SB 831, as amended, Hill. Political Reform Act of 1974.
(1) The Political Reform Act of 1974 provides for the comprehensive regulation of campaign financing and related matters, including the reporting of campaign contributions, as defined. Under existing law, a payment made at the behest of a candidate for elective office is considered a contribution unless the payment is made for purposes unrelated to the candidate’s candidacy, and a payment is presumed to be unrelated to a candidate’s candidacy if it is made principally for legislative, governmental, or charitable purposes. Pursuant to the act, payments principally for legislative, governmental, or charitable purposes made at the behest of a candidate who is an elected officer must be reported within 30 days following the date on which the payment or payments equal or exceed $5,000 in the aggregate from the same source in the same calendar year in which they are made.
This bill would reduce the reporting threshold for a behested payment to $2,500. The bill would also require the Fair Political Practices Commission to post certain behested payment reports on its Internet Web site within 30 days of receipt of the report. The bill would prohibit an elected officer from requesting that a payment be made, or a person from making a payment, at the behest of the elected officer to a nonprofit organization that the elected officer knows or has reason to know is owned or controlled bybegin delete specified persons, including that officer, any other elected officer who serves on the same elective body as the behesting officer, or family members, as defined, of elected officers serving on that elective body,end deletebegin insert that officer orend insertbegin insert
specified family members of the officer,end insert except as specified. The bill would provide that an elected officer is deemed to have complied with that requirement if the Commission determines that the elected officer has made a reasonable effort to ascertain whether a nonprofit organization is owned or controlled by any of the specified persons.
(2) The act prohibits specified officers from receiving gifts, as defined, in excess of $440 in value from a single source in a calendar year. The act exempts gift payments for the actual costs of specified types of travel that are reasonably related to a legislative or governmental purpose, or to an issue of state, national, or international public policy, from the annual limit on the value of gifts from a single source.
This bill would impose an annual limit on gift payments from a single source for these types of travel atbegin delete $5,000end deletebegin insert
$8,000end insert. The bill would also require a nonprofit organization that pays for these types of travel to disclose the names of donors responsible for funding the payments, as specified.begin insert The bill would require a person who receives a gift of a travel payment to report the travel destination on his or her statement of economic interests.end insert
(3) The act requires that contributions deposited into a campaign account be held in trust for expenses associated with the election of the candidate or for expenses associated with holding office. The act provides that an expenditure to seek office is within the lawful execution of this trust if it is reasonably related to a political purpose and an expenditure associated with holding office is within the lawful execution of this trust if it is reasonably related to a legislative or governmental purpose. Expenditures that confer a substantial personal benefit must be directly related to a political, legislative, or governmental purpose. The act authorizes the use of campaign funds to make donations or loans to bona fide charitable, educational, civic, religious, or similar tax-exempt nonprofit organizations. The act imposes additional limitations on certain expenditures, including those relating to automotive expenses, travel expenses, tickets for entertainment or sporting events, personal gifts, and real property expenses.
The bill would prohibit an elected officer or a committee controlled by the elected officer from making an expenditure of campaign funds to a nonprofit organization owned or controlled by the officerbegin delete, any other elected officer who serves on the same elective body, or family members, as defined, of elected officers serving on that elective body,end deletebegin insert
or specified family members of the officer,end insert
as specified.
This bill would also limit the expenditure of campaign funds for other purposes, as specified, including personal vacations, payments for membership dues for a country club, health club, or other recreational facility, tuition payments, utility payments, vehicle use that is not directly related to an election campaign, and certain gifts for specified family members of a candidate, elected officer, or other individuals with the authority to approve the expenditure of campaign funds held by a committee.
(4) Existing law permits the expenditure of campaign funds for attorney’s fees and other costs in connection with administrative, civil, or criminal litigation, as specified. Existing law also authorizes an elected state officer to establish a separate legal defense account to defray attorney’s fees and other related legal costs incurred for the officer’s legal defense in an administrative, civil, or criminal proceeding arising directly out of the conduct of an election campaign, the electoral process, or the performance of the officer’s governmental activities or duties.
