCPAC III, and that would make independent expenditures. The Secretary of State ruled that this would violate the Act. Subsequently, the Michigan Chamber of Commerce brought an action in the U.S. District Court challenging the Secretary of State's interpretation and application of the Act, and seeking an injunction. The Court granted an injunction, preventing enforcement of the Secretary of State's ruling.

 

In light of these developments, it was suggested that Act should be amended to reflect the Citizens United decision, and that related changes should be made. (The decisions in Citizens United, Austin, Michigan Chamber of Commerce, and a Federal case involving contributions to independent expenditure committees are discussed in the BACKGROUND section below.)

 

CONTENT

 

Senate Bill 335 amended the Michigan Campaign Finance Act to do the following:

 

 --    Permit the creation of independent expenditure committees.


 --    Redefine "independent expenditure".

 --    Allow a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or domestic dependent sovereign to make a contribution to an independent expenditure committee.

 --    Allow a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or domestic dependent sovereign to make an independent expenditure in any amount advocating the election or defeat of a candidate, and provide that the entity will not become a committee unless it solicits or receives contributions in excess of $500 to make the independent expenditure.

 --    Allow an independent expenditure committee to make contributions to another independent expenditure committee or a ballot question committee, in addition to any independent expenditures or other disbursements not prohibited by law.

 --    Prohibit an independent expenditure committee from making a contribution to a political committee, candidate committee, or certain other committees, and prescribe a felony penalty for a person who knowingly violates the prohibition.

 --    Prescribe penalties that will apply if the independent nature of an independent expenditure is defeated.

 --    Provide that the independent nature of an independent expenditure will not be defeated under circumstances in which a person making an independent expenditure related to a candidate or committee has an attorney, vendor, or other agent in common with the candidate or committee, unless certain information is shared.

 --    Provide that the independent nature of an independent expenditure will not be defeated if a candidate or committee solicits contributions on behalf of an independent expenditure committee.

 --    Require an independent expenditure committee to file campaign statements according to a schedule that applies to an independent committee.

 --    Prescribe late filing fees and a misdemeanor penalty for failing to report an independent expenditure as required.

 --    Require a separate segregated fund established by a connected organization to be organized as a political committee or an independent committee, and permit it to contribute to independent expenditure committees.

 --    Prohibit a member of a connected organization from maintaining its own separate segregated fund unless that fund and the fund of the other entity are treated as a single independent committee.

 --    Allow a committee, except as restricted or prohibited by law, to make other lawful disbursements (in addition to expenditures currently permitted), and require a committee's campaign statement to include information about disbursements.

 --    Prohibit a candidate committee from making an expenditure or disbursement except to further the nomination or election of the candidate for which it was formed, except as otherwise provided in the Act.

 

Senate Bill 336 amended the Code of Criminal Procedure to include the felony established by Senate Bill 335 (regarding a prohibited contribution by an independent expenditure committee) in the sentencing guidelines as a class H offense against the public trust with a statutory maximum of three years' imprisonment.

 

Each bill took effect on September 20, 2017.

 

A detailed description of Senate Bill 335 follows.

 

Independent Expenditure Committee

 

The bill added Section 24b to the Act to allow one or more people to create an independent expenditure committee, allow the committee to receive and make contributions, prohibit the committee from making contributions to certain other committees, and establish a penalty for a violation of that prohibition (as described below).

 

The bill defines "independent expenditure committee" as a committee formed under Section 24b for the purpose of making independent expenditures pursuant to the Michigan Campaign Finance Act.

 

Previously, the Act defined "independent expenditure" as an expenditure by a person if the expenditure was not made at the direction of, or under the control of, another person and if the expenditure was not a contribution to a committee. The bill defines the term, instead, as an expenditure by a person if the expenditure is not made in cooperation, consultation, or concert with, or at the request or suggestion of, a ballot question committee or a candidate, a candidate committee or its agents, or a political party committee or its agents and if the expenditure is not a contribution to a committee.

