Campaign Finance Legislation in the 108th Congress

CRS Report for Congress
Campaign Finance Legislation
th
in the 108 Congress
Updated December 15, 2004
Joseph E. Cantor
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division


Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Campaign Finance Legislation in the 108 Congress
Summary
During the 108th Congress, 30 bills were introduced to change the nation’s
campaign finance laws (primarily under Titles 2 and 26 of the U.S. Code). These
bills — 21 in the House and nine in the Senate — seek to make improvements in the
current system, including to tighten perceived loopholes. In the wake of enactment
of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (P.L. 107- 155), there has been
decidedly less legislative activity in this area than in recent Congresses, which
typically saw well over 100 campaign finance-related bills introduced.



Contents
Chapter I. Checklist of Bills and Types of Proposals......................3
Chapter II. Major Reforms Proposed, by Category........................9
Individuals (Hard Money)..........................................10
Remove Contribution Limits....................................10
Provide Tax Incentives for Individual Contributions.................10
Provide Tax Incentives on Contingency Basis...................10
PACs (Hard Money)..............................................10
Remove Contribution Limits....................................10
Political Parties (Hard Money)......................................10
Remove Contribution Limits....................................10
Limit All Party Spending Per Candidate...........................10
Double Limit on Coordinated Expenditures for Presidential Candidates ..11
Candidates (Hard Money)..........................................11
Ban Use of Campaign or Official Funds for Candidate Salary..........11
Ban Repayment of Candidate Loans from Campaign Funds............11
Expand Permissible Uses of Federal Campaign Funds................11
Clarify Limit on Contributions from Candidates’ Authorized Committees11
Enact Constitutional Amendment to Limit Candidate Spending.........11
In-state or In-district Minimum (Hard Money)..........................11
Require In-state Funding Level..................................12
Independent Expenditures (Hard Money)..............................12
Increase Disclosure Requirements................................12
Coordination (Hard and Soft Money).................................12
Define Coordination and Associated Activities......................12
Define Coordinated Activity As Contribution or Expenditure..........12
Soft Money: Party................................................12
Add Disclosure Requirements...................................13
Soft Money: Non-Party............................................13
Add Election Law Disclosure Requirements........................13
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money).......................................13
Repeal BCRA’s Electioneering Communications Provision............14
Require Regulation of 527s Under FECA..........................14
Declare 527 to be Political Committee if Major Purpose is
Influencing Federal Elections...........................14
Specify Activities to be Considered as Expenditures.............14



and Non-Federal Activities.............................14
Impose Restrictions on Contributions to Non-Federal Accounts....14
Require Enhanced Disclosure by 527 Groups under IRC..............14
Require Improved Disclosure Systems under IRC...................14
Require Linkage between FECA and IRC Disclosure Systems..........14
Spending Limits and Public Benefits..................................15
Offer Voluntary Spending Limits in Conjunction with Public Benefits...15
Provide Public Benefits with No Spending Limits...................15
Set Mandatory Limits through Constitutional Amendment.............15
FEC (Enforcement & Disclosure)....................................15
Enforcement .................................................15
Replace FEC with New Enforcement Agency...................15
Change Makeup of Enforcement Agency......................16
Appoint Administrative Law Judges to Expedite Enforcement......16
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Find Violations Have Occurred..16
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Impose Civil Penalties.........16
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Issue Cease-and-desist Orders...16
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Appeal for Injunctions
to Prevent Violations..................................16
Allow Enforcement Agency to Conduct Random Audits..........16
Change Standard to Begin Enforcement Proceedings.............16
Allow Enforcement Agency to Petition Supreme Court...........16
Expedite Enforcement Procedures Late in Election..............17
Allow Issuance of Subpoenas Without Signature of Chair.........17
Require GAO Study of Criminal Enforcement by Justice Department
...................................................17
Change Enforcement Agency’s Funding Process................17
Require GAO Study on Appropriate Funding Levels for
Enforcement Agency..................................17
Disclosure ..................................................17
Require Electronic Filing by All Committees...................17
Require Standardized Software for Electronic Filers.............17
Require Internet Posting by FEC.............................17
Require Expedited or Increased Disclosure.....................17
Remove “Best Efforts” Exemption...........................17
Require Senate Candidate Reports to be Filed at FEC............18
Require Disclosure of Phone Bank Activity....................18
Require Disclosure Regarding Push Polls......................18
Require Additional Breakdowns on Candidate Reports...........18
Advertising Issues................................................18
Augment Identification (Disclaimer) Requirements..................18
Require Identification for Push Polls/Phone Banks...................18
Require Identification on Internet Communications..................18
Require Identification on Pre-recorded Phone Calls..................18
Require Clear Statement of Candidate Approval in Ads...............18
Change Terms of Lowest Unit Rate...............................18
Prohibit Preemption of Lowest Unit Rate Ads......................19
Extend Lowest Unit Rate to Parties...............................19



Programs Before Elections..................................19
Presidential Elections..............................................19
Abolish Public Funding System..................................19
Increase Matching Funds in Primaries.............................19
Increase Qualifying Threshold in Primaries.........................19
Change Start Date for Payment of Matching Funds..................19
Eliminate State Spending Limits in Primaries.......................19
Raise National Primary Spending Limit...........................20
Double Tax Checkoff Amount...................................20
Increase Public Funds to Offset Spending by Non-Participants.........20
Link Participation in Primary and General Public Fund Systems........20
Authorize Public Education About Tax Checkoff ...................20
Miscellaneous ...................................................20
Prohibit Bundling.............................................20
Lengthen Pre-election Ban on Franked Mass Mailings................20
Offer Statement of Findings.....................................20
Chapter III. Bill Summaries: Numerical Order..........................21
House Bills .....................................................21
H.R. 156 (Petri)..............................................21
H.R. 157 (Petri)..............................................21
H.R. 344 (Bartlett)............................................21
H.R. 681 (English)............................................21
H.R. 797 (English)............................................21
H.R. 1878 (Andrews)..........................................22
H.R. 2529 (Hoekstra)..........................................22
H.R. 2667 (Maloney)..........................................22
H.R. 2709 (Shays)............................................23
H.R. 3172 (McCollum)........................................23
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)..........................................24
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)..........................................24
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)...........................................25
H.R. 3801 (Bartlett)...........................................27
H.R. 4384 (English)...........................................27
H.R. 4818/P.L. 108-447 (Kolbe) .................................27
H.R. 4985 (Price, NC).........................................28
H.R. 5013 (Larson)...........................................28
H.R. 5127 (Shays)............................................28
H.J.Res. 5 (Dingell)...........................................29
H.J.Res. 21 (Leach)...........................................29
Senate Bills.....................................................29
S. 804 (Dorgan)..............................................29
S. 1388 (McCain).............................................29
S. 1497 (McCain).............................................30
S. 1874 (Feingold)............................................30
S. 1913 (McCain).............................................31
S. 2392 (Wyden).............................................32



