SB 1442, as amended, Lara. Political Reform Act of 1974: campaign statements.
Existing law, the Political Reform Act of 1974, provides for the comprehensive regulation of campaign financing, including requiring the reporting of campaign contributions and expenditures and imposing other reporting and recordkeeping requirements on campaign committees. The act requires elected officers, candidates, committees, and slate mailer organizations to file various reports, including semiannual reports, preelection statements, and supplemental preelection statements. The act requires the Secretary of State, in consultation with the Fair Political Practices Commission, to develop online and electronic filing processes for specified entities.
This bill would require elected state officers, candidates for elective state officebegin insert and their controlled committeesend insert, committees primarily formed to support or oppose a candidate for elective state office or a statewide ballot measure, and state general purpose committees to file quarterly statements each year instead of semiannual statements, as specified. The bill would recast or repeal other specified reporting requirements, including supplemental preelection statements, supplemental independent expenditure reports, and odd-numbered year reports.
This bill would require the Secretary of State, in consultation with the Fair Political Practices Commission, to develop a statewide Internet-based system for the electronic filing and public display of all records filed by or for specified entities.
The act defines “late contributions” and “late independent expenditures” for purposes of the act to include certain contributions and independent expenditures, respectively, that are made within 90 days before the date of the election.
This bill would revise the definitions to specify that those terms also include contributions and independent expenditures that are made on the date of the election.
The bill would also make conforming changes.
A violation of the act’s provisions is punishable as a misdemeanor. By expanding the scope of a 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.
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 82036 of the Government Code is
2amended to read:
“Late contribution” means any of the following:
4(a) A contribution, including a loan, that totals in the aggregate
5one thousand dollars ($1,000) or more and is made to or received
6by a candidate, a controlled committee, or a committee formed or
7existing primarily to support or oppose a candidate or measure on
8the date of the election, or during the 90-day period preceding the
9date of the election, at which the candidate or measure is to be
10voted on. For purposes of the Board of Administration of the Public
11Employees’ Retirement System and the Teachers’ Retirement
12Board, “the date of the election” is the deadline to return ballots.
13(b) A contribution, including a loan, that totals in the aggregate
14one thousand dollars
($1,000) or more and is made to or received
15by a political party committee, as defined in Section 85205, on the
16date of a state election or within 90 days before the date of a state
17election.
Section 82036.5 of the Government Code is amended
19to read:
“Late independent expenditure” means an independent
21expenditure that totals in the aggregate one thousand dollars
22($1,000) or more and is made for or against a specific candidate
23or measure involved in an election on the date of the election or
24during the 90-day period preceding the date of the election. For
25purposes of the Board of Administration of the Public Employees’
26Retirement System and the Teachers’ Retirement Board, “the date
27of the election” is the deadline to return ballots.
Section 82048.4 of the Government Code is amended
29to read:
(a) “Slate mailer organization” means, except as
31provided in subdivision (b), a person who, directly or indirectly,
32does all of the following:
33(1) Is involved in the production of one or more slate mailers
34and exercises control over the selection of the candidates and
35measures to be supported or opposed in the slate mailers.
36(2) Receives or is promised payments totaling five hundred
37dollars ($500) or more in a calendar year for the production of one
38or more slate mailers.
P4 1(b) “Slate mailer organization” does not include any of the
2following:
3(1) A candidate or officeholder or a candidate’s or officeholder’s
4controlled committee.
5(2) An official committee of a political party.
6(3) A legislative caucus committee.
7(4) A committee primarily formed to support or oppose a
8candidate, officeholder, or ballot measure.
9(c) The production and distribution of slate mailers by a slate
10mailer organization shall not be considered making contributions
11or expenditures for purposes of subdivision (b) or (c) of Section
1282013. If a slate mailer organization makes contributions or
13expenditures other than by producing or distributing slate mailers,
14and it reports those contributions and expenditures pursuant to
15Sections 84218 and 84219, no additional campaign reports shall
16be required of the slate
mailer organization pursuant to Section
1784200, 84200.3, or 84200.5.
Section 84101 of the Government Code is amended
19to read:
(a) A committee that is a committee by virtue of
21subdivision (a) of Section 82013 shall file a statement of
22organization. The committee shall file the original of the statement
23of organization with the Secretary of State and shall also file a
24copy of the statement of organization with the local filing officer,
25if any, with whom the committee is required to file the originals
26of its campaign reports pursuant to Section 84215. The original
27and copy of the statement of organization shall be filed within 10
28days after the committee has qualified as a committee. The
29Secretary of State shall assign a number to each committee that
30files a statement of organization and shall notify the committee of
31the number. The Secretary of State shall send a copy of statements
32filed pursuant to this section to the county elections official of each
33
county that he or she deems appropriate. A county elections official
34who receives a copy of a statement of organization from the
35Secretary of State pursuant to this section shall send a copy of the
36statement to the clerk of each city in the county that he or she
37deems appropriate.