 

(The Act defines "committee" as a person that receives contributions or makes expenditures for the purpose of influencing the nomination or election of a candidate, for the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot question, or for the qualification of a new political party, if contributions received or expenditures made total $500 or more in a calendar year. An individual, other than a candidate, is not a committee.)

 

The bill also amended the definition of "contribution" to exclude an independent expenditure. ("Contribution" refers to a payment, gift, expenditure, or donation of money or anything of ascertainable monetary value, made for the purpose of influencing the nomination or election of a candidate, for the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot question, or for the qualification of a new political party.)

 

The bill requires a person creating an independent expenditure committee to file a statement of organization. An independent expenditure committee must file campaign statements as required by the bill.

 

In addition to any independent expenditures or other disbursements not prohibited by the Act or any other law, the bill permits an independent expenditure committee to make contributions to another independent expenditure committee or to a ballot question committee.

 

The bill also permits an independent expenditure committee to receive contributions from any person, except a person prohibited from making a contribution under 52 USC 30121 (a foreign national). Within 30 days after receiving a contribution from a person prohibited from making one, the committee must return it.

 

The bill provides that a political committee organized for the purpose of making independent expenditures formed before the bill's effective date is considered an independent expenditure committee. The Secretary of State may amend the statement of organization for any committee affected by this provision.

 

The Act provides that a person, other than a committee registered under the Act, making an expenditure to a ballot question committee may not, for that reason, be considered a committee for purposes of the Act unless the person solicits or receives contributions for the purpose of making an expenditure to that ballot question committee. Under the bill, this also applies to a person making an expenditure to an independent expenditure committee. In addition, the person making an expenditure to either a ballot question committee or an independent expenditure committee is not required to file a report for the purposes of the Act, unless the person solicits or receives contributions for the purpose of making an expenditure to that ballot question committee or independent expenditure committee.

 

Prohibited Contribution by Independent Expenditure Committee

 

The bill prohibits an independent expenditure committee from making a contribution to a candidate committee, independent committee, political committee, political party committee, or House or Senate political party caucus committee. A person who knowingly violates or causes a person to violate this prohibition will be guilty of a felony punishable by imprisonment for up to three years or a maximum fine of $5,000, or both.

 

If the person violating the prohibition is not an individual, the person will be subject to the greater of the following:

 

 --    A maximum fine of $20,000.

 --    A fine of up to three times the amount of the improper contribution or expenditure.

 

Improper Independent Expenditure

 

Under the bill, if the independent nature of an independent expenditure is defeated, the resulting contribution will be punishable as follows:

 

 --    For an independent expenditure committee or its agent, the penalty will be the same as provided above for a prohibited contribution by an independent expenditure committee, if the resulting contribution violates that prohibition.

 --    For a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or domestic dependent sovereign, or a person acting for such an entity, the penalty will be what the Act prescribes for a violation of Section 54, if the resulting contribution violates that section.

 --    For any other person, the penalty will be as otherwise provided for a violation of the Act.

 

(A person who knowingly violates Section 54, which is described below, is guilty of a felony punishable by a maximum fine of $5,000 and/or imprisonment for up to three years if the violator is an individual, or a maximum fine of $10,000 if the violator is not an individual.)

 

The bill specifies that the independent nature of an independent expenditure will not be defeated where a person making an independent expenditure related to a ballot question committee, candidate, candidate committee, or political party committee engages an attorney, vendor, or other agent that also is or has been engaged by that candidate or committee, if the attorney, vendor, or other agent does not do any of the following:

 

 --    For the creation, production, or distribution of a communication, convey information to the person making the communication about the campaign plans, projects, activities, or needs of that candidate or committee that he or she also provides services for and that has been obtained from that candidate or committee or its agents.

