Amended in Assembly April 30, 2013

Amended in Assembly April 15, 2013

California Legislature—2013–14 Regular Session

Assembly BillNo. 45


Introduced by Assembly Member Dickinson

(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Skinner)

(Coauthor: Assembly Member Bonta)

December 19, 2012


An act to amend Sections 81010, 82007, 82013, 82015, 84101, 84211, 84215, 84605, and 85201 of, and to add Sections 84215.5, 86119, and 90009 to, the Government Code, relating to the Political Reform Act of 1974.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AB 45, as amended, Dickinson. Political Reform Act of 1974.

(1) The Political Reform Act of 1974 defines various terms for purposes of the reporting and disclosure requirements under the act.

The act defines the term “candidate” as including, in addition to other individuals, an officeholder who is the subject of a recall election. This definition also provides that an individual who becomes a candidate retains his or her status as a candidate until the time that this status is terminated.

This bill would revise this definition to provide that the term “candidate” includes any officeholder, regardless of whether he or she is the subject of a recall election, and would provide that a candidate retains that status until the time that he or she leaves office and the status is terminated.

The act defines a “committee” as any person or combination of persons who receives contributions or makes independent expenditures totaling $1,000 or more in a calendar year.

This bill would increase the monetary threshold of contributions or independent expenditures that qualify a person or combination of persons as a committee to $2,000.begin delete (PU 20130AB__004599INT )end delete The bill also would make conforming changes.

(2) The act requires committees to file periodic campaign statements. The act requires that the campaign statements disclose certain information about contributors who have made aggregate contributions, as defined, of $100 or more.

This bill would increase the monetary contribution threshold for requiring the disclosure of contributor information tobegin delete $250end deletebegin insert $200end insert. The bill would require the Fair Political Practices Commission to adopt regulations establishing reporting thresholds, with a minimum of $500 and a maximum of $2,500, for disclosure of contributions and expenditures, as specified, for a committee primarily formed to support or oppose a statewidebegin delete initiative orend delete ballot measure, and would authorize the Commission to adopt regulations to adjust these thresholds in any odd-numbered year after 2013begin insert to reflect any increase or decrease in the Consumer Price Index, rounded to the nearest $100end insert.

This bill would revise the definition of “contribution” to include a payment to a multipurpose organization, as defined, made by a person who knows or has reason to know that the payment or portion of the payment will be used to make a contribution or an independent expenditure. The bill imposes a presumption that a donor has reason to know that his or her payment will be used to make a contribution or an independent expenditure if the recipient organization has made aggregate contributions or independent expenditures of $2,000 or more within the calendar year in which the payment is made or four preceding calendar years or if the donor payment is $50,000 or more, is made within the 6 months preceding the election, and the multipurpose organization makes a contribution or an independent expenditure of $50,000 or more within the 6 months prior to the election.

(3) The act imposes specified duties on a filing officer with respect to reports and statements filed with that filing officer, including supplying the necessary forms and manuals and determining whether required documents have been filed and conform on their face with the requirements of the act.

This bill would additionally require a filing officer to immediately affix a date stamp to each statement of economic interests that the officer receives to reflect the date of receipt. By imposing additional duties on local officials, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

(4) The act requires that certain campaign statements be filed with the Secretary of State online or electronically. The act requires that persons filing campaign statements online or electronically also continue to file the statements in a paper format.

This bill would repeal the requirement that a person file a paper copy of a campaign statement that is filed with the Secretary of State online or electronically, except during such times as the online or electronic system operated by the Secretary of State is malfunctioning, unavailable, or otherwise not capable of receiving online or electronically filed campaign statements.

(5) The act is administered and enforced by the Fair Political Practices Commission.

This bill would authorize the Commission to seek injunctive relief in a superior court to compel disclosure consistent with the act, and would require a court to grant expedited review of an action filed pursuant to this provision, as specified.

(6) The act requires a lobbying firm and a lobbyist employer, as defined, to register and file periodic activity reports with the Secretary of State disclosing specified information. The act requires lobbyists, lobbying firms, and lobbyist employers to periodically report activity expenses, as defined.

This bill would require the Secretary of State to make these registration documents and reports that are filed with the Secretary of State available to the Commission, upon request by the Commission.

(7) The act makes a knowing or willful violation of its provisions a misdemeanor and subjects offenders to criminal penalties.

By expanding the scope of an existing crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

(8) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that with regard to certain mandates no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

With regard to any other mandates, this bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs so mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.

(9) The Political Reform Act of 1974, an initiative measure, provides that the Legislature may amend the act to further the act’s purposes upon a 23 vote of each house and compliance with specified procedural requirements.

This bill would declare that it furthers the purposes of the act.