38(b) In addition to filing the statement of organization as required
39by subdivision (a), if a committee qualifies as a committee under
40subdivision (a) of Section 82013 before the date of an election in
P5 1connection with which the committee is required to file preelection
2statements, but after the closing date of the last campaign statement
3required to be filed before the election pursuant to Section 84200.8
4or 84200.9, the committee shall file, by facsimile transmission,
5online transmission, guaranteed overnight delivery, or personal
6delivery within 24 hours of qualifying as a committee, the
7information required to be reported in the statement of organization.
8The
information required by this subdivision shall be filed with
9the filing officer with whom the committee is required to file the
10originals of its campaign reports pursuant to Section 84215.
11(c) If an independent expenditure committee qualifies as a
12committee pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 82013 during the
13time period described in Section 82036.5 and makes independent
14expenditures of one thousand dollars ($1,000) or more to support
15or oppose a candidate or candidates for office, the committee shall
16file, by facsimile transmission, online transmission, guaranteed
17overnight delivery, or personal delivery within 24 hours of
18qualifying as a committee, the information required to be reported
19in the statement of organization. The information required by this
20section shall be filed with the filing officer with whom the
21committee is required to file the original of its campaign reports
22pursuant to Section 84215, and shall be filed at all
locations
23required for the candidate or candidates supported or opposed by
24the independent expenditures. The filings required by this section
25are in addition to filings that may be required by Section 84204.
26(d) For purposes of this section, in calculating whether one
27thousand dollars ($1,000) in contributions has been received,
28payments for a filing fee or for a statement of qualifications to
29appear in a sample ballot shall not be included if these payments
30have been made from the candidate’s personal funds.
Section 84103 of the Government Code is amended
32to read:
(a) If there is a change in any of the information
34contained in a statement of organization, an amendment shall be
35filed within 10 days to reflect the change. The committee shall file
36the original of the amendment with the Secretary of State and shall
37also file a copy of the amendment with the local filing officer, if
38any, with whom the committee is required to file the originals of
39its campaign reports pursuant to Section 84215.
P6 1(b) In addition to filing an amendment to a statement of
2organization as required by subdivision (a), a committee as defined
3in subdivision (a) of Section 82013 shall, by facsimile transmission,
4online transmission, guaranteed overnight delivery, or personal
5delivery within 24 hours, notify the
filing officer with whom it is
6required to file the originals of its campaign reports pursuant to
7Section 84215 if the change requiring the amendment occurs before
8the date of the election in connection with which the committee
9is required to file a preelection statement, but after the closing date
10of the last preelection statement required to be filed for the election
11pursuant to Section 84200.8, if any of the following information
12is changed:
13(1) The name of the committee.
14(2) The name of the treasurer or other principal officers.
15(3) The name of any candidate or committee by which the
16committee is controlled or with which it acts jointly.
17The notification shall include the changed information, the date
18of the change, the name of the person providing the notification,
19and
the committee’s name and identification number.
20A committee may file a notification online only if the appropriate
21filing officer is capable of receiving the notification in that manner.
Section 84200 of the Government Code is amended
23to read:
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, elected
25officers, candidates, and committees pursuant to subdivision (a)
26of Section 82013 shall file semiannual statements each year no
27later than July 31 for the period ending June 30, and no later than
28January 31 for the period ending December 31.
29(1) A candidate who, during the past six months, has filed a
30declaration pursuant to Section 84206 shall not be required to file
31a semiannual statement for that six-month period.
32(2) Elected officers whose salaries are less than two hundred
33dollars ($200) a month, judges, judicial candidates, and their
34controlled committees shall not file semiannual statements
pursuant
35to this subdivision for any six-month period in which they have
36not made or received any contributions or made any expenditures.
37(3) A judge who is not listed on the ballot for reelection to, or
38recall from, any elective office during a calendar year shall not
39file semiannual statements pursuant to this subdivision for any
40six-month period in that year if both of the following apply:
P7 1(A) The judge has not received any contributions.
2(B) The only expenditures made by the judge during the calendar
3year are contributions from the judge’s personal funds to other
4candidates or committees totaling less than one thousand dollars
5($1,000).