This bill would prohibit the expenditure of campaign funds for attorney’s fees and other costs in connection with criminal litigationbegin insert for which a candidate or elected officer has been indicted or arrestedend insert, and would limit the payment of criminal litigation attorney’s fees and other related legal costs arising directly out of the conduct of an election campaign, the electoral process, or the performance of the officer’s governmental activities or duties to funds deposited in a legal defense account created pursuant to other specified provisions of law. The bill would also prohibit a committee that is not a legal defense committee from making an expenditure of campaign funds to any legal defense account.
(5) A violation of the act’s provisions is punishable as a misdemeanor. By expanding the scope of an existing crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
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 no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
(6) 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 2⁄3 vote of each house and compliance with specified procedural requirements.
This bill would declare that it furthers the purposes of the act.
Vote: 2⁄3. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 82015 of the Government Code is
2amended to read:
(a) “Contribution” means a payment, a forgiveness of
4a loan, a payment of a loan by a third party, or an enforceable
5promise to make a payment, except to the extent that full and
6adequate consideration is received, unless it is clear from the
7surrounding circumstances that it is not made for political purposes.
8(b) (1) A payment made at the behest of a committee, as defined
9in subdivision (a) of Section 82013, is a contribution to the
10committee unless full and adequate consideration is received from
11the committee for making the payment.
12(2) A payment made at the behest of a candidate is a contribution
13to the
candidate unless the criteria in either subparagraph (A) or
14(B) are satisfied:
15(A) Full and adequate consideration is received from the
16candidate.
17(B) It is clear from the surrounding circumstances that the
18payment was made for purposes unrelated to his or her candidacy
19for elective office. The following types of payments are presumed
20to be for purposes unrelated to a candidate’s candidacy for elective
21office:
P5 1(i) A payment made principally for personal purposes, in which
2case it may be considered a gift under the provisions of Section
3
82028. Payments that are otherwise subject to the limits of Section
486203 are presumed to be principally for personal purposes.
5(ii) A payment made by a state, local, or federal governmental
6agency or by a nonprofit organization that is exempt from taxation
7under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
8(iii) A payment not covered by clause (i), made principally for
9legislative, governmental, or charitable purposes, in which case it
10is neither a gift nor a contribution. However, payments of this type
11that are made at the behest of a candidate who is an elected officer
12shall be reported within 30 days following the date on which the
13payment or payments equal or exceed two thousand five hundred
14dollars ($2,500) in the aggregate from the same source in the same
15calendar
year in which they are made. The report shall be filed by
16the elected officer with the elected officer’s agency and shall be
17a public record subject to inspection and copying pursuant to
18Section 81008. The report shall contain the following information:
19name of payor, address of payor, amount of the payment, date or
20dates the payment or payments were made, the name and address
21of the payee, a brief description of the goods or services provided
22or purchased, if any, and a description of the specific purpose or
23event for which the payment or payments were made. Once the
24two-thousand-five-hundred-dollar ($2,500) aggregate threshold
25from a single source has been reached for a calendar year, all
26payments for the calendar year made by that source shall be
27disclosed within 30 days after the date the threshold
was reached
28or the payment was made, whichever occurs later. Within 30 days
29after receipt of the report, state agencies shall forward a copy of
30these reports to the Commission, and local agencies shall forward
31a copy of these reports to the officer with whom elected officers
32of that agency file their campaign statements. Reports filed with
33the Commission pursuant to this clause shall be posted on the
34Commission’s Internet Web site not later than 30 days after receipt
35by the Commission.
36(C) For purposes of subparagraph (B), a payment is made for
37purposes related to a candidate’s candidacy for elective office if
38all or a portion of the payment is used for election-related activities.
39For purposes of this subparagraph, “election-related activities”
40include, but are not limited to, the following:
P6 1(i) Communications that contain express advocacy of the
2nomination or election of the candidate or the defeat of his or her
3opponent.
4(ii) Communications that contain reference to the candidate’s
5candidacy for elective office, the candidate’s election campaign,
6or the candidate’s or his or her opponent’s qualifications for
7elective office.
8(iii) Solicitation of contributions to the candidate or to third
9persons for use in support of the candidate or in opposition to his
10or her opponent.