Vote: 23. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P4    1

SECTION 1.  

Section 81010 of the Government Code is
2amended to read:

3

81010.  

With respect to reports and statements filed with him
4or her pursuant to this title, the filing officer shall do all of the
5following:

6(a) Supply the necessary forms and manuals prescribed by the
7Commission.

8(b) Immediately affix a date stamp to each statement of
9economic interests filed pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with
10Section 87100) to reflect the date of receipt by the filing officer.

11(c) Determine whether required documents have been filed and,
12if so, whether they conform on their face with the requirements of
13this title.

14(d) Notify promptly all persons and known committees who
15have failed to file a report or statement in the form and at the time
16required by this title.

17(e) Report apparent violations of this title to the appropriate
18agencies.

19(f) Compile and maintain a current list of all reports and
20statements filed with this office.

21

SEC. 2.  

Section 82007 of the Government Code is amended
22to read:

23

82007.  

“Candidate” means an individual who is listed on the
24ballot, or who has qualified to have write-in votes on his or her
25behalf counted by election officials, for nomination for or election
26to an elective office, or who receives a contribution or makes an
27expenditure or gives his or her consent for any other person to
28receive a contribution or make an expenditure with a view to
P5    1bringing about his or her nomination or election to an elective
2office, whether or not the specific elective office for which he or
3she will seek nomination or election is known at the time the
4contribution is received or the expenditure is made and whether
5or not he or she has announced his or her candidacy or filed a
6declaration of candidacy at that time. “Candidate” also includes
7an officeholder. An individual who becomes a candidate shall
8retain his or her status as a candidate until the time he or she leaves
9office and his or her status as a candidate is terminated pursuant
10to Section 84214. “Candidate” does not include a person within
11the meaning of Section 301(b) of the Federal Election Campaign
12Act of 1971.

13

SEC. 3.  

Section 82013 of the Government Code is amended
14to read:

15

82013.  

“Committee” means any person or combination of
16persons who directly or indirectly does any of the following:

17(a) Receives contributions totaling two thousand dollars ($2,000)
18or more in a calendar year.

19(b) Makes independent expenditures totaling two thousand
20dollars ($2,000) or more in a calendar year.

21(c) Makes contributions totaling ten thousand dollars ($10,000)
22or more in a calendar year to or at the behest of candidates or
23committees.

24A person or combination of persons that becomes a committee
25shall retain its status as a committee until such time as that status
26is terminated pursuant to Section 84214.

27

SEC. 4.  

Section 82015 of the Government Code is amended
28to read:

29

82015.  

(a) “Contribution” means a payment, a forgiveness of
30a loan, a payment of a loan by a third party, or an enforceable
31promise to make a payment except to the extent that full and
32adequate consideration is received, unless it is clear from the
33surrounding circumstances that it is not made for political purposes.

34(b) (1) A payment made at the behest of a committeebegin insert,end insert as defined
35in subdivision (a) of Section 82013begin insert,end insert is a contribution to the
36committee unless full and adequate consideration is received from
37the committee for making the payment.

38(2) A payment made at the behest of a candidate is a contribution
39to the candidate unless the criteria in either subparagraph (A) or
40(B) are satisfied:

P6    1(A) Full and adequate consideration is received from the
2candidate.

3(B) It is clear from the surrounding circumstances that the
4payment was made for purposes unrelated to his or her candidacy
5for elective office. The following types of payments are presumed
6to be for purposes unrelated to a candidate’s candidacy for elective
7office:

8(i) A payment made principally for personal purposes, in which
9case it may be considered a gift under the provisions of Section
1082028. Payments that are otherwise subject to the limits of Section
1186203 are presumed to be principally for personal purposes.

12(ii) A payment made by a state, local, or federal governmental
13agency or by a nonprofit organization that is exempt from taxation
14under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

15(iii) A payment not covered by clause (i), made principally for
16legislative, governmental, or charitable purposes, in which case it
17is neither a gift nor a contribution. However, payments of this type
18that are made at the behest of a candidate who is an elected officer
19shall be reported within 30 days following the date on which the
20payment or payments equal or exceed five thousand dollars
21($5,000) in the aggregate from the same source in the same
22calendar year in which they are made. The report shall be filed by
23the elected officer with the elected officer’s agency and shall be
24a public record subject to inspection and copying pursuant to
25subdivision (a) of Section 81008. The report shall contain the
26following information: name of payer, address of payer, amount
27of the payment, date or dates the payment or payments were made,
28the name and address of the payee, a brief description of the goods
29or services provided or purchased, if any, and a description of the
30specific purpose or event for which the payment or payments were
31made. Once the five-thousand-dollar ($5,000) aggregate threshold
32from a single source has been reached for a calendar year, all
33payments for the calendar year made by that source must be
34disclosed within 30 days after the date the threshold was reached
35or the payment was made, whichever occurs later. Within 30 days
36after receipt of the report, state agencies shall forward a copy of
37these reports to the Fair Political Practices Commission, and local
38agencies shall forward a copy of these reports to the officer with
39whom elected officers of that agency file their campaign
40statements.