S. 2828 (McCain).............................................32
S.J.Res. 5 (Hollings)..........................................33
Index ..........................................................35
List of Tables
Table 1. Checklist of Major Provisions of 108th Congress Bills..............4



th
Campaign Finance Legislation in the 108
Congress
This report lists all bills introduced in the 108th Congress to amend the nation’s
campaign finance laws (primarily under Titles 2 and 26 of the U.S. Code, the Federal
Election Campaign Act or FECA).
The report is comprised of three chapters and an index:
!Chapter I is a checklist of all bills (in numerical order), noting major
types of reforms proposed in each, listed according to 15 categories
(including “miscellaneous”);
!Chapter II arranges all provisions of every bill under the 15
categories noted in the checklist, with a basic description of the issue
area, where needed, and further division of proposals into
subcategories. Bills whose provisions fall under a specific category
or subcategory are noted accordingly (with further detail provided in
Chapter III);
!Chapter III is a chronological listing and summary of each bill. For
each bill, this chapter provides the bill number, sponsor, title, a
detailed summary of provisions arranged by the 15 categories used
in chapters I and II, date introduced, committee referral, and any
legislative action; and
!Index of bills, listed alphabetically by lead sponsor.




Chapter I. Checklist of Bills and
Types of Proposals
Table 1 on the following pages provides easy reference to types of provisions
in each of the bills listed in this report. An “x” denotes features in a given bill. For
each category, reference is made to the page in this report where a discussion of the
applicable legislation is found.



CRS-4
Table 1. Checklist of Major Provisions of 108th Congress Bills
Hard MoneyHard &Soft Money
So ft Sp end i ng
Moneylimits &
public
benefitsMajor contribution sourcesIn-state/Indep.Coord-PartyNon-partyIssueFECAdver-Presi-Misc.
-districtExpen.ination(and (labor/corp/Advoc.tisingdential
sor ge n. ) tax-exempt)
Indiv. PACs Party Cand.
p. 10p. 10 p. 10p. 11p. 11p. 12p. 12p. 12 p. 13p. 13p. 15p. 15p. 18p. 19p. 20
House Bills
R. 156XX
tri
iki/CRS-RL32650
g/wR. 157X
s.ortri
leak
R. 344X
://wikir tlett
httpR. 681X
glish
R. 797X
glish
R. 1878XXXXX
d r e ws
R. 2529XX
ekstra
R. 2667XX


ey

CRS-5
Hard MoneyHard &Soft Money
So ft Sp end i ng
Moneylimits &
public
benefitsMajor contribution sourcesIn-state/Indep.Coord-PartyNon-partyIssueFECAdver-Presi-Misc.
-districtExpen.ination(and (labor/corp/Advoc.tisingdential
sor ge n. ) tax-exempt)
Indiv. PACs Party Cand.
p. 10p. 10 p. 10p. 11p. 11p. 12p. 12p. 12 p. 13p. 13p. 15p. 15p. 18p. 19p. 20
R. 2709X
s
R. 3172XX
llum
iki/CRS-RL32650
g/wR. 3525XXXXXXX
s.oro little
leakR. 3617XX
://wikian
httpR. 3641XXXXX
erney
R. 3801X
r tlett
R. 4384X
glish
R. 4818/X
. 108-447
lb e
R. 4985X


ice, NC

CRS-6
Hard MoneyHard &Soft Money
So ft Sp end i ng
Moneylimits &
public
benefitsMajor contribution sourcesIn-state/Indep.Coord-PartyNon-partyIssueFECAdver-Presi-Misc.
-districtExpen.ination(and (labor/corp/Advoc.tisingdential
sor ge n. ) tax-exempt)
Indiv. PACs Party Cand.
p. 10p. 10 p. 10p. 11p. 11p. 12p. 12p. 12 p. 13p. 13p. 15p. 15p. 18p. 19p. 20
R. 5013X
r s o n
R. 5127X
s
iki/CRS-RL32650
g/w.Res. 5X
s.ornge l l
leak.Res. 21X
://wiki
httpSenate Bills
X
rgan
X
a in
XX
a in
X
i ngo l d
X X


a in

CRS-7
Hard MoneyHard &Soft Money
So ft Sp end i ng
Moneylimits &
public
benefitsMajor contribution sourcesIn-state/Indep.Coord-PartyNon-partyIssueFECAdver-Presi-Misc.
-districtExpen.ination(and (labor/corp/Advoc.tisingdential
sor ge n. ) tax-exempt)
Indiv. PACs Party Cand.
p. 10p. 10 p. 10p. 11p. 11p. 12p. 12p. 12 p. 13p. 13p. 15p. 15p. 18p. 19p. 20
X
den
X
amb liss
iki/CRS-RL32650
g/w X
s.ora in
leak.Res. 5X


://wikillings
http



Chapter II. Major Reforms Proposed, by Category
This section of the report is organized into 15 subsections, encompassing the 14
major areas of reform addressed in proposed 108th Congress bills, and a
“miscellaneous” category for provisions outside that framework. In each subsection,
bills containing provisions that address that particular area are noted. Greater detail
for each provision and a sense of how a bill’s various provisions might affect each
other can be found in Chapter III, where bill summaries appear in numerical order.
(In some cases, reference is made here to other provisions of the same bill.)
For easy reference, arbitrary decisions were made as to the primary nature and
goal of a particular provision. Many provisions, however, have multiple purposes.
For example, a bill that would raise the limit on an individual’s contributions to
political parties would empower both the individual and the political party. Such a
provision would be listed here under “individual,” as it most directly affects what an
individual may do, even though the parties would benefit as well.
The first six categories can be examined in the context of hard money, as they
pertain to types of activity that are regulated under federal election law, which
specifies prohibited sources, sets limits on permitted contributions, and requires
disclosure. The six hard money categories are shown on the checklist in Chapter I
under a larger heading of “hard money,” with the first four — individuals, PACs,
parties, and candidates — further grouped to reflect the four principal sources of
campaign receipts. The eighth, ninth, and tenth categories comprise provisions
dealing with soft money; the eighth contains provisions relating to party soft money
(and some general provisions); the ninth focuses on non-party soft money — direct
activities of unions and corporations; and the tenth addresses issue advocacy,
election-related communications that fall largely outside the purview of the Federal
Election Campaign Act (FECA), and often involve activities regulated under the
Internal Revenue Code (as section 527 political organizations).1