 --    For the creation, production, or distribution of a communication, use any information about the campaign plans, projects, activities, or needs of that candidate or committee that he or she also provides services for and that has been obtained from that candidate or committee or its agents.

 --    Convey information about the creation, production, or distribution of the communication to the candidate or committee that he or she also provides services for.

 

The independent nature of an independent expenditure also will not be defeated where a candidate, candidate committee, political party committee, or agent of the candidate or committee solicits contributions on behalf of an independent expenditure committee but does not request or suggest action by, or further cooperate, consult, act in concert, or otherwise coordinate in any way with the independent expenditure committee related to any independent expenditure made on behalf of that candidate or committee. This provision will not preserve the independent nature of an independent expenditure if the independent expenditure committee makes independent expenditures during an election cycle related solely to one candidate and that candidate, his or her candidate committee, or his or her agent solicits funds on behalf of the independent expenditure committee.

 

Expenditure/Contribution by Corporation or Labor Organization

 

Section 54(1) of the Act prohibits a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or

domestic dependent sovereign from making a contribution or expenditure, or providing volunteer personal services that are excluded from the definition of a contribution, subject to certain exceptions.

 

One of the exceptions permits a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or domestic dependent sovereign to make a contribution to a ballot question committee and to make an independent expenditure in any amount for the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot question. Under the bill, such an entity also may make a contribution to an independent expenditure committee, and may make an independent expenditure in any amount advocating for the election or defeat of a candidate.

 

The bill provides that a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or domestic dependent sovereign making an independent expenditure does not for that reason become a committee, unless it solicits or receives contributions in excess of $500 for the purpose of making the independent expenditure, but is subject to the independent expenditure reporting requirements.

 

Previously, a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or domestic dependent sovereign that made an independent expenditure was considered a ballot question committee for purposes of the Act. The bill deleted this provision.

 

Campaign Statement Requirements

 

The Act requires the campaign statement of a committee to contain specified information, including certain information about contributions and expenditures. Previously, this information included the cumulative total of expenditures of $50 or less made during the period covered by the campaign statement, except for expenditure made to or on behalf of another committee, candidate, or ballot question. The bill instead requires a committee's campaign statement to include the cumulative total of expenditures and other disbursements totaling $50 or less to any person made during the period covered by the statement, subject to the same exception.

 

The Act also requires a committee's campaign statement to include the name and address of each person to whom expenditures totaling more than $50 were made, the amount of each separate expenditure, and the purpose of the expenditure. The bill refers to expenditures or other disbursements.

 

The Act requires an independent committee or political committee to report all cumulative amounts on a calendar year basis. Under the bill, this also applies to an independent expenditure committee.

 

The Act requires an independent committee, or a political committee other than a House or Senate political party caucus committee required to file with the Secretary of State (SOS), to file campaign statements required by the Act according to the following schedule:

 

 --    By April 25 each year with a closing date of April 20.

 --    By July 25 of each year with a closing date of July 20.

 --    By October 25 of each year with a closing date of October 20.

 

The bill extends the filing requirement to an independent expenditure committee.

 

The bill also requires the campaign statement of a committee to include the electronic mail address of the committee treasurer or other designated individual.

 

Independent Expenditure Reporting Requirements

 

Under the Act, if a person, other than a committee, makes an independent expenditure advocating the election or defeat of a candidate or the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot question, in an amount of $100.01 or more in a calendar year, the person must file a report of the expenditure within 10 days. Under the bill, the report must be filed either with the clerk of the county of the person's residence (as previously required) or with the SOS if the expenditure advocates the election or defeat of a candidate for State elective office or the qualification, passage, or defeat of a statewide ballot question, or if the person making the expenditure is not a resident of the State.

 

The Act specifies information that the required report must include. The bill also requires the report to identify the candidate or ballot question for or against which the expenditure was made.