P7    1(C) For purposes of subparagraph (B), a payment is made for
2purposes related to a candidate’s candidacy for elective office if
3all or a portion of the payment is used for election-related activities.
4For purposes of this subparagraph, “election-related activities”
5shall include, but are not limited to, the following:

6(i) Communications that contain express advocacy of the
7nomination or election of the candidate or the defeat of his or her
8opponent.

9(ii) Communications that contain reference to the candidate’s
10candidacy for elective office, the candidate’s election campaign,
11or the candidate’s or his or her opponent’s qualifications for
12elective office.

13(iii) Solicitation of contributions to the candidate or to third
14persons for use in support of the candidate or in opposition to his
15or her opponent.

16(iv) Arranging, coordinating, developing, writing, distributing,
17preparing, or planning of any communication or activity described
18in clause (i), (ii), or (iii).

19(v) Recruiting or coordinating campaign activities of campaign
20volunteers on behalf of the candidate.

21(vi) Preparing campaign budgets.

22(vii) Preparing campaign finance disclosure statements.

23(viii) Communications directed to voters or potential voters as
24part of activities encouraging or assisting persons to vote if the
25communication contains express advocacy of the nomination or
26election of the candidate or the defeat of his or her opponent.

27(D) A contribution made at the behest of a candidate for a
28different candidate or to a committee not controlled by the
29behesting candidate is not a contribution to the behesting candidate.

30(3) A payment made at the behest of a member of the Public
31Utilities Commission, made principally for legislative,
32governmental, or charitable purposes, is not a contribution.
33However, payments of this type shall be reported within 30 days
34following the date on which the payment or payments equal or
35exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000) in the aggregate from the
36same source in the same calendar year in which they are made.
37The report shall be filed by the member with the Public Utilities
38Commission and shall be a public record subject to inspection and
39copying pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 81008. The report
40shall contain the following information: name of payer, address
P8    1of payer, amount of the payment, date or dates the payment or
2payments were made, the name and address of the payee, a brief
3description of the goods or services provided or purchased, if any,
4and a description of the specific purpose or event for which the
5payment or payments were made. Once the five-thousand-dollar
6 ($5,000) aggregate threshold from a single source has been reached
7for a calendar year, all payments for the calendar year made by
8that source must be disclosed within 30 days after the date the
9threshold was reached or the payment was made, whichever occurs
10later. Within 30 days after receipt of the report, the Public Utilities
11Commission shall forward a copy of these reports to the Fair
12Political Practices Commission.

13(c) “Contribution” includes the purchase of tickets for events
14such as dinners, luncheons, rallies, and similar fundraising events;
15the candidate’s own money or property used on behalf of his or
16her candidacy other than personal funds of the candidate used to
17pay either a filing fee for a declaration of candidacy or a candidate
18statement prepared pursuant to Section 13307 of the Elections
19Code; the granting of discounts or rebates not extended to the
20public generally or the granting of discounts or rebates by television
21and radio stations and newspapers not extended on an equal basis
22to all candidates for the same office; the payment of compensation
23by any person for the personal services or expenses of any other
24person if the services are rendered or expenses incurred on behalf
25of a candidate or committee without payment of full and adequate
26consideration.

27(d) “Contribution” further includes any transfer of anything of
28value received by a committee from another committee, unless
29full and adequate consideration is received.

30(e) “Contribution” does not include amounts received pursuant
31to an enforceable promise to the extent those amounts have been
32previously reported as a contribution. However, the fact that those
33amounts have been received shall be indicated in the appropriate
34campaign statement.

35(f) “Contribution” does not include a payment made by an
36occupant of a home or office for costs related to any meeting or
37fundraising event held in the occupant’s home or office if the costs
38for the meeting or fundraising event are five hundred dollars ($500)
39or less.

P9    1(g) Notwithstanding the foregoing definition of “contribution,”
2the term does not include volunteer personal services or payments
3made by any individual for his or her own travel expenses if the
4payments are made voluntarily without any understanding or
5agreement that they shall be, directly or indirectly, repaid to him
6or her.

7(h) “Contribution” further includes the payment of public
8moneys by a state or local governmental agency for a
9communication to the public that satisfies both of the following:

10(1) The communication expressly advocates the election or
11defeat of a clearly identified candidate or the qualification, passage,
12or defeat of a clearly identified measure, or, taken as a whole and
13in context, unambiguously urges a particular result in an election.