6(b) All committees pursuant to subdivision (b) or (c) of Section
782013 shall file campaign statements each year no
later than July
831 for the period ending June 30, and no later than January 31 for
9the period ending December 31, if they have made contributions
10or independent expenditures, including payments to a slate mailer
11organization, during the six-month period before the closing date
12of the statements.
13(c) This section does not apply to an elected state officer, a
14candidate for elective state office, or a committee that is subject
15to Section 84200.3.
Section 84200.3 is added to the Government Code, to
17read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), elected
19state officers, candidates for elective state officebegin insert and their
20controlled committeesend insert, committees primarily formed to support
21or oppose a candidate for elective state office or a statewide ballot
22measure, and committees formed pursuant to subdivision (a) of
23Section 82013 that are state general purpose committees pursuant
24to subdivision (b) of Section 82027.5 shall file quarterly campaign
25statements each year, as follows:
26(1) No later than April 7 for the period commencing January 1
27and ending March 31.
28(2) No later than July
31 for the period commencing April 1
29and ending June 30.
30(3) No later than October 7 for the period commencing July 1
31and ending September 30.
32(4) No later than January 31 for the period commencing October
331 and ending December 31.
34(b) A committee formed pursuant to subdivision (b) or (c) of
35Section 82013 that is a state general purpose committee pursuant
36to subdivision (b) of Section 82027.5 shall file quarterly campaign
37statements as required by subdivision (a), unless the committee
38has not made contributions or independent expenditures during
39the reporting period.
Section 84200.5 of the Government Code is repealed.
Section 84200.5 is added to the Government Code, to
2read:
(a) Elected state officers, candidates for elective state
4office, and committees filing quarterly campaign statements
5pursuant to Section 84200.3begin delete,end delete shall additionally file one preelection
6statement and, as appropriate, a runoff preelection statement, as
7follows:
8(1) Candidates for elective state office being voted upon in a
9state election, controlled committees of those candidates, and
10committees primarily formed to support or oppose a candidate for
11elective state office or a state ballot measure being voted on in that
12election shall file the appropriate preelection statements specified
13in subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 84200.8.
14(2) An elected state officer or candidate for elective state office
15who, during the applicable reporting period covered by subdivision
16(b) or (c) of Section 84200.8, makes a contribution to any
17committee required to report receipts, expenditures, or
18contributions pursuant to this title, or makes an independent
19expenditure, in connection with a state election, shall file the
20applicable preelection statements specified in subdivisions (b) and
21(c) of Section 84200.8.
22(3) (A) A state general purpose committee formed pursuant to
23subdivision (a) of Section 82013, other than a political party
24committee, as defined in Section 85205, shall file the applicable
25preelection statements specified in subdivisions (b) and (c) of
26Section 84200.8 if it makes contributions or independent
27expenditures totaling five hundred dollars ($500) or more during
28the period covered by the
preelection statement.
29(B) A state general purpose committee formed pursuant to
30subdivision (b) or (c) of Section 82013 is not required to file the
31preelection statements specified in Section 84200.8.
32(4) A political party committee, as defined in Section 85205,
33shall file the applicable preelection statements specified in
34subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 84200.8 in connection with a
35state election if the committee receives contributions totaling one
36thousand dollars ($1,000) or more, or if it makes contributions or
37independent expenditures totaling five hundred dollars ($500) or
38more, during the period covered by the preelection statement.
39(b) Local elected officers, candidates for local elective office,
40and committees filing semiannual statements pursuant to Section
P9 184200, shall file two preelection statements
and, as appropriate, a
2runoff preelection statement, as follows:
3(1) Candidates for county, multicounty district, or city elective
4office being voted upon in an election, controlled committees of
5those candidates, and committees primarily formed to support or
6oppose a candidate or measure being voted on in a county,
7multicounty district, or city election shall file the preelection
8statements specified in Section 84200.8.
9(2) (A) A county general purpose committee formed pursuant
10to subdivision (a) of Section 82013 shall file the preelection
11statements specified in Section 84200.8 if it makes contributions
12or independent expenditures totaling five hundred dollars ($500)
13or more in connection with a county election during the period
14covered by the preelection statements.
15(B) A county general
purpose committee formed pursuant to
16subdivision (b) or (c) of Section 82013 is not required to file the
17preelection statements specified in Section 84200.8.
18(3) City general purpose committees shall file the preelection
19statements specified in Section 84200.8 if they make contributions
20or independent expenditures totaling five hundred dollars ($500)
21or more in connection with a city election during the period covered
22by the preelection statement.