1 “Hard money” generally refers to funds raised and spent according to the source limits
and prohibitions and disclosure requirements of federal election law. By contrast, “soft
money” refers to funds raised and spent outside the federal election regulatory framework,
but which may have at least an indirect impact on federal elections

Individuals (Hard Money)
These bills would change limits and offer incentives to encourage a greater role
for individual citizens in federal campaign financing.
Remove Contribution Limits
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)
Provide Tax Incentives for Individual Contributions
H.R. 157 (Petri) — credit and special deduction
S. 804 (Dorgan) — credit
Provide Tax Incentives on Contingency Basis.
H.R. 3172 (McCollum) — for contributions to candidates who participate in
voluntary spending limits and public subsidy program
PACs (Hard Money)
These bills would restrict or empower political action committees (PACs) in
their funding role. A PAC is a “nonparty multicandidate committee,” an FECA status
that most PACs have. PACs sponsored by organizations are “separate segregated
funds,” while those that are independent of other entities are “nonconnected.”
Remove Contribution Limits
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)
Political Parties (Hard Money)
These bills would restrict or empower political parties in their funding role.
Remove Contribution Limits
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)
Limit All Party Spending Per Candidate
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)* — in “clean money” races



Double Limit on Coordinated Expenditures for Presidential
Candidates
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Candidates (Hard Money)
These bills contain provisions that focus on spending and loans by candidates
from personal or family wealth, including the issue of repayment of candidate loans
from campaign funds after an election, and permissible use of campaign funds in
general.
Ban Use of Campaign or Official Funds for Candidate Salary
H.R. 797 (English)
Ban Repayment of Candidate Loans from Campaign Funds
H.R. 681 (English) — for winning candidates, after taking office
Expand Permissible Uses of Federal Campaign Funds
H.R. 4818/P.L. 108-447 (Kolbe) — for donations to state and local candidates,
and other lawful purposes
Clarify Limit on Contributions from Candidates’ Authorized
Committees
H.R. 4818/P.L. 108-447 (Kolbe) — $2,000 to other candidates’ authorized
committees
Enact Constitutional Amendment to Limit Candidate
Spending
H.J.Res. 21 (Leach)
In-state or In-district Minimum (Hard Money)
This category includes bills that would require a minimum level of candidates’
funds to come from residents of that state or district, or in some way seek to
encourage a greater role for local residents.



Require In-state Funding Level
H.R. 2529 (Hoekstra) — for House and Senate candidates
Independent Expenditures (Hard Money)
Independent expenditures are communications with the public advocating the
election or defeat of clearly identified candidates made without any coordination,
cooperation, or consultation with the candidates. They are not subject to limits on
amounts spent, but the source restrictions and disclosure requirements of federal law
apply. This hard money activity should not be confused with issue advocacy, which
is largely outside federal election regulation; this is treated in a separate category,
below.
Increase Disclosure Requirements
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — for “clean money” candidates
Coordination (Hard and Soft Money)
These provisions address the issue of what constitutes coordination under the
FECA, which, in turn, triggers an activity’s treatment as a contribution or
expenditure, subject to relevant limits. This issue has come to include both issue and
express advocacy, hence it contains both hard and soft money components.
Define Coordination and Associated Activities
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)
Define Coordinated Activity As Contribution or Expenditure
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — but exempts party spending for “clean money”
candidates
Soft Money: Party
This term has traditionally referred to money that may indirectly influence
federal elections, but that is raised and spent outside federal election law’s purview
and that would be illegal if spent directly in connection with a federal election. Prior
to enactment of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA), national
parties commonly raised money from sources and in amounts that were federally
impermissible; these funds could then be transferred to state parties where permitted
under state election law and used for grassroots and generic party activity. Party soft
money was also used for a share of administrative and overhead expenses and issue
advocacy. Since BCRA’s prohibition on the raising of soft money by national parties



and federal officials, this issue has largely been moot. Those few bills that address
it focus solely on improving disclosure of state party funds.
Add Disclosure Requirements
H.R. 1878 (Andrews) — allows state parties to file copies of state reports with
FEC, if substantially similar to what FEC requires
H..R. 3525 (Doolittle) — requires copies of state party reports to be filed with
FEC
Soft Money: Non-Party
Non-party soft money pertains to direct spending by and activity of groups, as
opposed to their donations to another entity (such as parties). The term is most
commonly used to refer to union and corporate treasury money that federal election
law allows for three exempt activities aimed only at specified restricted classes
(corporate executives and stockholders and families, and union members and their
families). The three exempt activities are setting up and raising money for a PAC,
internal communications (including express advocacy), and voter registration and
get-out-the-vote drives.
Add Election Law Disclosure Requirements
H.R. 1878 (Andrews)
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money)
Prior to enactment of BCRA in 2002, observers had become concerned about
communications that promoted political issues in reference to candidates, but which,
by avoiding the use of specific, election advocacy language (e.g., “elect Jones” or
“defeat Smith”), were not subject to regulation under federal election law. These
“issue advocacy” communications contrasted with those that explicitly promoted the
election or defeat of clearly identified candidates, known as “express advocacy.”
Since the courts had generally construed “express advocacy” communications in a
narrow sense (i.e., using explicit phrases), communications that may have been
perceived as constituting thinly-veiled election activity could thus avoid federal
disclosure and source regulations.
BCRA addressed issue advocacy by creating a new term in federal election law,
“electioneering communication “ — political advertisements that “refer” to a clearly
identified federal candidate and are broadcast within 30 days of a primary or 60 days
of a general election. The act prohibited unions and certain corporations from
spending treasury funds for electioneering communications and required disclosure
of disbursements of over $10,000 and the identity of donors of $1,000 or more.
In part because of BCRA’s narrowly-tailored response to issue advocacy,
concerns remain. Some believe BCRA went too far and favor the repeal of its