14(2) The communication is made at the behest of the affected
15candidate or committee.

16(i) (1) “Contribution” further includes a payment made to a
17multipurpose organization if the donor knows or has reason to
18know that the payment, or part of the payment, will be used to
19make a contribution or an independent expenditure.

20(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), a donor knows that a payment
21to a multipurpose organization will be used to make a contribution
22or an independent expenditure if the donor specifies that to be the
23purpose for which the payment must be used or if the donor makes
24the payment in response to a message or solicitation indicating the
25multipurpose organization’s intent to make a contribution or an
26independent expenditure.

27(3) For purposes of paragraph (1), a donor is presumed to have
28reason to know that a payment to a multipurpose organization will
29be used to make a contribution or an independent expenditure if
30the recipient multipurpose organization has made aggregate
31contributions or independent expenditures of two thousand dollars
32($2,000) or more during the calendar year in which the payment
33is made or during any of the four preceding calendar years.

34(4) For purposes of paragraph (1), a donor who makes an
35aggregate payment of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more to
36a multipurpose organization within the six months prior to an
37election is presumed to have reason to know that the aggregate
38payments will be used by the multipurpose organization to make
39a contribution or an independent expenditure if the multipurpose
40organization makes an aggregate contribution or independent
P10   1expenditure of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or more to support
2or oppose a candidate or ballot measure within the six months prior
3to that election.

4(5) A donor who makes a contribution described in paragraph
5(1) shall be identified and reported by the multipurpose
6organization receiving the contribution in accordance with
7regulations adopted by the Commission.

8(6) For purposes of this subdivision, “multipurpose organization”
9means a nonprofit organization, a federal or out-of-state political
10action committee, or a local club focusing on educational or social
11activities.

12

SEC. 5.  

Section 84101 of the Government Code is amended
13to read:

14

84101.  

(a) A committee that is a committee by virtue of
15subdivision (a) of Section 82013 shall file a statement of
16organization. The committee shall file the original of the statement
17of organization with the Secretary of State and shall also file a
18copy of the statement of organization with the local filing officer,
19if any, with whom the committee is required to file the originals
20of its campaign reports pursuant to Section 84215. The original
21and copy of the statement of organization shall be filed within 10
22days after the committee has qualified as a committee. The
23Secretary of State shall assign a number to each committee that
24files a statement of organization and shall notify the committee of
25the number. The Secretary of State shall send a copy of statements
26filed pursuant to this section to the county elections official of each
27 county that he or she deems appropriate. A county elections official
28who receives a copy of a statement of organization from the
29Secretary of State pursuant to this section shall send a copy of the
30statement to the clerk of each city in the county that he or she
31deems appropriate.

32(b) In addition to filing the statement of organization as required
33by subdivision (a), if a committee qualifies as a committee under
34subdivision (a) of Section 82013 before the date of an election in
35connection with which the committee is required to file preelection
36statements, but after the closing date of the last campaign statement
37required to be filed before the election pursuant to Section 84200.7,
3884200.8, or 84200.9, the committee shall file, by facsimile
39transmission, guaranteed overnight delivery, or personal delivery
40within 24 hours of qualifying as a committee, the information
P11   1required to be reported in the statement of organization. The
2information required by this subdivision shall be filed with the
3filing officer with whom the committee is required to file the
4originals of its campaign reports pursuant to Section 84215.

5(c) If an independent expenditure committee qualifies as a
6committee pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 82013 during the
7time period described in Section 82036.5 and makes independent
8expenditures of one thousand dollars ($1,000) or more to support
9or oppose a candidate or candidates for office, the committee shall
10file, by facsimile transmission, online transmission, guaranteed
11overnight delivery, or personal delivery within 24 hours of
12qualifying as a committee, the information required to be reported
13in the statement of organization. The information required by this
14section shall be filed with the filing officer with whom the
15committee is required to file the original of its campaign reports
16pursuant to Section 84215, and shall be filed at all locations
17required for the candidate or candidates supported or opposed by
18the independent expenditures. The filings required by this section
19are in addition to filings that may be required by Sections 84203.5
20and 84204.

21(d) For purposes of this section, in calculating whether two
22thousand dollars ($2,000) in contributions has been received,
23payments for a filing fee or for a statement of qualifications to
24appear in a sample ballot shall not be included if these payments
25have been made from the candidate’s personal funds.

26

SEC. 6.  

Section 84211 of the Government Code is amended
27to read:

28

84211.  

Each campaign statement required by this article shall
29contain all of the following information:

30(a) The total amount of contributions received during the period
31covered by the campaign statement and the total cumulative amount
32of contributions received.