 

Under the bill, if a person fails to file a report as described above, the person must pay a late filing fee. If the person has made independent expenditures totaling less than $10,000, the late fee is $25 for each business day the report remains unfiled, but not more than $1,000. If the person has made independent expenditures totaling $10,000 or more, the late fee is $50 for each business day the report remains unfiled, but not more than $5,000. A person who fails to file a report for more than 30 days after it is required to be filed is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for up to 90 days and/or a maximum fine of $1,000.

 

Under the Act, if an independent expenditure is made within 45 days before a special election by an independent committee, or a political party committee required to file a campaign statement with the SOS, the committee must file a report of the expenditure with the SOS within 48 hours after the expenditure. The bill extends this requirement to an independent expenditure committee.

 

Connected Organization/Separate Segregated Fund

 

The Act allows a connected organization to make an expenditure for the establishment or administration of, and solicitation, collection, or transfer of contributions to, a separate segregated fund established by the organization. The fund may make contributions to, and expenditures on behalf of, candidate committees, ballot question committees, political party committees, political committees, independent committees, and other separate segregated funds. The bill requires the fund to be organized as a political committee or an independent committee, and permits it to make contributions to an independent expenditure committee as well as the other committees listed, in addition to any other disbursements not restricted or prohibited by law.

 

Under the bill, if connected organization that obtains contributions for a separate segregated fund from certain individuals (e.g., stockholders, officers, directors, or employees) pays to one or more of them a bonus or other remuneration for the purpose of reimbursing those contributions, the entity is subject to a civil fine of not more than two times the total contributions obtained from all individuals for the separate segregated fund during that calendar year. Previously, this provision applied to a corporation, labor organization, joint stock company, or domestic dependent sovereign, rather than a connected organization, and the fine was equal to, rather than not more than, twice the amount of total contributions.

 

The Act defines "connected organization" as a corporation organized on a for-profit or nonprofit basis, a joint stock company, a domestic dependent sovereign, or a labor organization formed under the laws of this or another state or a foreign country, or a member of such an entity that is not an individual. The bill retains this definition but refers to a member of such an entity that is not an individual and that does not maintain its own separate segregated fund, unless its fund and the separate segregated fund of the entity of which it is a member are treated as a single independent committee as provided in the Act.

 

MCL 169.203 et al. (S.B. 335)

       777.11e (S.B. 336)

 

BACKGROUND

 

Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce (494 U.S. 652)

 

In Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce, the United States Supreme Court found that Section

54(1) of the Michigan Campaign Finance Act did not violate the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution or the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment. The case arose after a special election was scheduled to fill a vacancy in the Michigan House of Representatives in 1985. According to the Court's opinion, the Chamber of Commerce had established and funded a separate political fund, but wanted to use its general treasury funds to place an advertisement supporting a specific candidate in a local newspaper, which would have been a felony under the Act. The Chamber brought a suit in the U.S. District Court for an injunction against enforcement of the Act. The District Court upheld the statute but the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, finding that the expenditure restriction violated the First Amendment (which includes the protection of freedom of speech).

 

The U.S. Supreme Court cited an earlier decision in which it held that a Federal statute requiring corporations to make political expenditures only through special segregated funds burdened corporate freedom of expression. Similarly, the Court stated, "Michigan's segregated fund requirement still burdens the Chamber's exercise of expression because 'the corporation is not free to use its general funds for campaign advocacy purposes.'" The Court concluded, however, that the State had "articulated a sufficiently compelling reason to support its restriction on the independent expenditures by corporations".

 

The Court based its reasoning on the State's interest in preventing corruption or the appearance of corruption, specifically: "the corrosive and distorting effects of immense aggregations of wealth that are accumulated with the help of the corporate form and that have little or no correlation to the public's support for the corporation's political ideas".

 

In addition, the Court found that the Act's classifications did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment. The Court stated that the regulation of only corporations was "precisely tailored to serve the compelling state interest of eliminating from the political process the corrosive effect of political 'war chests' amassed with the aid of the legal advantages given to corporations".