electioneering communications provision. Others believe it did not go far enough
and favor more regulation in this area. Of particular interest has been the activity of
“political organizations” defined by section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC).
While Congress in 2000 enacted Public Law 106-230, to require disclosure by “527”
groups through the IRS, much debate has ensued in 2004 as to whether their election-
related activities should require full regulation under federal election law.
Repeal BCRA’s Electioneering Communications Provision
H.R. 3801 (Bartlett)
S. 2702 (Chambliss)
Require Regulation of 527s Under FECA
Declare 527 to be Political Committee if Major Purpose is
Influencing Federal Elections.
H.R. 5127 (Shays)
S. 2828 (McCain)
Specify Activities to be Considered as Expenditures.
H.R. 5127 (Shays)
S. 2828 (McCain)
Require Minimum Levels of Hard Money by Committees with
Federal and Non-Federal Activities.
H.R. 5127 (Shays)
S. 2828 (McCain)
Impose Restrictions on Contributions to Non-Federal Accounts.
H.R. 5127 (Shays)
S. 2828 (McCain)
Require Enhanced Disclosure by 527 Groups under IRC
H.R. 4384 (English)
H.R. 5013 (Larson)
Require Improved Disclosure Systems under IRC
H.R. 5013 (Larson)
Require Linkage between FECA and IRC Disclosure Systems
H.R. 5013 (Larson)



Spending Limits and Public Benefits
Bills in this category would, in general, provide: (1) campaign spending limits
for House or Senate candidates on overall campaign or candidate personal spending
(or advertising time restrictions); (2) public, cost-saving benefits to candidates; or (3)
both. They are grouped together because many bills embody both concepts, largely
because a voluntary system of limits with conditional benefits has been a major
response to the Buckley v. Valeo ruling [424 U.S. 1 (1976)] which overturned
mandatory limits. This grouping should not be construed as an inherent linkage
between the two ideas; there are very distinct principles behind spending limits and
public benefits (or financing). Options among spending limit bills include voluntary
limits, in response to Buckley, with or without inducements to participation through
public benefits; mandatory limits, through a constitutional amendment; or “benefits
only” provisions without adherence to spending limits.
Offer Voluntary Spending Limits in Conjunction with Public
Benefits
H.R. 3172 (McCollum) — with subsidies and, for contributors, tax credits
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — with subsidies and free and discounted broadcast time
Provide Public Benefits with No Spending Limits
H.R. 1878 (Andrews) — subsidies, in exchange for: limiting individual
contributions to $100, raising at least 80% of funds in-state, and
participating in debates
S. 1497 (McCain) — broadcast vouchers, funded by spectrum-use fee, based on
matching individual contributions, in exchange for: limits on candidates’
personal spending and specified threshold of individual contributions
Set Mandatory Limits through Constitutional Amendment
H.J.Res. 5 (Dingell)
S.J.Res. 5 (Hollings)
FEC (Enforcement & Disclosure)
These bills seek to improve FEC enforcement and disclosure responsibilities.
Enforcement
Replace FEC with New Enforcement Agency.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
S. 1388 (McCain)



Change Makeup of Enforcement Agency.
H.R. 2709 (Shays) — new agency to have three members: chairman to serve
one 10-year term and two others to serve one six-year term
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — add one commissioner to FEC
S. 1388 (McCain) — new agency to have three members: chairman to serve one
10-year term and two others to serve one six-year term
Appoint Administrative Law Judges to Expedite Enforcement.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
S. 1388 (McCain)
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Find Violations Have Occurred.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
S. 1388 (McCain)
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Impose Civil Penalties.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
S. 1388 (McCain)
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Issue Cease-and-desist Orders.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
S. 1388 (McCain)
Authorize Enforcement Agency to Appeal for Injunctions to Prevent
Violations.
H.R. 2709 (Shays) — and restraining orders
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)
S. 1388 (McCain) — and restraining orders
Allow Enforcement Agency to Conduct Random Audits.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)
S. 1388 (McCain)
Change Standard to Begin Enforcement Proceedings.
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — to “reason to investigate”
Allow Enforcement Agency to Petition Supreme Court.
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)



Expedite Enforcement Procedures Late in Election.
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)
Allow Issuance of Subpoenas Without Signature of Chair.
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)
Require GAO Study of Criminal Enforcement by Justice
Department.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
S. 1388 (McCain)
Change Enforcement Agency’s Funding Process.
H.R. 2709 (Shays) — Chairman to submit budget directly to Congress
S. 1388 (McCain) — Chairman to submit budget directly to Congress
Require GAO Study on Appropriate Funding Levels for
Enforcement Agency.
H.R. 2709 (Shays)
S. 1388 (McCain)
Disclosure
Require Electronic Filing by All Committees.
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)
Require Standardized Software for Electronic Filers.
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)
Require Internet Posting by FEC.
H.R. 3535 (Doolittle) — within 24 hours
Require Expedited or Increased Disclosure.
H.R. 2529 (Hoekstra) — monthly reporting for candidates
H.R. 3535 (Doolittle) — 24-hour notice of contributions in last 90 days
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — 24-hour notice of contributions in last 90 days
Remove “Best Efforts” Exemption.
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)



Require Senate Candidate Reports to be Filed at FEC.
S. 1874 (Feingold)
Require Disclosure of Phone Bank Activity.
H.R. 2667 (Maloney)
Require Disclosure Regarding Push Polls.
H.R. 156 (Petri)
Require Additional Breakdowns on Candidate Reports.
H.R. 1878 (Andrews) — by primary, general, and runoff election
Advertising Issues
Bills in this category would change terms under which candidates communicate
their messages, including rates charged and identification (disclaimer) required.
Augment Identification (Disclaimer) Requirements
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)
Require Identification for Push Polls/Phone Banks
H.R. 156 (Petri)
H.R. 2667 (Maloney)
Require Identification on Internet Communications
H.R. 4985 (Price, NC)
Require Identification on Pre-recorded Phone Calls
H.R. 4985 (Price, NC)
Require Clear Statement of Candidate Approval in Ads
S. 2392 (Wyden) — when opponents are mentioned in Internet communications
or pre-recorded phone calls
Change Terms of Lowest Unit Rate
S. 1497 (McCain)