11(iv) Arranging, coordinating, developing, writing, distributing,
12preparing, or planning of any communication or activity described
13in clause (i), (ii), or (iii).
14(v) Recruiting or coordinating campaign activities of campaign
15volunteers on behalf of the candidate.
16(vi) Preparing campaign budgets.
17(vii) Preparing campaign finance disclosure statements.
18(viii) Communications directed to voters or potential voters as
19part of activities encouraging or assisting persons to vote, if the
20communication contains express advocacy of the nomination or
21election of the candidate or the defeat of his or her opponent.
22(D) A contribution made at the behest of a candidate for a
23different candidate or to a committee not controlled by the
24behesting candidate is not a contribution to the
behesting candidate.
25(3) A payment made at the behest of a member of the Public
26Utilities Commission, made principally for legislative,
27governmental, or charitable purposes, is not a contribution.
28However, payments of this type shall be reported within 30 days
29following the date on which the payment or payments equal or
30exceed two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) in the aggregate
31from the same source in the same calendar year in which they are
32made. The report shall be filed by the member with the Public
33Utilities Commission and shall be a public record subject to
34inspection and copying pursuant to Section 81008. The report shall
35contain the following information: name of payor, address of payor,
36amount of the payment, date or dates the payment or payments
37were made, the name and address of the payee, a brief description
38of the
goods or services provided or purchased, if any, and a
39description of the specific purpose or event for which the payment
40or payments were made. Once the
P7 1
two-thousand-five-hundred-dollar ($2,500) aggregate threshold
2from a single source has been reached for a calendar year, all
3payments for the calendar year made by that source shall be
4disclosed within 30 days after the date the threshold was reached
5or the payment was made, whichever occurs later. Within 30 days
6after receipt of the report, the Public Utilities Commission shall
7forward a copy of these reports to the Fair Political Practices
8Commission. Reports filed with the Fair Political Practices
9Commission pursuant to this paragraph shall be posted on the
10Commission’s Internet Web site not later than 30 days after receipt
11by the Commission.
12(4) For purposes of this subdivision and subdivision (h), “made
13at the behest of” means made under the control or at the direction
14of; in cooperation, consultation, coordination, or
concert with; at
15the request or suggestion of; or with the express, prior consent of.
16(c) “Contribution” includes the purchase of tickets for events
17such as dinners, luncheons, rallies, and similar fundraising events;
18the candidate’s own money or property used on behalf of his or
19her candidacy, other than personal funds of the candidate used to
20pay either a filing fee for a declaration of candidacy or a candidate
21statement prepared pursuant to Section 13307 of the Elections
22Code; the granting of discounts or rebates not extended to the
23public generally or the granting of discounts or rebates by television
24and radio stations and newspapers not extended on an equal basis
25to all candidates for the same office; the payment of compensation
26by any person for the personal services or expenses of any other
27person, if the services are rendered or
expenses incurred on behalf
28of a candidate or committee without payment of full and adequate
29consideration.
30(d) “Contribution” further includes any transfer of anything of
31value received by a committee from another committee, unless
32full and adequate consideration is received.
33(e) “Contribution” does not include amounts received pursuant
34to an enforceable promise to the extent those amounts have been
35previously reported as a contribution. However, the fact that those
36amounts have been received shall be indicated in the appropriate
37campaign statement.
38(f) “Contribution” does not include a payment made by an
39occupant of a home or office for costs related to any meeting or
40fundraising event held in the occupant’s home
or office if the costs
P8 1for the meeting or fundraising event are five hundred dollars ($500)
2or less.
3(g) Notwithstanding the foregoing definition of “contribution,”
4the term does not include volunteer personal services or payments
5made by any individual for his or her own travel expenses if the
6payments are made voluntarily without any understanding or
7agreement that they shall be, directly or indirectly, repaid to him
8or her.
9(h) “Contribution” further includes the payment of public
10moneys by a state or local governmental agency for a
11communication to the public that satisfies both of the following:
12(1) The communication expressly advocates the election or
13defeat of a clearly identified candidate or the
qualification, passage,
14or defeat of a clearly identified measure, or, taken as a whole and
15in context, unambiguously urges a particular result in an election.
16(2) The communication is made at the behest of the affected
17candidate or committee.