 

Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (558 U.S. 310)

 

In Citizens United, the U.S. Supreme Court addressed the constitutionality of a Federal law (referred to as §441b) that prohibits corporations and labor organizations from using their general treasury funds to make independent expenditures for speech that is an "electioneering communication" or that expressly advocates the election or defeat of a candidate, although corporations and unions may establish a separate segregated fund (commonly known as a political action committee, or PAC) for this purpose. The case involved a documentary called "Hillary: The Movie", which was about then-Senator Hillary Clinton, who was a candidate in the 2008 presidential primary election at the time. The film was released by a nonprofit corporation called Citizens United. In addition to making the film available through video-on-demand services, Citizens United produced an ad that it wanted to run on broadcast and cable television. Because airing the film and the ad might have violated §441b, Citizens United sought declaratory and injunctive relief against the Federal Election Commission, claiming in part that the law was unconstitutional. After the U.S. District Court denied Citizens United's motion, the case was reargued in the U.S. Supreme Court.

 

The Court found that §441b was an outright ban on corporate speech, in violation of the First Amendment, "notwithstanding the fact that a PAC created by a corporation can still speak". According to the Court, "A PAC is a separate association from the corporation… Even if a PAC could somehow allow a corporation to speak--and it does not--the option to form PACs does not alleviate the First Amendment problems with §441b. PACs are burdensome alternatives…".

 

The Court discussed a line of a cases in which it recognized that the protection of the First Amendment applies to corporations. "This protection has been extended by explicit holdings to the context of political speech... Under the rationale of these precedents, political speech does not lose First Amendment protection 'simply because its source is a corporation.'" The Court found that it was confronted with conflicting lines of precedent, and stated, "No case before Austin had held that Congress could prohibit independent expenditures for political speech based on the speaker's corporate identity."

 

The Court found that Austin was not well reasoned. In overruling Austin, the Court concluded, "We return to the principal…that the Government may not suppress political speech on the basis of the speaker's corporate identity. No sufficient governmental interest justifies limits on the political speech of nonprofit or for-profit corporations." In addition, the Court overruled part of a 2003 decision that had relied on Austin (McConnell v. Federal Election Commission, 540 U.S. 93).

 

Michigan Chamber of Commerce v. Land (725 F. Supp. 2d 665)

 

The Michigan Chamber of Commerce, Michigan Chamber Political Action Committee III, and Sterling Consulting Corporation brought an action against then-Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan, challenging the Secretary of State's interpretation and application of Section 54(1) of the Michigan Campaign Finance Act (described above). The plaintiffs complained that the Secretary of State's interpretation violated their First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and freedom of association by restricting their right to make certain independent political expenditures during and in connection with campaigns for State elective office. According to the Secretary of State, "Citizens United only lifted the section 54 ban on independent expenditures. The ban on contributions remains intact and cannot be avoided by transferring corporate funds to MCPAC III and then contributing those funds to another committee." The Secretary of State also stated that an MCPAC III contribution to another political committee would not be an "independent expenditure" permitted under Citizens United.

 

In July 2010, the U.S. District Court granted the plaintiff's application for a preliminary injunction in part, stating, "The Michigan Secretary of State may not enforce…[Section 54 of the Act] to restrict or prohibit the plaintiff corporations from making payments to the plaintiff political action committee for the purpose of the political action committee making expenditures in connection with a campaign for government office where those expenditures are in no way directly or indirectly coordinated with any candidate or the candidate's campaign committee, political party, or political party committee." (Emphasis in original.) In August 2010, the Court entered a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant.