33(b) The total amount of expenditures made during the period
34covered by the campaign statement and the total cumulative amount
35of expenditures made.

36(c) The total amount of contributions received during the period
37covered by the campaign statement from persons who have given
38a cumulative amount of two hundredbegin delete fiftyend delete dollarsbegin delete ($250)end deletebegin insert ($200)end insert
39 or more.

P12   1(d) The total amount of contributions received during the period
2covered by the campaign statement from persons who have given
3a cumulative amount of less than two hundredbegin delete fiftyend delete dollarsbegin delete ($250)end delete
4begin insert ($200)end insert.

5(e) The balance of cash and cash equivalents on hand at the
6 beginning and the end of the period covered by the campaign
7statement.

8(f) If the cumulative amount of contributions (including loans)
9received from a person is two hundredbegin delete fiftyend delete dollarsbegin delete ($250)end deletebegin insert ($200)end insert
10 or more and a contribution or loan has been received from that
11person during the period covered by the campaign statement, all
12of the following:

13(1) His or her full name.

14(2) His or her street address.

15(3) His or her occupation.

16(4) The name of his or her employer or, if self-employed, the
17name of the business.

18(5) The date and amount received for each contribution received
19during the period covered by the campaign statement and, if the
20contribution is a loan, the interest rate for the loan.

21(6) The cumulative amount of contributions.

22(g) If the cumulative amount of loans received from or made to
23a person is two hundredbegin delete fiftyend delete dollarsbegin delete ($250)end deletebegin insert ($200)end insert or more, and
24a loan has been received from or made to a person during the period
25covered by the campaign statement, or is outstanding during the
26period covered by the campaign statement, all of the following:

27(1) His or her full name.

28(2) His or her street address.

29(3) His or her occupation.

30(4) The name of his or her employer or, if self-employed, the
31name of the business.

32(5) The original date and amount of each loan.

33(6) The due date and interest rate of the loan.

34(7) The cumulative payment made or received to date at the end
35of the reporting period.

36(8) The balance outstanding at the end of the reporting period.

37(9) The cumulative amount of contributions.

38(h) For each person, other than the filer, who is directly,
39indirectly, or contingently liable for repayment of a loan received
P13   1or outstanding during the period covered by the campaign
2statement, all of the following:

3(1) His or her full name.

4(2) His or her street address.

5(3) His or her occupation.

6(4) The name of his or her employer or, if self-employed, the
7name of the business.

8(5) The amount of his or her maximum liability outstanding.

9(i) The total amount of expenditures made during the period
10covered by the campaign statement to persons who have received
11one hundred dollars ($100) or more.

12(j) The total amount of expenditures made during the period
13covered by the campaign statement to persons who have received
14less than one hundred dollars ($100).

15(k) For each person to whom an expenditure of one hundred
16dollars ($100) or more has been made during the period covered
17by the campaign statement, all of the following:

18(1) His or her full name.

19(2) His or her street address.

20(3) The amount of each expenditure.

21(4) A brief description of the consideration for which each
22expenditure was made.

23(5) In the case of an expenditure that is a contribution to a
24candidate, elected officer, or committee or an independent
25expenditure to support or oppose a candidate or measure, in
26addition to the information required in paragraphs (1) to (4),
27inclusive, the date of the contribution or independent expenditure;
28the cumulative amount of contributions made to a candidate,
29elected officer, or committee, or the cumulative amount of
30independent expenditures made relative to a candidate or measure;
31the full name of the candidate, and the office and district for which
32he or she seeks nomination or election, or the number or letter of
33the measure; and the jurisdiction in which the measure or candidate
34is voted upon.

35(6) The information required in paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive,
36for each person, if different from the payee, who has provided
37consideration for an expenditure of five hundred dollars ($500) or
38more during the period covered by the campaign statement.

39For purposes of subdivisions (i), (j), and (k) only, the term
40“expenditure” or “expenditures” means any individual payment
P14   1or accrued expense, unless it is clear from surrounding
2circumstances that a series of payments or accrued expenses are
3for a single service or product.

4(l) In the case of a controlled committee, an official committee
5of a political party, or an organization formed or existing primarily
6for political purposes, the amount and source of any miscellaneous
7receipt.

8(m) If a committee is listed pursuant to subdivision (f), (g), (h),
9(k), (l), or (p), the number assigned to the committee by the
10Secretary of State shall be listed or, if no number has been assigned,
11the full name and street address of the treasurer of the committee.