Section 87106 is added to the Government Code, to
19read:
(a) An elected officer shall not request that a payment
21be made, and a person shall not make a payment at the behest of
22the elected officer, as described in Section 82015, to a nonprofit
23organization that the elected officer knows or has reason to know
24is owned or controlled by that officerbegin delete, any other elected officer or a family member of
25who serves on the same elective body,end deletebegin delete anyend delete
26begin insert theend insert elected officerbegin delete who serves on that elective bodyend delete.
27(b) An elected officer is deemed to have complied with the
28requirements of subdivision (a) if the Commission determines that
29the elected officer has made a reasonable effort to ascertain whether
30a nonprofit organization is owned or controlled by any individual
31described in subdivision (a).
32(c) For purposes of this section, as applied to a Member of the
33
Legislature, “same elective body” includes both houses of the
34Legislature.
31 35(d)
end delete
36begin insert(c)end insert For purposes of this section, a nonprofit organization is
37owned or controlled by an elected officer or family member ofbegin delete anend delete
38begin insert theend insert elected officer if the elected officer or family member of the
39elected officer, or a member of that person’s immediate family, is
40a director, officer, partner, or trustee of, or holds any position of
P9 1management with, the nonprofit organizationbegin insert,
and is paid for his
2or her servicesend insert.
4 3(e)
end delete
4begin insert(d)end insert For purposes of this section, “family member ofbegin delete anend deletebegin insert theend insert
5 elected officer” means the spouse, child, sibling, or parent of an
6elected officer.
8 7(f)
end delete
8begin insert(e)end insert This section shall not apply to behested payments made to
9a nonprofit organization that is formed for the purpose of
10coordinating or performing disaster relief services.
begin insertSection 87207 of the end insertbegin insertGovernment Codeend insertbegin insert is amended to
12read:end insert
(a) begin deleteWhen end deletebegin insertIf end insertincome is required to be reported under
14this article, the statement shall contain, except as provided in
15subdivision (b):
16(1) The name and address of each source of income aggregating
17five hundred dollars ($500) or more in value, or fifty dollars ($50)
18or more in value if the income was a gift, and a general description
19of the business activity, if any, of each source.
20(2) A statement whether the aggregate value of income from
21each source, or in the case of
a loan, the highest amount owed to
22each source, was at least five hundred dollars ($500) but did not
23exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), whether it was in excess of
24one thousand dollars ($1,000) but was not greater than ten thousand
25dollars ($10,000), whether it was greater than ten thousand dollars
26($10,000) but not greater than one hundred thousand dollars
27($100,000), or whether it was greater than one hundred thousand
28dollars ($100,000).
29(3) A description of the consideration, if any, for which the
30income was received.
31(4) In the case of a gift, the amount and the date on which the
32gift was receivedbegin insert, and the travel destinationend insertbegin insert for purposes of a gift
33that is a travel payment, advance, or
reimbursementend insert.
34(5) In the case of a loan, the annual interest rate, the security,
35if any, given for the loan, and the term of the loan.
36(b) begin deleteWhen end deletebegin insertIf end insertthe filer’s pro rata share of income to a business
37entity, including income to a sole proprietorship, is required to be
38reported under this article, the statement shall contain:
39(1) The name, address, and a general description of the business
40activity of the business entity.
P10 1(2) The name of every person from whom the business entity
2received payments if the filer’s pro rata share of gross
receipts
3from that person was equal to or greater than ten thousand dollars
4($10,000) during a calendar year.
5(c) begin deleteWhen end deletebegin insertIf end inserta payment, including an advance or reimbursement,
6for travel is required to be reported pursuant to this section, it may
7be reported on a separate travel reimbursement schedule which
8shall be included in the filer’s statement of economic interest. A
9filer who chooses not to use the travel schedule shall disclose
10payments for travel as a gift, unless it is clear from all surrounding
11circumstances that the services provided were equal to or greater
12in value than the payments for the travel, in which case the travel
13may be reported as income.