 

SpeechNow Org. v. Federal Election Commission (599 F.3d 686)

 

In this case, decided in March 2010, the U.S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit addressed the constitutionality of limits in Federal law on the amount that a person may contribute to a political committee. The plaintiffs included SpeechNow (a nonprofit association registered as a political organization), an individual who was the president of the association, and four other individuals. SpeechNow intended to acquire donations from individuals and operate through independent expenditures, and the individual plaintiffs were proposing to make donations to it in excess of the contributions allowed by the Federal Election Campaign Act. The limits in question 1) prohibited any person from making contributions to a political committee in any calendar year that, in the aggregate, exceeded $5,000; 2) prohibited an individual, during a biennial period, from making contributions aggregating more than a) $37,500 in the case of contributions to candidates and the authorized committees of candidates, and b) $57,500 in the case of any other contributions, of which not more than $37,500 may be attributable to contributions to political committees that are not political committees of national political parties. (These amounts are subject to annual or biennial adjustments to reflect changes in the Consumer Price Index.)

 

The Court of Appeals held that 1) both of these limits violated the First Amendment by preventing SpeechNow's president from accepting contributions to the association in excess of the limits; 2) the $5,000 limit violated the First Amendment by preventing the individual plaintiffs from contributing to SpeechNow in excess of that limit; and 3) the biennial contribution limits violated the First Amendment by preventing one the individual plaintiffs (who proposed to donate $110,000) from making contributions to SpeechNow that would exceed his biennial aggregate limit.

 

The Court of Appeals stated, "The Supreme Court has recognized only one interest sufficiently important to outweigh the First Amendment interests implicated by contributions for political speech: preventing corruption or the appearance of corruption." Since the Supreme Court had held in Citizens United that the government has no anti-corruption interest in limiting independent expenditures, "contributions to groups that make only independent expenditures also cannot corrupt or create the appearance of corruption". The Court of Appeals concluded that "the government has no anti-corruption interest in limiting contributions to an independent expenditure group such as SpeechNow". The Court pointed out, however, that it was only deciding the questions "as applied to contributions to SpeechNow, an independent expenditure-only group", and that its holding did not affect the statutory limits on direct contributions to candidates.

 

ARGUMENTS

 

(Please note:  The arguments contained in this analysis originate from sources outside the Senate Fiscal Agency. The Senate Fiscal Agency neither supports nor opposes legislation.)

 

Supporting Argument

Michigan has a history of amending the Campaign Finance Act to bring it into conformity with judicial decisions. In 1986, for example, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan found that a limit on the amount corporations could spend on ballot questions was unconstitutional (Michigan State Chamber of Commerce v. Austin, 637 F. Supp. 1192). Subsequently, Public Act 95 of 1989 amended the Act to delete that limit. In 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court held that an Ohio law prohibiting anonymous campaign literature violated the First Amendment (McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission, 514 U.S. 334); in reliance on that opinion, Michigan's Attorney General found that a similar provision in the Campaign Finance Act was unconstitutional (Opinion No. 6895). In response, Public Act 225 of 1996 amended the relevant provisions of the statute.

 

It now has been seven years since the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated Michigan's restrictions on corporate campaign expenditures, and since the U.S. District Court found that the law, as interpreted by a former Secretary of State, was unenforceable. The Campaign Finance Act still read, however, as if those decisions had not been made. The bill brings the statute up to date and codifies what is current practice.

 

Supporting Argument

The bill makes a number of positive changes to the Act, including the revised definition of "independent expenditure". The new definition is more comprehensive and explicit than the previous definition and is more consistent with Federal law. While the term previously referred to an expenditure that was not made at the direction or under the control of another person, the new definition refers to an expenditure not made in cooperation, consultation, or concert with, or at the request or suggestion of, a candidate, a candidate committee or its agent, a political party committee or its agent, or a ballot question committee.

 

The bill also clarifies that an independent expenditure is not a "contribution" if it is made properly, and the bill creates a clear pathway for the imposition of criminal penalties if an independent expenditure is made in violation of the law. This may occur, for example, if an individual knowingly causes an independent expenditure committee to make a contribution to a political party committee, or if a consultant retained by both an independent expenditure committee and a candidate improperly conveys information about campaign plans.

