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A message from MoveOn.org:
Are you involved in a local or national non-profit or public
interest organization? As a leader or board director or member?
Please read this message carefully, because your organization
could be facing a serious threat.
The Republican National Committee is pressing the Federal Election
Commission to issue new rules that would cripple groups that
dare to communicate with the public in any way critical of President
Bush or members of Congress.
Incredibly, the FEC has just issued -- for public comment
-- proposed rules that would do just that. Any kind of non-profit
-- conservative, progressive, labor, religious, secular, social
service, charitable, educational, civic participation, issue-oriented,
large, and small -- could be affected by these rules.
By the way, one thing FEC's proposed rules do not affect is the
donations you may have made in the past or may make now to MoveOn.org
or to the MoveOn.org Voter Fund. They are aimed at activist non-profit
groups, not donors.
Operatives in Washington are displaying a terrifying disregard
for the values of free speech and openness which underlie our
democracy. Essentially, they are willing to pay any price to
stop criticism of Bush administration policy.
We've attached materials below to help you make a public comment
to the FEC before the comment period ends on APRIL 9th. Your
comment could be very important, because normally the FEC doesn't
get much public feedback.
Public comments to the FEC are encouraged by email to politicalcommitteestatus@fec.gov
More details can be found on the FEC Web site
________________
EXAMPLES OF SPECIFIC CONSEQUENCES FOR NONPROFIT GROUPS
Under the proposed rules, nonprofit organizations that advocate
for cancer research, gun and abortion restrictions or rights,
fiscal discipline, tax reform, poverty issues, immigration reform,
the environment, or civil rights or liberties - all these organizations
could be transformed into political committees if they criticize
or commend members of Congress or the President based on their
official actions or policy positions.
Such changes would cripple the ability of groups to raise and
spend funds in pursuit of their mission and could be so ruinous
that organizations would be forced to back away from meaningful
conversations about public policies that affect millions of Americans.
If the proposed rules were adopted, the following organizations
would be treated as federal political committees and therefore
could not receive grants from any corporation, even an incorporated
nonprofit foundation, from any union, or from any individual
in excess of $5,000 per year:
- A 501(c)(4) gun rights organization that spends $50,000 on
ads at any time during this election year criticizing any legislator,
who also happens to be a federal candidate, for his or her position
on gun control measures.
- A "good government" organization [§501(c)(3)]
that spends more than $50,000 to research and publish a report
criticizing several members of the House of Representatives for
taking an all-expense trip to the Bahamas as guests of the hotel
industry.
- A fund [§527] created by a tax reform organization to
provide information to the public regarding federal candidates'
voting records on budget issues.
- A civil rights organization [§501(c)(3) or §501(c)(4)]
that spends more than $50,000 to conduct non-partisan voter registration
activities in Hispanic and African-American communities after
July 5, 2004.
- An organization devoted to the environment that spends more
than $50,000 on communications opposing oil drilling in the Arctic
and identifying specific Members of Congress as supporters of
the legislation, if those Members are running for re-election.
- A civic organization [§501(c)(6)] that spends $50,000
during 2004 to send letters to all registered voters in the community
urging them to vote on November 2, 2004 because "it is your
civic duty."
Other potential ramifications include the following situations:
- A religious organization that publishes an election-year legislative
report card covering all members of Congress on a broad range
of issues would be unable to accept more than $5,000 from any
individual donor if the report indicated whether specific votes
were good or bad.
- A 501(c)(3) organization that primarily encourages voter registration
and voting among young people will be required to re-create itself
as a federal PAC.
- A 501(c)(4) pro-life group that accepts contributions from
local businesses would break the law by using its general funds
to pay for any communications critical of an incumbent Senator's
position on abortion rights after the Senator had officially
declared himself for reelection more than a year before the next
election.
- A 501(c)(3) civil rights group that has been designated as
a political committee can no longer hold its annual fundraiser
at a corporate-donated facility, and it must refuse donations
or grants from donors that have already given $5,000 for that
year.
BRIEFING ON THE PROPOSED RULE CHANGES
Under federal campaign finance laws, federal "political
committees" must register and file reports with the FEC
and can accept contributions only from individual persons (and
other federal committees), and only up to $5,000 per year from
any one donor ("hard money"). The FEC is now proposing
to redefine "political committee" to include any group
that:
1. Spends more than $1,000 this year on nonpartisan voter registration
or get out the vote activity or on any ad, mailing or phone bank
that "promotes, supports, attacks or opposes" any federal
candidate; and
2. Supposedly has a "major purpose" of election of
a federal candidate as shown by:
(a) Saying anything in its press releases, materials, website,
etc. that might lead regulators to conclude that the group's
"major purpose" is to influence the election of any
federal candidate; or
(b) Spending more than $50,000 this year or in any of the last
4 years for any nonpartisan voter registration or get out the
vote program, or on any public communication that "promotes,
supports, attacks or opposes" any federal candidate.
What's more, any group that gets turned into a federal "political
committee" under these new rules has to shut down all its
communications critical of President Bush (or any other federal
candidate) until it sets up "federal" and "non-federal"
accounts; and raises enough hard money contributions to "repay"
the federal account for the amounts spent on all those communications
since the beginning of 2003.