Section 89506 of the Government Code is amended
16to read:
(a) Payments, advances, or reimbursements for travel,
18including actual transportation and related lodging and subsistence
19that is reasonably related to a legislative or governmental purpose,
20or to an issue of state, national, or international public policy, shall
21not exceedbegin delete five thousand dollars ($5,000)end deletebegin insert eight thousand dollars
22($8,000)end insert in a calendar year from a single source, but are otherwise
23not prohibited or limited by this chapter if either of the following
24applies:
25(1) The travel
is in connection with a speech given by the elected
26state officer, local elected officeholder, candidate for elective state
27office or local elective office, an individual specified in Section
2887200, member of a state board or commission, or designated
29employee of a state or local government agency, the lodging and
30subsistence expenses are limited to the day immediately preceding,
31the day of, and the day immediately following the speech, and the
32travel is within the United States.
33(2) The travel is provided by a government, a governmental
34agency, a foreign government, a governmental authority, a bona
35fide public or private educational institution, as defined in Section
36203 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, a nonprofit organization
37that is exempt from taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
38Revenue Code, or by a person domiciled
outside the United States
39who substantially satisfies the requirements for tax-exempt status
40under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
P11 1(b) Gifts of travel not described in subdivision (a) are subject
2to the limits in Section 89503.
3(c) Subdivision (a) applies only to travel that is reported on the
4recipient’s statement of economic interests.
5(d) For purposes of this section, a gift of travel does not include
6any of the following:
7(1) Travel that is paid for from campaign funds, as permitted
8by Article 4 (commencing with Section 89510), or that is a
9contribution.
10(2) Travel that is
provided by the agency of a local elected
11officeholder, an elected state officer, member of a state board or
12commission, an individual specified in Section 87200, or a
13designated employee.
14(3) Travel that is reasonably necessary in connection with a
15bona fide business, trade, or profession and that satisfies the criteria
16for federal income tax deduction for business expenses in Sections
17162 and 274 of the Internal Revenue Code, unless the sole or
18predominant activity of the business, trade, or profession is making
19
speeches.
20(4) Travel that is excluded from the definition of a gift by any
21other provision of this title.
22(e) This section does not apply to payments, advances, or
23reimbursements for travel and related lodging and subsistence
24permitted or limited by Section 170.9 of the Code of Civil
25Procedure.
26(f) (1) A nonprofit organization that makes a payment, advance,
27or reimbursement for travel described in subdivision (a) shall
28disclose to the Commission the names of the donors responsible
29for funding that payment, advance, or reimbursement. The
30disclosure of donor names shall be limited to donors who knew or
31had reason to know that the donation would be used for a payment,
32advance,
or reimbursement for travel described in subdivision (a).
33(2) A donor knows or has reason to know that his or her donation
34will be used in the manner described in paragraph (1) under any
35of the following conditions:
36(A) The donor directed the nonprofit organization to use the
37donation to make a payment, advance, or reimbursement for travel
38described in subdivision (a).
39(B) The donor made the donation in response to a message or
40solicitation for donations for the stated purpose of making a
P12 1payment, advance, or reimbursement for travel described in
2subdivision (a).
3(C) The nonprofit organization made a payment, advance, or
4reimbursement for travel
described in subdivision (a) in the current
5calendar year or any of the immediately preceding four calendar
6years. The nonprofit organization shall disclose donors identified
7pursuant to this subparagraph only to the extent that donations
8made pursuant to subparagraphs (A) and (B) are less than the
9amount of the payment, advance, or reimbursement made by the
10organization. The nonprofit organization shall not report a donor
11identified pursuant to this subparagraph if the organization has
12evidence indicating that the donor restricted or otherwise did not
13intend the donation to be used for a payment, advance, or
14reimbursement for travel described in subdivision (a).
Section 89513 of the Government Code is amended
17to read:
This section governs the use of campaign funds for the
19specific expenditures set forth in this section. It is the intent of the
20Legislature that this section guide the interpretation of the standard
21imposed by Section 89512 as applied to other expenditures not
22specifically set forth in this section.
23(a) (1) Campaign funds shall not be used to pay or reimburse
24a candidate, elected officer, or any individual or individuals with
25authority to approve the expenditure of campaign funds held by a
26committee, or employees or staff of the committee or the elected
27officer’s governmental agency, for travel expenses and necessary
28accommodations, except when
these expenditures are directly
29related to a political, legislative, or governmental purpose.