Prohibit Preemption of Lowest Unit Rate Ads
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — for House candidates, in “Clean Money” system
S. 1497 (McCain)
Extend Lowest Unit Rate to Parties
S. 1497 (McCain) — for advertising on behalf of candidates
Require Broadcasters to Provide Candidate- and Issue-
Centered Programs Before Elections
S. 1497 (McCain)
Presidential Elections
These bills seek to change the rules for the public system available in
presidential elections, or to abolish that system.
Abolish Public Funding System
H.R. 344 (Bartlett) — for nominating conventions only
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle)
Increase Matching Funds in Primaries
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Increase Qualifying Threshold in Primaries
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Change Start Date for Payment of Matching Funds
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Eliminate State Spending Limits in Primaries
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)



Raise National Primary Spending Limit
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Double Tax Checkoff Amount
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Increase Public Funds to Offset Spending by Non-
Participants
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Link Participation in Primary and General Public Fund
Systems
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Authorize Public Education About Tax Checkoff
H.R. 3617 (Meehan)
S. 1913 (McCain)
Miscellaneous
Prohibit Bundling
H.R. 1878 (Andrews) — by PACs, parties, lobbyists, unions, corporations,
national banks, or agents or employees acting on their behalf
Lengthen Pre-election Ban on Franked Mass Mailings
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)
Offer Statement of Findings
H.R. 3525 (Doolittle) — regarding impact of regulation of campaign financing
H.R. 3641 (Tierney)



Chapter III. Bill Summaries: Numerical Order
House Bills
H.R. 156 (Petri) — Push Poll Disclosure Act of 2003
FEC. Requires disclosure by sponsors of push polls whose results are not
public, including cost, funding sources, number of households contacted, and
questions asked.
Advertising. Requires identification of all push poll sponsors to respondents.
Introduced January 7, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 157 (Petri) — Citizen Involvement in Campaigns Act of 2003
Individuals (Hard Money). Establishes a 100% tax credit for individual
contributions to federal candidates and national political party committees, up to
$200 (or $400 on joint returns), and a special tax deduction (regardless of whether
taxpayer itemizes deductions) for the total value of such contributions, beyond the
amount applied toward the credit, up to $600 (or $1,200 on joint returns).
Introduced January 7, 2003; referred to Committee on Ways and Means.
H.R. 344 (Bartlett) — Political Convention Reform Act of 2003
Presidential. Repeals public funding of presidential nominating conventions.
Introduced January 27, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 681 (English)
Candidates (Hard Money). Prohibits use of campaign funds to repay a
winning candidate’s personal loans to his or her campaign, once that candidate takes
office (for elections after December 2003).
Introduced February 11, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 797 (English) — Candidate Anti-Corruption Act
Candidates (Hard Money). Prohibits use of campaign funds or funds used
to defray official expenses of federal officeholders for payment of a salary to the
candidate or any immediate family member.
Introduced February 13, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.



H.R. 1878 (Andrews) — Public Campaign Financing Act of 2003
Soft Money: Party. Requires FEC to allow state parties to file copies of
reports filed under state law if they contain substantially the same information as
required under federal law;
Soft Money: Non-Party. Requires prompt disclosure by non-party entities
for spending on federal election activities (as defined by Bipartisan Campaign
Reform Act of 2002), once $2,000 threshold level is reached.
Spending/Benefits. Provides public funding in House general elections in
amounts based on media costs in the area, up to $750,000 (with indexing for future
inflation), for specified campaign purposes (but not a salary for candidate), within
four months of general election, for candidates who: (a) gather petitions signed by at
least 3% of registered voters or whose party received at least 25% of the vote in prior
general election; (b) limit individual donations to $100; (c) raise at least 80% of
funds in-state; and (d) participate in at least two debates; requires broadcasters to
accept participating candidate ads, until they constitute 40% of total advertising time.
FEC. Requires candidate reports to be broken down by primary, general, or
runoff election.
Miscellaneous. Prohibits bundling by PACs, parties, lobbyists, unions,
corporations, or national banks, or employees or agents acting on their behalf.
Introduced April 30, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 2529 (Hoekstra) — Accountability and Transparency in Federal
Campaigns Act of 2003
In-state/-district (Hard Money). Requires House and Senate candidates to
raise at least 75% of funds from in-state individual residents.
FEC. Requires candidates to file monthly reports, itemizing all contributions
received of $200 or more.
Introduced June 19, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 2667 (Maloney) — Voters’ Right to Know Act of 2003
FEC. Regarding federal election phone banks: requires FEC disclosure of
costs, receipts, text of questions, and number of households contacted.
Advertising. Requires a disclaimer to identify the sponsor of federal election
phone bank communications.
Introduced July 8, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.



H.R. 2709 (Shays) — Federal Election Administration Act of 2003
FEC.
!Replaces Federal Election Commission with Federal Election
Administration, to administer, seek compliance with, enforce, and
formulate policy regarding federal election law: new agency would
consist of three commissioners, appointed by President with advice
and consent of Senate, headed by chairman serving one 10-year
term; other two commissioners would serve staggered six-year
terms;
!enforcement actions would be initiated by majority vote;
!administrative law judges would be authorized to hear cases, make
findings of fact, impose civil monetary penalties, and issue cease-
and-desist orders, subject to appeal to agency;
!provides for appeals for judicial review by complainants or
aggrieved parties;
!authorizes agency to appeal to district court for temporary restraining
orders or preliminary injunctions to prevent possible violations;
!gives agency responsibility to administer disclosure laws and
presidential public finance system, and to conduct random audits;
!provides for agency to submit budget directly to Congress;
!requires GAO to study criminal enforcement of election laws by
Justice Department and to conduct ongoing study on appropriate
funding levels for agency.
Introduced July 10, 2003; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 3172 (McCollum)
Individuals (Hard Money). Provides for 100% tax credit for contributions
to House and Senate candidates who participate in voluntary spending limits and
public subsidy program, up to $100 aggregate total of contributions per year.
Spending/Benefits (Hard Money). Provides public subsidies and allows
tax credits for contributors to House and Senate candidates in the general election
(whose party received at least 5% of votes in preceding election for that office) who:
(1) abide by voluntary spending limits in primary and general elections; (2) establish
eligibility by raising at least 2.5% of spending limit from individual in-state donors
in amounts of $100 or less; and (3) raise no more than one-third of funds from PACs
and other committees, no more than 10% from parties, and remainder allowed under
spending limit from individuals and subsidies; spending limit for general election is
equal to population of state (Senate) or district (House) and half of that for primary
election; raises limit for candidates opposed by non-participating candidates, in
amounts equal to spending limit times number of non-participants; subsidy in general
election, financed through dollar tax checkoff, equals one-third of spending limit.
Introduced September 24, 2003; referred to Committee on House
Administration.