23(c) For elections for the Board of Administration of the Public
24Employees’ Retirement System or the Teachers’ Retirement Board,
25candidates and committees shall file preelection statements, as
26followsbegin delete.end deletebegin insert:end insert
27(1) During an election period for the Board of Administration
28of the Public Employees’ Retirement System or thebegin delete Teacher’send delete
29begin insert Teachersend insertbegin insert’end insert Retirement Board, all candidates for these boards, their
30controlled committees, and committees primarily formed to support
31or oppose the candidates shall file the preelection statements
32specified in Section 84200.9.
33(2) During an election period for the Board of Administration
34of the Public Employees’ Retirement System or the Teachers’
35Retirement Board, a state or county general purpose committee
36formed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 82013 shall file the
37
preelection statements specified in Section 84200.9 if it makes
38contributions or independent expenditures totaling five hundred
39dollars ($500) or more during the period covered by the preelection
40statement to support or oppose a candidate, or a committee
P10 1primarily formed to support or oppose a candidate, on the ballot
2for the Board of Administration of the Public Employees’
3Retirement System or the Teachers’ Retirement Board. A state or
4county general purpose committee formed pursuant to subdivision
5(b) or (c) of Section 82013 is not required to file the statements
6specified in Section 84200.9.
Section 84200.6 of the Government Code is amended
8to read:
In addition to the campaign statements required by
10Sections 84200, 84200.3, and 84200.5, all candidates and
11committees shall file the following special statements and reports:
12(a) Late contribution reports, when required by Section 84203.
13(b) Late independent expenditure reports, when required by
14Section 84204.
Section 84200.7 of the Government Code is repealed.
Section 84202.3 of the Government Code is repealed.
Section 84202.5 of the Government Code is repealed.
Section 84202.7 of the Government Code is repealed.
Section 84203.5 of the Government Code is repealed.
Section 84215 of the Government Code is amended
21to read:
All candidates and elected officers and their controlled
23committees, except as provided in subdivisions (d) and (e) of this
24section and subdivision (h) of Section 84605, shall file one copy
25of the campaign statements required by Sections 84200 and
2684200.3 with the elections official of the county in which the
27candidate or elected official is domiciled, as defined in subdivision
28(b) of Section 349 of the Elections Code. In addition, campaign
29statements shall be filed at the following places:
30(a) Statewide elected officers, including members of the State
31Board of Equalization; Members of the Legislature; Supreme Court
32justices, court of appeal justices, and superior court judges;
33candidates for those offices and their controlled committees;
34committees formed or existing primarily to
support or oppose these
35candidates, elected officers, justices and judges, or statewide
36measures, or the qualification of state ballot measures; and all state
37general purpose committees and filers not specified in subdivisions
38(b) to (e), inclusive, shall file a campaign statement by online or
39electronic means, as specified in Section 84605, and shall file the
P11 1original and one copy of the campaign statement in paper format
2with the Secretary of State.
3(b) Elected officers in jurisdictions other than legislative
4districts, State Board of Equalization districts, or appellate court
5districts that contain parts of two or more counties, candidates for
6these offices, their controlled committees, and committees formed
7or existing primarily to support or oppose candidates or local
8measures to be voted upon in one of these jurisdictions shall file
9the original and one copy with the elections official of the county
10with the largest number of registered
voters in the jurisdiction.
11(c) County elected officers, candidates for these offices, their
12controlled committees, committees formed or existing primarily
13to support or oppose candidates or local measures to be voted upon
14in any number of jurisdictions within one county, other than those
15specified in subdivision (d), and county general purpose
16committees shall file the original and one copy with the elections
17official of the county, subject to subdivision (j) of Section 84615
18with respect to statements filed online or electronically.
19(d) City elected officers, candidates for city office, their
20controlled committees, committees formed or existing primarily
21to support or oppose candidates or local measures to be voted upon
22in one city, and city general purpose committees shall file the
23original and one copy with the clerk of the city and are not required
24to file with the local
elections official of the county in which they
25are domiciled, subject to subdivision (j) of Section 84615 with
26respect to statements filed online or electronically.
27(e) Elected members of the Board of Administration of the
28Public Employees’ Retirement System, elected members of the
29Teachers’ Retirement Board, candidates for these offices, their
30controlled committees, and committees formed or existing
31primarily to support or oppose these candidates or elected members
32shall file the original and one copy with the Secretary of State, and
33a copy shall be filed at the relevant board’s office in Sacramento.
34These elected officers, candidates, and committees need not file
35with the elections official of the county in which they are
36domiciled.