30(2) For purposes of this section, payments or reimbursements
31for travel and necessary accommodations shall be considered
32directly related to a political, legislative, or governmental purpose
33if the payments would meet standards similar to the standards of
34the Internal Revenue Service pursuant to Sections 162 and 274 of
35the Internal Revenue Code for deductions of travel expenses under
36the federal income tax law.
37(3) For purposes of this section, payments or reimbursement
38for travel by the household of a candidate or elected officer when
39traveling to the same destination in order to accompany the
P13 1candidate or elected officer shall be considered for the same
2purpose as the candidate’s or
elected officer’s travel.
3(4) If campaign funds are used to pay or reimburse a candidate,
4elected officer, his or her representative, or a member of the
5candidate’s household for travel expenses and necessary
6accommodations, the expenditure shall be reported as required by
7Section 84211.
8(5) If campaign funds are used to pay or reimburse for travel
9expenses and necessary accommodations, any mileage credit that
10is earned or awarded pursuant to an airline bonus mileage program
11shall be deemed personally earned by or awarded to the individual
12traveler. Neither the earning or awarding of mileage credit, nor
13the redeeming of credit for actual travel, shall be subject to
14reporting pursuant to Section 84211.
15(6) Campaign
funds shall not be used to make a payment for a
16
personal vacation for a candidate; elected officer; immediate family
17member of a candidate or elected officer; or an officer, director,
18employee, or member of the staff of a candidate, elected officer,
19or committee.
20(b) (1) Campaign funds shall not be used to pay for or reimburse
21the cost of professional services unless the services are directly
22related to a political, legislative, or governmental purpose.
23(2) Expenditures by a committee to pay for professional services
24reasonably required by the committee to assist it in the performance
25of its administrative functions are directly related to a political,
26legislative, or governmental purpose.
27(3) Campaign funds shall not be used to pay
health-related
28expenses for a candidate, elected officer, or any individual or
29
individuals with authority to approve the expenditure of campaign
30funds held by a committee, or members of his or her household.
31“Health-related expenses” includes, but is not limited to,
32examinations by physicians, dentists, psychiatrists, psychologists,
33or counselors; expenses for medications, treatments, or medical
34equipment; and expenses for
hospitalization and special dietary
35foods. However, campaign funds may be used to pay employer
36costs of health care benefits of a bona fide employee or independent
37contractor of the committee.
38(4) Campaign funds shall not be used to make a payment for
39membership dues for a country club, health club, or other
40recreational facility.
P14 1(5) Campaign funds shall not be used to make tuition payments.
2(c) Campaign funds shall not be used to pay or reimburse fines,
3penalties, judgments, or settlements, except those resulting from
4either of the following:
5(1) Parking citations incurred in the performance of an activity
6that was directly related to a
political, legislative, or governmental
7purpose.
8(2) Any other action for which payment of attorney’s fees from
9contributions would be permitted pursuant to this title.
10(d) Campaign funds shall not be used to purchase clothing to
11be worn by a candidate or elected officer.
12(e) (1) Except where otherwise prohibited by law, campaign
13funds may be used to purchase or reimburse for the costs of
14purchase of tickets to political fundraising events for the attendance
15of a candidate, elected officer, or his or her immediate family, or
16an officer, director, employee, or staff of the committee or the
17elected officer’s governmental agency.
18(2) Campaign
funds shall not be used to pay for or reimburse
19for the costs of admission to a sporting event, concert, theater, or
20other form of entertainment for the candidate, elected officer, or
21members of his or her immediate family, or an officer, director,
22employee, or staff of the committee, unless their attendance at the
23event is directly related to the election campaign of the candidate
24or elected officer.
25(3) The purchase of tickets for entertainment or sporting events
26for the benefit of persons other than the candidate, elected officer,
27or his or her immediate family are governed by subdivision (f).
28(f) (1) Campaign funds shall not be used to make a gift to a
29spouse, child, sibling, or parent of a candidate, elected officer, or
30other individual with authority to
approve the expenditure of
31campaign funds held by a committee, except for a gift of nominal
32value that is substantially similar to a gift made to other persons
33and that is directly related to a political, legislative, or
34governmental purpose. Campaign funds shall not be used to make
35personal gifts to any other person not described in this paragraph
36unless the gift is directly related to a political, legislative, or
37governmental purpose. The refund of a campaign contribution
38does not constitute the making of a gift.