H.R. 3525 (Doolittle) — Citizen Legislature and Political Freedom Act
Individuals (Hard Money). Abolishes all contribution limits, after 2004.
PACs (Hard Money). Abolishes all contribution limits, after 2004.
Parties (Hard Money). Abolishes all contribution limits, after 2004.
Soft Money: Party. Requires state and local parties to file copies with the
FEC of any disclosure reports required under state law.
FEC.
!Requires electronic filing of reports by all committees;
!requires FEC to make standardized software available to all
electronic filers;
!requires posting of information within 24 hours on Internet;
!requires all committees to notify FEC within 24 hours of all
donations in last 90 days of election;
!revokes “best efforts” exemption for identifying contributors of over
$200 in a year.
Presidential. Terminates presidential public funding system;
Miscellaneous. States a series of findings which attribute contemporary
problems with campaign financing to the effects of government regulation.
Introduced November 19, 2003; referred to Committee on House
Administration.
H.R. 3617 (Meehan) — Presidential Funding Act of 2003
Party (Hard Money). Doubles limit for coordinated spending by national
party on behalf of its presidential candidate, indexed for inflation;
Presidential.
!Increases public funds match of the first $250 of an individual’s
contribution to a primary candidate to 4-to-1 match;
!increases qualifying threshold for presidential matching funds to
$15,000 in contributions of $250 or less in each of 20 states;
!requires candidates to commit to accepting public financing for the
general election as condition for getting matching funds in primaries;
!moves starting date for payment of matching funds to July 1 of year
prior to election year;
!increases amount of matching funds available to 80% of primary
spending limit;
!requires acceptance of primary matching funds as a condition for
getting public funding in general election;



!eliminates state-by-state primary spending limits;
!raises national primary spending limit to $75 million, indexed for
inflation;
!sets general election spending limit at $75 million, indexed for
inflation;
!changes rules to fully count fundraising costs toward expenditure
limits;
!doubles spending limit for participating candidates if opposed by
non-participating candidate who exceeds primary spending limit by
one-third, with no additional public funds available;
!doubles check-off amount on tax form to $6 for individuals and $12
for married couples, with future indexing for inflation;
!requires Secretary of Treasury to issue regulations to ensure that
electronic software used in preparation or filing of tax returns does
not automatically accept or decline a check-off to Fund;
!authorizes FEC to spend up to $10 million from Fund on public
education about the Fund during a four-year period;
!doubles public funds available to general election participants if
non-participating opponent raises or spends more than one-third
above the combined primary and general election spending limits;
!changes rules for determination of estimated shortfall in Fund;
!repeals prioritization of nominating convention funding over primary
matching funds.
Introduced November 21, 2003; jointly referred to Committees on House
Administration and Ways and Means.
H.R. 3641 (Tierney) — Clean Money, Clean Elections Act
Parties (Hard Money). In House races with at least one “clean money”
candidate, limits party spending on behalf of a candidate to 10% of general election
candidate’s subsidy.
Independent Expenditures (Hard Money).
!Regarding clean money candidates: requires 48 hour notice of
independent expenditures above $1,000 up to 20 days before
election and 24 hour notice of amounts above $500 in last 20 days;
Coordination (Hard and Soft Money).
!Amends “contribution” to include anything of value for purpose of
influencing a federal election and is coordinated with candidate;
!defines “payment made in coordination with a candidate” to include
payments: (1) in cooperation or consultation with, or at request or
suggestion of, a candidate or agent; (2) using candidate-prepared
materials; (3) based on information about campaign plans provided
by candidate’s campaign for purpose of expenditure; (4) by a
spender who during that election cycle has acted in an official
position for a candidate, in an executive, policymaking, or advisory



capacity; and (5) by a spender who has used the same consultants as
an affected candidate during election cycle; deems payments made
in coordination with a candidate as a “contribution” or “expenditure”
(but exempts a payment by a party in coordination with a “clean
money” candidate).
Spending/Benefits (Hard Money).
!Provides full public subsidies, 30 minutes of free broadcast time in
primary and 75 minutes in general election, and additional broadcast
time at 50% of lowest unit rate for House candidates who:
participate in Clean Money system and spend no private funds
beyond subsidy once qualified;
!prior to qualification, allows candidates to raise seed money
($35,000, in contributions of $100 or less) for specified uses other
than broadcast ads; major party candidates qualify by raising $5
donations from 1,500 state voters; others qualify by raising 150%
of amount raised by major party candidates;
!subsidy equals applicable percentage (60% for general election, 40%
for major party candidate in primary, and 25% for other primary
candidates) of 80% of base amount per election (base amount is
national average of winning House candidate expenditures in three
most recent general elections), but amount may never be less than
amount provided in previous election cycle;
!reduces subsidy to 40% of amount otherwise determined for
unopposed candidates;
!additional subsidies are provided to candidates opposed by
independent expenditures and by non-complying opponents once
such spending exceeds 125% of spending limit (maximum
additional funds equals 200% of limit);
!denies lowest unit rate to non-participating House candidates;
!finances benefits from House of Representatives Election Fund
using appropriated funds, qualifying contributions, and unused seed
money.
FEC.
!Adds one commissioner, recommended by other members;
!allows random audits of campaigns;
!gives FEC authority to seek injunctions;
!changes standard to begin enforcement proceedings to “reason to
i nvest i gat e”;
!allows FEC to petition Supreme Court;
!expedites enforcement in last 60 days of election, with clear and
convincing evidence that violation has occurred, is occurring, or is
about to occur;
!allows subpoenas without chair’s signature;
!requires 24 hour notice of all contributions received in last 90 days
of election.



