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  • 3
    days
    ago

    Lax state rules provide cover for sponsors of attack ads

    By Alan Suderman
    The Center for Public Integrity

    While much criticism has been lobbed at the federal system for failing to adequately identify who is spending money to influence campaigns, 35 states have independent spending disclosure laws that are less stringent than federal election law.

    In fact, in 30 states it’s impossible to total how much money outside groups are spending on campaigns, information that is mostly available when it comes to federal contests.

    That’s according to a new 50-state analysis by the National Institute on Money in State Politics, which graded the states on disclosure requirements for super PACs, nonprofits and other outside spending groups.

    Fifteen states — Alaska, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin — received an “A” grade, meaning the states’ laws were at least as robust as federal independent spending requirements.


    Follow @openchannelblog

    New Jersey and Virginia, states where residents will be casting votes for governor and state legislature this year, were among 26 states that received a failing grade in the analysis  by the nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that focuses on the influence of campaign money on state-level elections and public policy in all 50 states.

    The others were Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee and Wyoming.

    States were graded on a 100-point scale, based on how much information is provided to the public about non-candidate organizations that buy ads, often negative and misleading, just before an election. Six states — Alabama, Indiana, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota and South Carolina — didn’t garner a single point in the survey.

    Independent super PACs and nonprofits intent on influencing campaigns proliferated in the wake of the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission ruling, adding about $1 billion in spending  in federal races in the 2012 election cycle.

    At the state level, lavish spending by outside groups often faces weaker disclosure rules than federal contests and receives far less media attention.

    The result is a mishmash of rules, with some states scrambling to pass legislation in the wake of the high court decision while others show little interest in enacting any changes.

    In South Carolina, for example, outside groups paid for ads attacking several state and local politicians in 2012 but were not required to report the spending.

    Two federal court decisions have left the state without “any rules” related to outside groups’ spending, according to Cathy L. Hazelwood, deputy director of the state Ethics Commission.

    State Sen. Wes Hayes, a Republican from Rock Hill, estimates that an anonymous group called Conservative GOP PAC, which despite its name has no apparent affiliation with the state’s Republican party, spent at least $100,000 on campaign fliers in an unsuccessful effort to unseat him.

    He concedes that’s just a guess.

    “I’ll never know the amount, just like I’ll never know who spent it,” Hayes says. Efforts to contact Conservative GOP PAC were unsuccessful, as the group has no office, no phone number, no website, did not file incorporation records with the state and no individuals have claimed membership in the organization.

    Non-candidate, independent spending on elections can be broken into two general categories: “independent expenditures” and “electioneering.” With independent expenditures, potential voters are asked to back or oppose a candidate. With electioneering, a candidate is named, but there’s no explicit request for support or opposition.

    In 25 of 50 states, electioneering advertisements are not required to be reported, according to the analysis by the National Institute.

    The term “electioneering communications” came to be with the passage of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002. The federal law requires such expenditures be reported, but it applies only to television and radio ads that air shortly before an election.

    In a few states, however, the definition of electioneering communications is broader than at the federal level, and may include non-broadcast expenditures like direct mail and print advertising. Independent expenditures refer to all expenditures used to support or oppose a candidate, including non-advertising costs like polling and yard signs.

    Points were withheld in the survey based on the level of disclosure and whether disclosure forms differentiate between independent spending and other types of campaign expenditures.

    While North Dakota scored a zero, the state passed legislation this year that will beef up disclosure requirements for outside groups once the law goes into effect Aug. 1.

    The National Institute’s rankings focus solely on spending and not on donors to the groups that are doing the spending. Increasingly, “social welfare” nonprofits — currently at the center of a scandal involving the IRS — and trade associations are being used to hide donors’ identities in both federal and state races.

    In New Mexico, outside political action groups spent heavily on races for the state Legislature, races that typically attract fewer than 20,000 voters. Once sleepy contests have become bruising battles fought through statewide television ads, said state Sen. Peter Wirth, a Democrat from Santa Fe.

    He’s pushed a bill requiring greater disclosure by outside groups through the Senate three times (twice with unanimous approval) only to see it die in the state House after frenetic lobbying by “very powerful special interests” from both parties, he says.

    “It’s bipartisan support in the open, and then behind the scenes it’s full-on bipartisan opposition,” Wirth says.

    But several states have enacted disclosure requirements that go beyond federal requirements.