12(n) In a campaign statement filed by a candidate who is a
13candidate in both a state primary and general election, his or her
14controlled committee, or a committee primarily formed to support
15or oppose such a candidate, the total amount of contributions
16received and the total amount of expenditures made for the period
17January 1 through June 30 and the total amount of contributions
18received and expenditures made for the period July 1 through
19December 31.

20(o) The full name, residential or business address, and telephone
21number of the filer or, in the case of a campaign statement filed
22by a committee defined by subdivision (a) of Section 82013, the
23name, street address, and telephone number of the committee and
24of the committee treasurer. In the case of a committee defined by
25subdivision (b) or (c) of Section 82013, the name that the filer uses
26on campaign statements shall be the name by which the filer is
27identified for other legal purposes or any name by which the filer
28is commonly known to the public.

29(p) If the campaign statement is filed by a candidate, the name,
30street address, and treasurer of any committee of which he or she
31has knowledge which has received contributions or made
32expenditures on behalf of his or her candidacy and whether the
33committee is controlled by the candidate.

34(q) A contribution need not be reported nor shall it be deemed
35accepted if it is not cashed, negotiated, or deposited and is returned
36to the contributor before the closing date of the campaign statement
37on which the contribution would otherwise be reported.

38(r) If a committee primarily formed for the qualification or
39support of, or opposition to, an initiative or ballot measure is
40required to report an expenditure to a business entity pursuant to
P15   1subdivision (k) and 50 percent or more of the business entity is
2owned by a candidate or person controlling the committee, by an
3officer or employee of the committee, or by a spouse of any of
4these individuals, the committee’s campaign statement shall also
5contain, in addition to the information required by subdivision (k),
6that person’s name, the relationship of that person to the committee,
7and a description of that person’s ownership interest or position
8with the business entity.

9(s) (1) If a committee primarily formed for the qualification or
10support of, or opposition to, an initiative or ballot measure is
11required to report an expenditure to a business entity pursuant to
12subdivision (k), and a candidate or person controlling the
13committee, an officer or employee of the committee, or a spouse
14of any of these individuals is an officer, partner, consultant, or
15employee of the business entity, the committee’s campaign
16statement shall also contain, in addition to the information required
17by subdivision (k), that person’s name, the relationship of that
18person to the committee, and a description of that person’s
19ownership interest or position with the business entity.

20(2) For a committee primarily formed to support or oppose a
21statewidebegin delete initiative orend delete ballot measure, the reporting thresholds for
22disclosure of contributions, including loans, and expenditures
23specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (f), (g), (i), (j), and (k) shall be
24established in regulations adopted by the Commission and may be
25adjusted in regulations adopted by the Commission in any
26odd-numbered year after 2013begin insert to reflect any increase or decrease
27in the Consumer Price Index, rounded to the nearest one hundred
28dollars ($100)end insert
. The thresholds established pursuant to this
29paragraph shall be not less than five hundred dollars ($500) and
30not greater than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).

31(t) If the campaign statement is filed by a committee, as defined
32in subdivision (b) or (c) of Section 82013, information sufficient
33to identify the nature and interests of the filer, including:

34(1) If the filer is an individual, the name and address of the
35filer’s employer, if any, or his or her principal place of business
36if the filer is self-employed, and a description of the business
37activity in which the filer or his or her employer is engaged.

38(2) If the filer is a business entity, a description of the business
39activity in which it is engaged.

P16   1(3) If the filer is an industry, trade, or professional association,
2a description of the industry, trade, or profession that it represents,
3including a specific description of any portion or faction of the
4industry, trade, or profession that the association exclusively or
5primarily represents.

6(4) If the filer is not an individual, business entity, or industry,
7trade, or professional association, a statement of the person’s nature
8and purposes, including a description of any industry, trade,
9profession, or other group with a common economic interest that
10the person principally represents or from which its membership
11 or financial support is principally derived.

12

SEC. 7.  

Section 84215 of the Government Code is amended
13to read:

14

84215.  

All candidates and elected officers and their controlled
15committees, except as provided in subdivisions (d) and (e), shall
16file one copy of the campaign statements required by Section 84200
17with the elections official of the county in which the candidate or
18elected official is domiciled, as defined in subdivision (b) of
19Section 349 of the Elections Code. In addition, campaign
20statements shall be filed at the following places:

21(a) Statewide elected officers, including members of the State
22Board of Equalization; Members of the Legislature; Supreme Court
23justices, court of appeal justices, and superior court judges;
24candidates for those offices and their controlled committees;
25committees formed or existing primarily to support or oppose these
26candidates, elected officers, justices and judges, or statewide
27measures, or the qualification of state ballot measures; and all state
28general purpose committees and filers not specified in subdivisions
29(b) to (e), inclusive, shall file a campaign statement by online or
30electronic means, as specified in Section 84605, and, if not required
31to file the statement by online or electronic means, shall file the
32original and one copy of the campaign statement in paper format
33with the Secretary of State.