Advertising. Prohibits preemption of House campaign broadcast ads, unless
beyond broadcasters’ control; requires more prominent and visible ad disclaimers.
Miscellaneous.
!Prohibits franked mass mailings from start of primary election
period through general election, unless Member is not a candidate or
mailing promotes public forum with candidate name only;
!includes statement of findings and declarations;
!if any provision of Act or this statute is held unconstitutional, the
remainder of Act and statute will be unaffected.
Introduced November 21, 2003; jointly referred to Committees on House
Administration, Energy and Commerce, and Government Reform.
H.R. 3801 (Bartlett) — First Amendment Restoration Act
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money). Repeals provisions in BCRA that (1)
require disclosure of and (2) prohibit corporate and union treasury funding of
electioneering communications.
Introduced February 11, 2004; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 4384 (English) — Truth in Spending Act of 2004
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money). Requires political organizations operating
under section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code, but not regulated under FECA, to
file monthly disclosure statements with the IRS.
Introduced May 18, 2004; referred to Committee on Ways and Means.
H.R. 4818/P.L. 108-447 (Kolbe) — Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2005
Candidates (Hard Money). Authorizes (excess) federal campaign funds to
be donated to state and local candidates and to be used for other lawful purposes;
clarifies that authorized committees of federal candidates are limited to contributions
of $2,000 to any authorized committee of another federal candidate.
Introduced and reported by House Appropriations Committee, July 13, 2004
(H.Rept. 108-599); passed by House, July 15, 2004; discharged from Senate
Appropriations Committee and passed by Senate in lieu of S. 2812, Sept. 23, 2004;
conference report filed (H.Rept. 108-792) and agreed to by House and Senate, Nov.

20, 2004; signed by President, Dec. 8, 2004 (P.L. 108-447).



H.R. 4985 (Price, NC) — Stand By Your Internet Ad Act of 2004
Advertising. Clarifies law requiring statement of responsibility for election-
related communications to apply to printed, audio, and video communications
distributed on the Internet and to pre-recorded telephone calls.
Introduced July 22, 2004; referred to Committee on House Administration.
H.R. 5013 (Larson)
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money). Increases frequency of required disclosure
by 527 political organizations under Internal Revenue Code (IRC); requires
disclosure by such groups with receipts or expenditures of less than $25,000 per year;
requires Secretary of Treasury to improve database and disclosure systems for 527
reporting; requires FEC and Secretary of Treasury to improve linkage of disclosure
systems under FECA and IRC.
Introduced September 7, 2004; jointly referred to Committees on Ways and
Means and House Administration.
H.R. 5127 (Shays) — 527 Reform Act of 2004
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money).
!Adds to definition of political committee that its major purpose be
the nomination or election of one or more candidates;
!declares that political organizations under section 527 of Internal
Revenue Code have the major purpose of influencing elections
unless they have annual receipts of less than $25,000 or are
exclusively devoted to non-federal elections (or are state or local
party committees); those exemptions do not apply if 527 spends
money for public communications that promote, support, attack, or
oppose a clearly identified federal candidate in that election cycle;
!specifies two activities that will be considered expenditures by a
political committee or any group whose major purpose is to
influence federal elections: public communications that promote,
support, attack, or oppose a clearly identified federal candidate or
party; and voter registration, voter identification, get-out-the-vote
drive, or generic activity in connection with an election where a
federal candidate is on the ballot;
!requires political committees (but not candidate or party committees)
engaged in both federal and non-federal activities to generally use at
least 50% hard money from federal accounts to finance activities
that mention a clearly identified federal candidate or candidates or
a political party; requires that 100% of public communications and
voter drive activities that mention both federal candidates and a
political party generally, but not a non-federal candidate, be financed
with hard money from a federal account;



!allows contributions to non-federal accounts making allocations
under this provision only by individuals in amounts of up to $25,000
per year;
!states that this act shall have no bearing on FEC regulations or any
litigation regarding them or on definitions of political organizations
in Internal Revenue Code.
Introduced September 22, 2004; referred to Committee on House
Administration.
H.J.Res. 5 (Dingell)
Spending/Benefits (Hard Money). Proposed constitutional amendment to
give Congress authority to limit expenditures in federal elections.
Introduced January 7, 2003; referred to Committee on the Judiciary.
H.J.Res. 21 (Leach)
Candidates (Hard Money). Proposed constitutional amendment to give
Congress and the states the power to regulate the amounts of expenditures candidates
may make from personal and immediate family funds, including personal loans.
Introduced February 5, 2004; referred to Committee on the Judiciary.
Senate Bills
S. 804 (Dorgan)
Individuals (Hard Money). Establishes a 100% tax credit for individual
contributions to congressional candidates, up to $200 (or $400 on joint returns),
available to taxpayers whose adjusted annual gross income does not exceed $60,000
(or $120,000 for joint filers).
Introduced April 7, 2003; referred to Committee on Finance.
S. 1388 (McCain) — Federal Election Administration Act of 2003
FEC.
!Replaces Federal Election Commission with Federal Election
Administration, to administer, seek compliance with, enforce, and
formulate policy regarding federal election law: new agency to
consist of three commissioners, appointed by President with advice
and consent of Senate, headed by chairman serving one 10-year
term; other two commissioners to serve staggered six-year terms;
!enforcement actions would be initiated by majority vote;



!administrative law judges authorized to hear cases, make findings of
fact, impose civil penalties, and issue cease-and-desist orders,
subject to appeal;
!provides for appeals for judicial review by complainants or
aggrieved parties;
!authorizes agency to appeal to district court for temporary restraining
orders or preliminary injunctions to prevent possible violations;
!gives agency responsibility to administer disclosure laws and
presidential public finance system and to conduct random audits;
!provides for agency to submit budget directly to Congress;
!requires GAO to study criminal enforcement of election laws by
Justice Department and conduct ongoing study on appropriate
agency funding levels.
Introduced July 10, 2003; referred to Committee on Rules and Administration.
S. 1497 (McCain) — Our Democracy, Our Airwaves Act of 2003
Spending/Benefits (Hard Money). Establishes a system of vouchers, to be
provided to qualified federal candidates and parties for purchase of radio and
television advertising time; vouchers to be financed by a spectrum-use fee on
broadcasters of between .5% and 1% of their gross annual revenues; congressional
candidates may qualify by raising at least $25,000 from individuals in amounts of
$250 or less, limiting personal spending to a specified level, and having at least one
opponent who raises or spends a specified amount; presidential candidates may
qualify in same manner as they must for eligibility in public finance system; vouchers
provided to congressional candidates based on 3-to1 match of individual
contributions of $250 or less, up to a specified limit; vouchers provided to
presidential candidates based on equal match of contributions of $250 or less in
primaries and half the amount they receive in public funds in general election;
candidates may exchange unused vouchers to parties for dollar value thereof;
Advertising. Requires broadcasters to sell advertising time to candidates and
parties (advertising on behalf of candidates) at lowest unit rate provided to other
advertisers for same class and amount of time in the previous 120 days; prohibits
broadcasters from preempting such ads unless due to circumstances beyond their
control; requires broadcasters to provide at least two hours per week of candidate- or
issue-centered programming in the six weeks prior to a primary or general federal
election, at least four of which immediately precede general election.
Introduced July 30, 2003; referred to Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation.
S. 1874 (Feingold) — Senate Campaign Disclosure Parity Act
FEC. Requires all reports, designations, and statements filed by Senate
candidate committees with the Secretary of the Senate to be in electronic form, and
available to the public on the Internet within 48 hours.