 

In addition, the bill prescribes late filing fees as well as a misdemeanor penalty for failure to file an independent expenditure report as required, and subjects independent expenditure committees to the reporting requirements. These measures will enhance transparency and help ensure that independent expenditures are disclosed.

 

Opposing Argument

The bill goes well beyond codifying Citizens United and related case law. Under Citizens United, the U.S. Supreme Court essentially said that government cannot put limits on independent expenditures by corporations and labor organizations. The spending, however, needs to be truly independent of candidates and uncoordinated with their campaigns. Although the revised definition of "independent expenditure" is consistent with the Federal definition, and is an improvement over the former definition, other provisions of the bill undermine the independence of independent expenditure committees (commonly referred to as superPACs).

 

First, the bill gives candidates and their supporters broad ability to share consultants, attorneys, and other vendors. For example, a person may make an expenditure on behalf of a superPAC for advertising in support of a candidate even though the candidate has hired the same public relations firm. Although the bill prohibits the vendor from conveying or using information about campaign plans, projects, and activities that it has obtained from the candidate, proving a violation will be very difficult and essentially will require one of the parties involved to admit guilt.

 

In addition, while Federal law limits the solicitation of contributions by Federal candidates, the bill allows a candidate to solicit unlimited contributions to his or her superPAC. In a 2011 advisory opinion, the Federal Election Commission concluded that, although independent expenditure-only committees may accept unlimited contributions from individuals, corporations, and labor organizations, statutory restrictions continue to apply to contributions solicited by Federal officeholders and candidates. Under the Michigan Campaign Finance Act, an individual may not contribute more than $6,800 for a candidate for State elective office except the office of State legislator. (The limits are $2,000 for a candidate for State Senator and $1,000 for a candidate for State Representative.) Under the bill, however, a candidate may ask a supporter to contribute unlimited amounts to his or her superPAC, making those individual contribution limits meaningless.

 

Rather than weakening the Act, the bill could have codified Citizens United and, at the same time, set up real barriers between candidates and superPACs that support them, improved transparency, and allowed the tracking of expenditures in a timely manner.

Response:  Regarding a candidate's solicitation of unlimited contributions to an independent expenditure committee, the independent nature of an expenditure can be defeated if the committee makes independent expenditures during an election cycle related solely to one candidate, and that candidate or his or her candidate committee solicits funds on behalf of the independent expenditure committee.

 

                                                                              Legislative Analyst:  Suzanne Lowe

 

FISCAL IMPACT

 

Senate Bill 335

 

The bill will have an indeterminate impact on State and local government. It is unknown whether the provisions in the bill will lead to more or fewer violations of the Act. More misdemeanor and felony arrests and convictions may increase resource demands on law enforcement, court systems, community supervision, jails, and correctional facilities. The average cost to State government for felony probation supervision is approximately $3,024 per probationer per year. For any increase in prison intakes, in the short term, the marginal cost to State government is approximately $3,764 per prisoner per year. Any associated increase in fine revenue increases funding to public libraries.

 

In addition, the bill will have a minimal, indeterminate impact on the Department of State regarding the administration of reporting requirements. The late filing fees added by the bill also may generate revenue to the State or local units. As a rule, under the Act, late filing fees are payable to the filing official with whom a statement or report is required to be filed.

 

 

Senate Bill 336

 

The bill will have no fiscal impact on local government and an indeterminate fiscal impact on the State. According to the Michigan Supreme Court's July 2015 opinion in People v. Lockridge, the


sentencing guidelines are advisory for all cases. This means that the addition to the guidelines under the bill is not compulsory for the sentencing judge. As penalties for felony convictions vary, the fiscal impact of any given felony conviction depends on judicial decisions.

 

                                                                                       Fiscal Analyst:  Ryan Bergan

                                                                                                            Joe Carrasco

This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.