34(b) Elected officers in jurisdictions other than legislative
35districts, State Board of Equalization districts, or appellate court
36districts that contain parts of two or more counties, candidates for
37these offices, their controlled committees, and committees formed
38or existing primarily to support or oppose candidates or local
39measures to be voted upon in one of these jurisdictions shall file
P17   1the original and one copy with the elections official of the county
2with the largest number of registered voters in the jurisdiction.

3(c) County elected officers, candidates for these offices, their
4controlled committees, committees formed or existing primarily
5to support or oppose candidates or local measures to be voted upon
6in any number of jurisdictions within one county, other than those
7specified in subdivision (d), and county general purpose
8committees shall file the original and one copy with the elections
9official of the county.

10(d) City elected officers, candidates for city office, their
11controlled committees, committees formed or existing primarily
12to support or oppose candidates or local measures to be voted upon
13in one city, and city general purpose committees shall file the
14original and one copy with the clerk of the city and are not required
15to file with the local elections official of the county in which they
16are domiciled.

17(e) Elected members of the Board of Administration of the
18Public Employees’ Retirement System, elected members of the
19Teachers’ Retirement Board, candidates for these offices, their
20controlled committees, and committees formed or existing
21primarily to support or oppose these candidates or elected members
22shall file the original and one copy with the Secretary of State, and
23a copy shall be filed at the relevant board’s office in Sacramento.
24These elected officers, candidates, and committees need not file
25with the elections official of the county in which they are
26domiciled.

27(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a
28committee, candidate, or elected officer is not required to file more
29than the original and one copy, or one copy, of a campaign
30statement with any one county elections official or city clerk or
31with the Secretary of State.

32(g) If a committee is required to file campaign statements
33required by Section 84200 or 84200.5 in places designated in
34subdivisions (a) to (d), inclusive, it shall continue to file these
35statements in those places, in addition to any other places required
36by this title, until the end of the calendar year.

37

SEC. 8.  

Section 84215.5 is added to the Government Code, to
38read:

P18   1

84215.5.  

A statement or report filed with the Secretary of State
2pursuant to this chapter shall be made available to the Commission
3by the Secretary of State, upon request of the Commission.

4

SEC. 9.  

Section 84605 of the Government Code is amended
5to read:

6

84605.  

(a) The following persons shall file online or
7electronically with the Secretary of State:

8(1) Any candidate, including superior court, appellate court,
9and Supreme Court candidates and officeholders, committee, or
10other persons who are required, pursuant to Chapter 4 (commencing
11with Section 84100), to file statements, reports, or other documents
12in connection with a state elective office or state measure, provided
13that the total cumulative reportable amount of contributions
14received, expenditures made, loans made, or loans received is
15twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) or more. In determining
16the cumulative reportable amount, all controlled committees, as
17defined by Section 82016, shall be included. For a committee
18subject to this title prior to January 1, 2000, the beginning date for
19calculating cumulative totals is January 1, 2000. For a committee
20that is first subject to this title on or after January 1, 2000, the
21beginning date for calculating cumulative totals is the date the
22committee is first subject to this title. A committee, as defined in
23subdivision (c) of Section 82013, shall file online or electronically
24if it makes contributions of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000)
25or more in a calendar year.

26(2) Any general purpose committees, as defined in Section
2782027.5, including the general purpose committees of political
28parties, and small contributor committees, as defined in Section
2985203, that cumulatively receive contributions or make
30expenditures totaling twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) or
31more to support or oppose candidates for any elective state office
32or state measure. For a committee subject to this title prior to
33January 1, 2000, the beginning date for calculating cumulative
34totals is January 1, 2000. For a committee that first is subject to
35this title on or after January 1, 2000, the beginning date for
36calculating cumulative totals is the date the committee is first
37subject to this title.

38(3) Any slate mailer organization with cumulative reportable
39payments received or made for the purposes of producing slate
40mailers of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) or more. For a
P19   1slate mailer organization subject to this title prior to January 1,
22000, the beginning date for calculating cumulative totals is
3January 1, 2000. For a slate mailer organization that first is subject
4to this title on or after January 1, 2000, the beginning date for
5calculating cumulative totals is the date the organization is first
6subject to this title.

7(4) Any lobbyist, lobbying firm, lobbyist employer, or other
8persons required, pursuant to Chapter 6 (commencing with Section
986100), to file statements, reports, or other documents, provided
10that the total amount of any category of reportable payments,
11expenses, contributions, gifts, or other items is two thousand five
12hundred dollars ($2,500) or more in a calendar quarter.