39(2) This section does not prohibit the use of campaign funds to
40reimburse or otherwise compensate a public employee for services
P15 1rendered to a candidate or committee while on vacation, leave, or
2otherwise outside of compensated public time.
3(3) An election
victory celebration or similar campaign event,
4or gifts with a total cumulative value of less than two hundred fifty
5dollars ($250) in a single year made to an individual employee, a
6committee worker, or an employee of the elected officer’s agency,
7are considered to be directly related to a political, legislative, or
8governmental purpose. For purposes of this paragraph, a gift to a
9member of a person’s immediate family shall be deemed to be a
10gift to that person.
11(g) Campaign funds shall not be used to make loans other than
12to organizations pursuant to Section 89515, or, unless otherwise
13prohibited, to a candidate for elective office, political party, or
14committee.
Section 89514 of the Government Code is amended
17to read:
Expenditures of campaign funds for attorney’s fees and
19other costs in connection with administrative or civil litigation are
20not directly related to a political, legislative, or governmental
21purpose except where the litigation is directly related to activities
22of a committee that are consistent with its primary objectives or
23arises directly out of a committee’s activities or out of a candidate’s
24or elected officer’s activities, duties, or status as a candidate or
25elected officer, including, but not limited to, an action to enjoin
26defamation, defense of an action to enjoin defamation, defense of
27an action brought for a violation of state or local campaign,
28disclosure, or election laws, and an action arising from an election
29
contest or recount.
Section 89514.5 is added to the Government Code, to
32read:
(a) Expenditures of campaign funds for attorney’s
34fees and other costs in connection with criminal litigation are not
35directly related to a political, legislative, or governmental purpose.
36(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), attorney’s fees and other
37related legal costs incurred in connection with criminal litigation
38begin insert for which the candidate or elected officer has been indicted or
39arrested andend insert arising directly out of the conduct of an election
40campaign, the electoral process, or the performance of the officer’s
P16 1governmental activities or duties may be paid for using funds
2deposited in
a legal defense account created pursuant to Section
385304 or 85304.5.
4(c) A committee that is not a legal defense committee shall not
5make an expenditure of campaign funds to a legal defense account
6created pursuant to Section 85304 or 85304.5.
Section 89515 of the Government Code is amended
9to read:
Campaign funds may be used to make donations or
11loans to bona fide charitable, educational, civic, religious, or similar
12tax-exempt, nonprofit organizations, if no substantial part of the
13proceeds will have a material financial effect on the candidate,
14campaign treasurer, or any individual or individuals with authority
15to approve the expenditure of campaign funds held by a committee,
16or member of his or her immediate family, and if the donation or
17loan bears a reasonable relation to a political, legislative, or
18governmental purpose, except as prohibited by Section 89515.5.
Section 89515.5 is added to the Government Code, to
21read:
(a) An expenditure of campaign funds by an elected
23officer or committee controlled by the elected officer to a nonprofit
24organization that the elected officer knows or has reason to know
25is owned or controlled by the elected officerbegin delete, any other elected or a family member
26officer who serves on the same elective body,end delete
27ofbegin delete anyend deletebegin insert theend insert
elected officerbegin delete who serves on that bodyend delete is deemed to
28serve the primary purpose of conferring a personal financial benefit
29on the recipient and is prohibited as being unrelated to a political,
30legislative, or governmental purpose and inconsistent with the trust
31imposed by Section 89510.
32(b) An elected officer is deemed to have complied with the
33requirements of subdivision (a) if the Commission determines that
34the elected officer has made a reasonable effort to ascertain whether
35a nonprofit organization is owned or controlled by any individual
36described in subdivision (a).
37(c) For purposes of this section, as applied to a Member of the
38Legislature, “same elective body” includes both houses of the
39Legislature.