37(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a
38committee, candidate, or elected officer is not required to file more
39than the original
and one copy, or one copy, of a campaign
P12 1statement with any one county elections official or city clerk or
2with the Secretary of State.
3(g) If a committee is required to file campaign statements
4required by Section 84200, 84200.3, or 84200.5 in places
5designated in subdivisions (a) to (d), inclusive, it shall continue to
6file these statements in those places, in addition to any other places
7required by this title, until the end of the calendar year.
Section 84218 of the Government Code is amended
9to read:
(a) A slate mailer organization shall file semiannual
11campaign statements no later than July 31 for the period ending
12June 30, and no later than January 31 for the period ending
13December 31.
14(b) In addition to the semiannual statements required by
15subdivision (a), a slate mailer organization which produces a slate
16mailer supporting or opposing candidates or measures being voted
17on in an election shall file the statements specified in Section
1884200.8 if, during the period covered by the preelection statement,
19the slate mailer organization receives payments totaling five
20hundred dollars ($500) or more from any person for the support
21of or opposition to candidates or ballot measures in one or more
22slate mailers, or expends five hundred dollars ($500) or more to
23produce
one or more slate mailers.
24(c) A slate mailer organization shall file two copies of its
25campaign reports with the clerk of the county in which it is
26domiciled. A slate mailer organization is domiciled at the address
27listed on its statement of organization unless it is domiciled outside
28California, in which case its domicile shall be deemed to be Los
29Angeles County for purposes of this section.
30In addition, slate mailer organizations shall file campaign reports
31as follows:
32(1) A slate mailer organization which produces one or more
33slate mailers supporting or opposing candidates or measures voted
34on in a state election, or in more than one county, shall file
35campaign reports in the same manner as state general purpose
36committees pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 84215.
37(2) A slate mailer organization which produces one or more
38slate mailers supporting or opposing candidates or measures voted
39on in only one county, or in more than one jurisdiction within one
40county, shall file campaign reports in the same manner as county
P13 1general purpose committees pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section
284215.
3(3) A slate mailer organization which produces one or more
4slate mailers supporting or opposing candidates or measures voted
5on in only one city shall file campaign reports in the same manner
6as city general purpose committees pursuant to subdivision (d) of
7Section 84215.
8(4) Notwithstanding the above, no slate mailer organization
9shall be required to file more than the original and one copy, or
10two copies, of a campaign report with any one county or city clerk
11or with the Secretary of State.
Section 84252 of the Government Code is amended
13to read:
A committee primarily formed to support or oppose a
15LAFCO proposal shall file all statements required under this
16chapter except that, in lieu of the statements required by Section
1784200, the committee shall file monthly campaign statements from
18the time circulation of a petition begins until a measure is placed
19on the ballot or, if a measure is not placed on the ballot, until the
20committee is terminated pursuant to Section 84214. The committee
21shall file an original and one copy of each statement on the 15th
22day of each calendar month, covering the prior calendar month,
23with the clerk of the county in which the measure may be voted
24on. If the petition results in a measure that is placed on the ballot,
25the committee thereafter shall file campaign statements required
26by this
chapter.
Section 84620 is added to the Government Code, to
28read:
(a) The Secretary of State, in consultation with the
30Commission, shall develop a statewide Internet-based system for
31the electronic filing and public display of all records filed with the
32Secretary of State pursuant to this title, including, but not limited
33to, statements of organization, campaign statements, reports,
34registrations, and certifications filed by or for any of the following:
35(1) An officeholder account or legal defense fund.
36(2) A committee that is primarily formed to support or oppose
37one or more candidates for elective state office or one or more
38statewide ballot measures, including, but not limited to, major
39donor and independent expenditure committees formed
pursuant
40to subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 82013.
P14 1(3) A slate mailer organization.
2(4) A lobbyist, lobbying firm, or lobbyist employer.
3(5) A multipurpose organization that is required to file any report
4pursuant to this title.
5(b) The system developed pursuant to subdivision (a) shall
6provide both of the following:
7(1) Search capabilities that are data-driven and user-friendly for
8members of the public.
9(2) Regular availability of all filings in a raw, machine-readable
10data format that may be downloaded by members of the public.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
12Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
13the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
14district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
15infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
16for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
17the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
18the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
19Constitution.
It is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation
21that would provide for monthly filing of campaign statements,
22instead of the quarterly filing established by this act, after the
23Secretary of State implements the Internet-based system required
24by Section 20 of this act.
The Legislature finds and declares that this bill
26furthers the purposes of the Political Reform Act of 1974 within
27the meaning of subdivision (a) of Section 81012 of the Government
28Code.
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