13(b) The Secretary of State shall also disclose on the Internet any
14late contribution or late independent expenditure report, as defined
15by Sections 84203 and 84204, respectively, not covered by
16paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of subdivision (a) or any other provision
17of law.

18(c) Committees and other persons that are not required to file
19online or electronically by this section may do so voluntarily.

20(d) Once a person or entity is required to file online or
21electronically, subject to subdivision (a) or (c), the person or entity
22shall be required to file all subsequent reports online or
23electronically.

24(e) It shall be presumed that online or electronic filers file under
25penalty of perjury.

26(f) Persons filing online or electronically shall not be required
27to continue to file required disclosure statements and reports in
28paper format with the Secretary of State. However, an original
29paper copy shall be filed with the Secretary of State during any
30period of time for which the online or electronic system operated
31by the Secretary of State is malfunctioning, unavailable, or
32otherwise not capable of receiving online or electronically filed
33disclosure statements and reports.

34(g) The Secretary of State shall maintain at all times a secured,
35official version of all original online and electronically filed
36statements and reports required by this chapter. Upon determination
37by the Secretary of State, pursuant to Section 84606, that the
38system is operating securely and effectively, this online or
39electronic version shall be the official version for audit and other
40legal purposes.

P20   1(h) Except for statements related to a local elective office or a
2local ballot measure filed by a candidate for local elective office
3who is also a candidate for elective state office, a copy of a
4statement, report, or other document filed by online or electronic
5means with the Secretary of State shall not be filed with a local
6filing officer.

7

SEC. 10.  

Section 85201 of the Government Code is amended
8to read:

9

85201.  

(a) Upon the filing of the statement of intention
10pursuant to Section 85200, the individual shall establish one
11campaign contribution account at an office of a financial institution
12located in the state.

13(b) As required by subdivision (f) of Section 84102, a candidate
14who raises contributions of two thousand dollars ($2,000) or more
15in a calendar year shall set forth the name and address of the
16financial institution where the candidate has established a campaign
17contribution account and the account number on the committee
18statement of organization filed pursuant to Sections 84101 and
1984103.

20(c) All contributions or loans made to the candidate, to a person
21on behalf of the candidate, or to the candidate’s controlled
22committee shall be deposited in the account.

23(d) Any personal funds which will be utilized to promote the
24election of the candidate shall be deposited in the account prior to
25expenditure.

26(e) All campaign expenditures shall be made from the account.

27(f) Subdivisions (d) and (e) do not apply to a candidate’s
28payment for a filing fee and statement of qualifications from his
29or her personal funds.

30(g) This section does not apply to a candidate who will not
31receive contributions and who makes expenditures from personal
32funds of less than two thousand dollars ($2,000) in a calendar year
33to support his or her candidacy. For purposes of this section, a
34candidate’s payment for a filing fee and statement of qualifications
35shall not be included in calculating the total expenditures made.

36(h) An individual who raises contributions from others for his
37or her campaign, but who raises or spends less than two thousand
38dollars ($2,000) in a calendar year, and does not qualify as a
39committee under Section 82013, shall establish a campaign
40contribution account pursuant to subdivision (a), but is not required
P21   1to file a committee statement of organization pursuant to Section
284101 or other statement of bank account information.

3

SEC. 11.  

Section 86119 is added to the Government Code, to
4read:

5

86119.  

A registration or report filed with the Secretary of State
6pursuant to this chapter shall be made available to the Commission
7by the Secretary of State, upon request of the Commission.

8

SEC. 12.  

Section 90009 is added to the Government Code, to
9read:

10

90009.  

(a) To further the purposesbegin delete identified in Section 90008, end delete
11begin insert of this title, end insertthe Commission may seek injunctive relief in a
12superior court to compel disclosure consistent with this title.

13(b) A court shall grant expedited review to an action filed
14pursuant to subdivision (a) as follows:

15(1) The court shall conduct an expedited hearing with an
16opportunity for the defendant to respond.

17(2) Briefs of the parties shall be required pursuant to an
18expedited schedule.

19(c) A superior or appellate court may, at its discretion, grant a
20stay of an order granting relief pursuant to subdivision (a).

21

SEC. 13.  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
22Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution for certain
23costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district
24because, in that regard, this act creates a new crime or infraction,
25eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime
26or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the
27Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the
28meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
29Constitution.

30However, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that
31this act contains other costs mandated by the state, reimbursement
32to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made
33pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division
344 of Title 2 of the Government Code.

35

SEC. 14.  

The Legislature finds and declares that this bill
36furthers the purposes of the Political Reform Act of 1974 within
37the meaning of subdivision (a) of Section 81012 of the Government
38Code.



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