    •In Maryland, corporations are required to alert shareholders about a company’s independent political spending;

    •A “stand by your ad” provision in a 2010 Massachusetts law requires that in corporate-funded ads, the CEO appear in the spot;

    •Alaska, California and North Carolina require independent expenditure groups to list their top donors in political ads.

    The National Institute’s rankings also factor whether states require independent spending groups to disclose which candidate they are targeting.

    Two states, Florida and Delaware, require that spending be made public but not the targets or the purpose of the spending. The result: It’s virtually impossible to track how much was spent by outside groups trying to hurt or help a particular candidate.

    Thirty-six states will elect governors in 2014. Edwin Bender, executive director of the National Institute on Money in State Politics, said he hopes states with poor grades will strengthen their reporting requirements.

    “The majority of states will elect their governors and other major statewide offices in 2014,” he said. “We think the public should know how much money is spent on these races, and by whom.” 

    John Dunbar contributed to this report.

    The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit, non-partisan investigative news organization in Washington, D.C. For more of its stories on this to go publicintegrity.org.

    For more information about money in state politics, visit www.followthemoney.org.

    More from Open Channel:

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    Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook 


    5 comments

    "Efforts to contact Conservative GOP PAC were unsuccessful, as the group has no office, no phone number, no website, did not file incorporation records with the state and no individuals have claimed membership in the organization."

    Show more
    Explore related topics: elections, state, campaign, laws, analysis, ads, spending, reporting
  • 7
    Dec
    2012
    5:58pm, EST

    Adelson, other big super PAC donors continued spending in race's final days

    Nicholas Kamm / AFP - Getty Images

    Casino magnate Sheldon Adelson continued to pour money into the 2012 campaign right up until the last minute, new campaign records show.

    By Michael Beckel
    The Center for Public Integrity

    Billionaire casino owner Sheldon Adelson gave $1 million to a super PAC active in Michigan’s U.S. Senate race during the campaign’s final days, a fact unknown to voters until long after polls closed.

    Adelson supplied the bulk of funding for the “Hardworking Americans Committee” with the Oct. 19 donation, Federal Election Commission records show.

    The super PAC spent more than $1 million on ads in a futile, last-minute attempt to boost former Republican Rep. Pete Hoekstra in his bid to oust incumbent Sen. Debbie Stabenow, a Democrat.


    Liberal super PACs spent little – just $1,700 -- attacking Hoekstra,  according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

    The deadline for reporting donations made since Oct. 17 was Thursday.

    Last-minute contributions are not unusual in politics, but thanks to the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision and a lower court ruling, the amount a donor can give to outside groups’ electoral efforts is unlimited. Furthermore, donations to political action committees during the final three weeks of the election need not be reported until December.

    The reporting gap should be closed, say watchdogs.

    “Congress should amend our disclosure laws to give voters the information they need to make informed decisions on Election Day,” said Paul S. Ryan, an attorney at the Campaign Legal Center. “With current technology, disclosure is easier than ever for super PACs and other political players.”

    Adelson, the top donor to super PACs in the 2012 election by a large margin, along with wife Miriam, also provided all $2 million of Republican Jewish Coalition Victory Fund’s war chest. The super PAC, which did not report any receipts before Election Day, pumped more than $1.7 million into advertising opposing President Barack Obama.

    The Republican Jewish Coalition is a lobbying organization that seeks to “foster and enhance ties between the American Jewish community and Republican decision makers,” according to its website. It was started in 1985 and Adelson serves on the group’s board of directors

    Similarly, “Freedom Fund North America,” a GOP-aligned super PAC established on Oct. 15, spent $990,000 in the final weeks of the 2012 race, mostly attacking incumbent Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., and former North Dakota Attorney General Heidi Heitkamp.

    Both Democrats prevailed in their hotly contested races.

    Adelson did not return a call seeking comment.

    The entirety of Freedom Fund's $1 million budget came from Texas businessman and Republican mega-donor Bob Perry, according to FEC reports.

    New records further show that billionaire New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg provided nearly $10 million to the “Independence USA PAC,” whose priorities include gun control, marriage equality for same-sex couples and education issues. It was launched on Oct. 18 and reported spending $8.2 million on five House races.

    Two of its favored candidates — Democrat Gloria McLeod of California and Democrat Dan Maffei of California — won.

    Super PACs can accept donations of unlimited amounts from corporations, unions and individuals.

    FEC Vice Chairwoman Ellen Weintraub, a Democrat, stressed the importance of people having such information before they cast their votes.