P16 1 40(d)
end delete
P17 1begin insert(c)end insert For purposes of this section, a nonprofit organization is
2owned or controlled by an elected officer or family member ofbegin delete anend delete
3begin insert theend insert elected
officer if the elected officer or family member of the
4elected officer, or a member of that person’s immediate family, is
5a director, officer, partner, or trustee of, or holds any position of
6management with, the nonprofit organization.
13 7(e)
end delete
8begin insert(d)end insert For purposes of this section, “family member ofbegin delete anend deletebegin insert theend insert
9 elected officer” means the spouse, child, sibling, or parent of an
10elected officer.
Section 89516 of the Government Code is amended
13to read:
Notwithstanding Sections 89512 and 89513, this section
15governs the use of campaign funds for vehicle expenses.
16(a) Campaign funds shall not be used to purchase a vehicle
17unless both of the following apply:
18(1) Title to the vehicle is held by the committee and not the
19candidate, elected officer, campaign treasurer, or any other
20individual or individuals with authority to approve the expenditure
21of campaign funds held by a committee, or a member of his or her
22immediate family.
23(2) The use of the vehicle is directly related to an election
24campaign.
25(b) Campaign funds shall not be used to lease a vehicle unless
26both of the following apply:
27(1) The lessee is the committee, or a state or local government
28agency, and not the candidate, elected officer, or a member of his
29or her immediate family; or the lessor is a state or local government
30agency.
31(2) The use of the vehicle is directly related to an election
32campaign.
33(c) Campaign funds may be used to pay for or reimburse the
34operating costs, including, but not limited to, insurance,
35maintenance, and repairs, for any vehicle for which campaign
36funds may be spent pursuant to this section.
37(d) Campaign funds may be used to reimburse a candidate,
38elected officer, his or her immediate family, or any individual or
39individuals with authority to approve the expenditure of campaign
40funds held by a committee, or an employee or member of the staff
P18 1of the committee or of the elected officer’s governmental agency,
2for the use of his or her vehicle at the rate approved by the Internal
3Revenue Service pursuant to Section 162 of the Internal Revenue
4Code in connection with deductible mileage expenses under the
5federal income tax law, if both of the following requirements are
6met:
7(1) The vehicle use for which reimbursement is sought is directly
8related to an election campaign.
9(2) The specific purpose and mileage in connection with each
10expenditure is documented in a
manner approved by the Internal
11Revenue Service in connection with deductible mileage expenses.
12(e) For purposes of this section, use of a vehicle is considered
13to be directly related to an election campaign as long as its use for
14other purposes is only incidental to its use for an election campaign.
Section 89517 of the Government Code is amended
17to read:
(a) Campaign funds shall not be used for payment or
19reimbursement for the lease of real property, for a utility bill for
20real property, or for the purchase, lease, or refurbishment of any
21appliance or equipment, where the lessee or sublessor is, or the
22legal title resides in, in whole or in part, a candidate, elected officer,
23campaign treasurer, or any individual or individuals with authority
24to approve the expenditure of campaign funds, or member of his
25or her immediate family.
26(b) Campaign funds shall not be used to purchase real property.
27Except as prohibited by subdivision (a), campaign funds may be
28used to lease real property for up to one year
at a time if the use
29of that property is directly related to political, legislative, or
30governmental purposes and the lessee or sublessor is not, or the
31legal title does not reside in, in whole or in part, a candidate, elected
32officer, campaign treasurer, or any individual or individuals with
33authority to approve the expenditure of campaign funds, or a
34member of his or her immediate family.
35(c) For purposes of this section, real property, appliance, or
36equipment is considered to be directly related to a political,
37legislative, or governmental purpose if its use for other purposes
38is only incidental to its use for political, legislative, or
39governmental purposes and the lessee or sublessor of the real
40property is not, or the legal title for the real property does not reside
P19 1in, in whole or in part, a candidate, elected officer, campaign
2treasurer,
or any individual or individuals with authority to approve
3the expenditure of campaign funds, or a member of his or her
4immediate family.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
7Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
8the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
9district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
10infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
11for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
12the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
13the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
14Constitution.
The Legislature finds and declares that this bill
17furthers the purposes of the Political Reform Act of 1974 within
18the meaning of subdivision (a) of Section 81012 of the Government
19Code.
O
96