Introduced November 17, 2003; referred to Committee on Rules and
Administration.
S. 1913 (McCain) — Presidential Funding Act of 2003
Party (Hard Money). Doubles limit for coordinated spending by national
party on behalf of its presidential candidate, indexed for inflation;
Presidential.
!Increases public funds match of the first $250 of an individual’s
contribution to a primary candidate to 4-to-1 match;
!increases qualifying threshold for presidential matching funds to
$15,000 in contributions of $250 or less in each of 20 states;
!requires candidates to commit to accepting public financing for the
general election as condition for getting matching funds in primaries;
!moves starting date for payment of matching funds to July 1 of year
prior to election year;
!increases amount of matching funds available to 80% of primary
spending limit;
!requires acceptance of primary matching funds as condition for
getting public funding in general election;
!eliminates state-by-state primary spending limits;
!raises national primary spending limit to $75 million, indexed for
inflation;
!sets general election spending limit at $75 million, indexed for
inflation;
!changes rules to fully count fundraising costs toward expenditure
limits;
!doubles spending limit for participating candidates if opposed by
non-participating candidate who exceeds primary spending limit by
one-third, with no additional public funds available;
!doubles check-off amount on tax form to $6 for individuals and $12
for married couples, with future indexing for inflation;
!requires Secretary of Treasury to issue regulations to ensure that
electronic software used in preparation or filing of tax returns does
not automatically accept or decline a check-off to Fund;
!authorizes FEC to spend up to $10 million from Fund on public
education about the Fund during a four-year period;
!doubles public funds available to general election participants if
non-participating opponent raises or spends more than one-third
above the combined primary and general election spending limits;
!changes rules for determination of estimated shortfall in Fund;
!repeals prioritization of funds for nominating conventions over
primaries.
Introduced November 21, 2003; referred to Committee on Finance.



S. 2392 (Wyden) — Political Candidate Personal Responsibility Act of 2004
Advertising. Requires communications by federal candidates that refer to
opponents and are distributed in print, on the Internet, or through pre-recorded
telephone calls to contain clear statements of candidate responsibility.
Introduced May 6, 2004; referred to Committee on Rules and Administration.
S. 2702 (Chambliss) — First Amendment Restoration Act
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money). Repeals provisions in BCRA that require
(1) disclosure of and (2) prohibit corporate and union treasury funding of
electioneering communications.
Introduced July 21, 2004; referred to Committee on Rules and Administration.
S. 2828 (McCain) — 527 Reform Act of 2004
Issue Advocacy (Soft Money).
!Adds to definition of political committee that its major purpose be
the nomination or election of one or more candidates;
!declares that political organizations under section 527 of Internal
Revenue Code have the major purpose of influencing elections
unless they have annual receipts of less than $25,000 or are
exclusively devoted to non-federal elections (or are state or local
party committees); those exemptions do not apply if 527 spends
money for public communications that promote, support, attack, or
oppose a clearly identified federal candidate in that election cycle;
!specifies two activities that will be considered expenditures by a
political committee or any group whose major purpose is to
influence federal elections: public communications that promote,
support, attack, or oppose a clearly identified federal candidate or
party; and voter registration, voter identification, get-out-the-vote
drive, or generic activity in connection with an election where a
federal candidate is on the ballot;
!requires political committees (but not candidate or party committees)
engaged in both federal and non-federal activities to generally use at
least 50% hard money from federal accounts to finance activities
that mention a clearly identified federal candidate or candidates or
a political party; requires that 100% of public communications and
voter drive activities that mention both federal candidates and a
political party generally, but not a non-federal candidate, be financed
with hard money from a federal account;
!allows contributions to non-federal accounts making allocations
under this provision only by individuals in amounts of up to $25,000
per year;



!states that this act shall have no bearing on FEC regulations or any
litigation regarding them or on definitions of political organizations
in Internal Revenue Code.
Introduced September 22, 2004; referred to Committee on Rules and
Administration.
S.J.Res. 5 (Hollings)
Spending/Benefits (Hard Money). Proposed constitutional amendment to
allow Congress and the states to set reasonable limits on contributions and
expenditures in support of or opposition to candidates for nomination and election
to federal and state or local office.
Introduced January 23, 2003; referred to Committee on the Judiciary.




Index
House Bills
Andrews.................................................H.R. 1878
Bartlett..........................................H.R. 344; H.R. 3801
Dingell..................................................H.J.Res. 5
Doolittle.................................................H.R. 3525
English..................................H.R. 681; H.R. 797; H.R. 4384
Hoekstra.................................................H.R. 2529
Kolbe........................................H.R. 4818/P.L. 108-447
Larson...................................................H.R. 5013
Leach..................................................H.J.Res. 21
Maloney.................................................H.R. 2667
McCollum...............................................H.R. 3172
Meehan..................................................H.R. 3617
Petri.............................................H.R. 156; H.R. 157
Price....................................................H.R. 4985
Shays..........................................H.R. 2709; H.R. 5127
Tierney..................................................H.R. 3641
Senate Bills
Chambliss..................................................S. 2702
Dorgan.....................................................S. 804
Feingold...................................................S. 1874
Hollings..................................................S.J.Res. 5
McCain...............................S. 1388; S. 1497; S. 1913; S. 2828
Wyden....................................................S. 2392