    “I always think the public benefits from and is entitled to transparency about the sources of political funds,” she said. “As the Supreme Court said in Citizens United, ‘The public has an interest in knowing who is speaking about a candidate shortly before an election.’”

    Republican attorney Brad Smith, a former FEC chairman who founded the Center for Competitive Politics, however, argues that the lack of disclosure of last-minute super PAC donations is not a "real catastrophe or something that is harmful to the election process."

    The government's interest in “preventing corruption or its appearance” is served just as well "if information is released afterward," he said.

    The only other large contributions that went to the anti-Stabenow super PAC came from Amway President Doug DeVos and Michael Jandernoa, former president and CEO of pharmaceutical company Perrigo, who each donated $100,000 to the group in October.

    Ads from the super PAC accused her of dodging taxes on her “ritzy Washington, D.C., home,” voting for tax increases and “failing Michigan for years.”

    Despite the spending, Stabenow easily captured nearly 60 percent of the vote. Yet the last-minute deluge earned ire from her campaign.

    “The fact that secret money can be dumped into races like this, with no one knowing where the money came from until a month after the election, is awful for our democracy,”  said Stabenow spokesman Cullen Schwarz.

    Hoekstra did not return a call seeking comment about the super PAC spending on his behalf.

    The Center for Public integrity is a non-profit, independent investigative news outlet.  To read more of its stories go to publicintegrity.org.

    More from Open Channel:


     

  • Secret Service says it lost two computer backup tapes in 2008
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    Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     


    86 comments

    They (Adelson etc.) would rather waste their money on a losing cause - the bottonless hole (mitt) - than pay their fair share of taxes and invest for a better America.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: campaign, donations, reporting, contributions, super-pac
  • 16
    Apr
    2012
    3:32pm, EDT

    AP account of police spying on Muslims shares investigative Pulitzer

    By Bill Dedman
    Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    Four staffers at the Associated Press shared a 2012 Pulitzer Prize on Monday for exposing the New York Police Department's clandestine spying that monitored daily life of Muslim communities. The Pulitzer board at Columbia University in New York said the AP series resulted in "congressional calls for a federal investigation, and a debate over the proper role of domestic intelligence gathering." The journalists are Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Eileen Sullivan and Chris Hawley. The AP is a non-profit news cooperative owned by U.S. newspapers.

    The Seattle Times also was honored in the investigative reporting category for articles showing "how a little-known governmental body in Washington State moved vulnerable patients from safer pain-control medication to methadone, a cheaper but more dangerous drug, coverage that prompted statewide health warnings." The journalists are Michael J. Berens and Ken Armstrong. You can read that series here.

    Highlights of the AP investigation are here. A summary:

    Domestic spying
    "AP's investigation has revealed that the NYPD dispatched undercover officers into minority neighborhoods as part of a human mapping program. Police also used informants, known as "mosque crawlers," to monitor sermons, even when there was no evidence of wrongdoing. The articles showed that police systemically listened in on sermons, hung out at cafes and other public places, infiltrated colleges and photographed law-abiding residents as part of a broad effort to prevent terrorist attacks.

    "Individuals and groups were monitored even when there was no evidence they were linked to terrorism.


    "The AP also determined that police subjected entire neighborhoods to surveillance and scrutiny, often because of the ethnicity of the residents, not because of any accusations of crimes. Hundreds of mosques and Muslim student groups were investigated and dozens were infiltrated. Many of these operations were built with help from the CIA, which is prohibited from spying on Americans but was instrumental in transforming the NYPD's intelligence unit after 9/11."

    Reporter Apuzo describes the reporting on the series in a podcast for Pro Publica, the nonprofit investigative news organization. You can listen to the podcast here.

    More winners
    The winners in journalism, letters and the arts are listed at the Pulitzer Prizes site at Columbia University, and nominated finalists who did not win are listed separately.

    The Huffington Post news website won its first Pulitzer Prize, for national reporting, for articles describing wounds suffered by American veterans in Iraq and Afghanistan. The series is called "Beyond the Battlefield."

     

    1 comment

    BROKEINCOLORADO -- I couldn't agree with you more. The comments here seem to be from twenty somethings that didn't live through the JFK assassination along with the usual Obama haters. This story stinks to high heaven -- these agents have to be replaced. Does someone or group have an agenda to repla …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: muslim, terrorism, reporting, documents, pulitzer, investigative

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