These proposed rules would apply to all types of groups: 501(c)(3)
charitable organizations, 501(c)(4) advocacy organizations, labor
unions, trade associations and non-federal political committees
and organizations (so-called "527" groups, as well
as state PACs, local political clubs, etc.).
The new rules, including those that apply to voter engagement,
cover all types of communications -- not just broadcast TV or
radio ads -- but messages in any form, such as print ads, mailings,
phone banks, email alerts like this one, websites, leaflets,
speeches, posters, tabling, even knocking on doors.
The FEC will hold a public hearing on April 14 & 15. Written
comments are due by April 5 if the group wants to testify at
that hearing; otherwise, by April 9. The FEC plans to make its
final decision on these proposed rules by mid-May and they could
go into effect as early as July, right in the middle of the election
year, potentially retroactive to January 2003.
It's clear that these rules would immediately silence thousands
of groups, of all types, who have raised questions and criticisms
of any kind about the Bush Administration, its record and its
policies.
SOME TALKING POINTS
- The FEC should not change the rules for nonprofit advocacy
in the middle of an election year, especially in ways that Congress
already considered and rejected. Implementing these changes now
would go far beyond what Congress decided and the Supreme Court
upheld.
- These rules would shut down the legitimate activities of nonprofit
organizations of all kinds that the FEC has no authority at all
to regulate.
- Nothing in the McCain-Feingold campaign reform law or the Supreme
Court's decision upholding it provides any basis for these rules.
That law is only about banning federal candidates from using
unregulated contributions ("soft money"), and banning
political parties from doing so, because of their close relationship
to those candidates. It's clear that, with one exception relating
to running broadcast ads close to an election, the new law wasn't
supposed to change what independent nonprofit interest groups
can do, including political organizations (527's) that have never
before been subject to regulation by the FEC.
- The FEC can't fix the problems with these proposed rules just
by imposing new burdens on section 527 groups. They do important
issue education and advocacy as well as voter mobilization. And
Congress clearly decided to require those groups to fully and
publicly disclose their finances, through the IRS and state agencies,
not to restrict their independent activities and speech. The
FEC has no authority to go further.
- In the McConnell opinion upholding McCain-Feingold, the U.S.
Supreme Court clearly stated that the law's limits on unregulated
corporate, union and large individual contributions apply to
political parties and not interest groups. Congress specifically
considered regulating 527 organization three times in the last
several years - twice through the Internal Revenue Code and once
during the BCRA debate - and did not subject them to McCain-Feingold.
- The FEC should not, in a few weeks, tear up the fabric of tax-exempt
law that has existed for decades and under which thousands of
nonprofit groups have structured their activities and their governance.
The Internal Revenue Code already prohibits 501(c)(3) charities
from intervening in political candidate campaigns, and IRS rules
for other 501(c) groups prohibit them from ever having a primary
purpose to influence any candidate elections -- federal, state,
or local.
- As an example of how seriously the new FEC rules contradict
the IRS political and lobbying rules for nonprofits, consider
this: Under the 1976 public charity lobbying law, a 501(c)(3)
group with a $1.5 million annual budget can spend $56,250 on
grassroots lobbying, including criticism of a federal incumbent
candidate in the course of lobbying on a specific bill. That
same action under the new FEC rules would cause the charity to
be regulated as a federal political committee, with devastating
impact on its finances and perhaps even loss of its tax-exempt
status.
- The chilling effect of the proposed rules on free speech cannot
be overstated. Merely expressing an opinion about an officeholder's
policies could turn a nonprofit group OVERNIGHT into a federally
regulated political committee with crippling fund-raising restrictions.
- Under the most draconian proposal, the FEC would "look
back" at a nonprofit group's activities over the past four
years - before McCain-Feingold was ever passed and the FEC ever
proposed these rules - to determine whether a group's activities
qualify it as a federal political committee. If so, the FEC would
require a group to raise hard money to repay prior expenses that
are now subject to the new rules. Further work would be halted
until debts to the "old" organization were repaid.
This rule would jeopardize the survival of many groups.
- The 4 year "look back" rule would cause a nonprofit
group that criticized or praised the policies of Bush, Cheney,
McCain, or Gore in 2000, or any Congressional incumbent candidate
in 2000 or 2002, to be classified as a political committee now,
even though the group has not done so since then. This severely
violates our constitutional guarantees of due process.
- These changes would impoverish political debate and could act
as a de facto "gag rule" on public policy advocacy.
They would insulate public officials from substantive criticism
for their positions on policy issues. They would actually diminish
civic participation in government rather than strengthen it.
This would be exactly the opposite result intended by most supporters
of campaign finance reform.
- The FEC's proposed rule changes would dramatically impair vigorous
debate about important national issues. It would hurt nonprofit
groups across the political spectrum and restrict First Amendment
freedoms in ways that are unhealthy for our democracy.
- Any kind of nonprofit -- conservative, liberal, labor, religious,
secular, social service, charitable, educational, civic participation,
issue-oriented, large, and small -- could be affected by these
rules. A vast number would be essentially silenced on the issues
that define them, whether they are organized as 501(c)(3), 501(c)(4),
or 527 organizations.
- Already, more than five hundred nonprofit organizations - including
many that supported McCain-Feingold like ourselves - have voiced
their opposition to the FEC's efforts to restrict advocacy in
the name of campaign finance reform.
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