The Session Gets Rollin’

The Session Gets Rollin'

Common Cause New Mexico attends the new committee orientations and Senator Peter Wirth speaks out about campaign finance reform.

The committees kick-off

The House committee of Government, Elections and Indian Affairs began this morning (promptly as promised!) at 8:30 a.m. for orientation.  Chaired by Rep. James Smith, R-Albuquerque, the first request for a presentation to the committee was to the Office of the Secretary of State and scheduled for this Wednesday morning at 8:30 a.m. in Rm. 307.  

Another committee we anticipate spending much of our time in this session, House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Rep. Zach Cook, R-Otero, began past schedule due to a caucus of the Democrats from both the House and Senate.  The membership of the committee includes former HJC chairs Rep. Gail Chasey, D-Albuquerque and former House Speaker, Rep. Ken Martinez, D-Grants.  Current House Majority Leader, Rep. Nate Gentry, R-Albuquerque is on the committee as well as current House Minority Leader, Rep. Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe and other supporters of Common Cause New Mexico’s issues. 

On the Senate side, the Senate Judiciary Committee met for orientation and began hearing bills this afternoon.  Common Cause New Mexico champion, Senator Peter Wirth is on the committee and most of our bills will also head to their committee this session.

Common Cause will be at the Senate Public Affairs Committee’s orientation tomorrow at 2:30 p.m.

Common Cause New Mexico In the News:

http://www.abqjournal.com/531736/news/nm-news/lawmakers-again-consider-postcitizens-united-bill.html

Lawmakers again consider post-Citizens United bill

By Thomas Cole / Of the Journal

PUBLISHED: Monday, January 26, 2015 at 12:05 am

Wednesday marked the fifth anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the landmark ruling that has led to an explosion in campaign spending.

So far, the state Legislature hasn’t passed any legislation to deal with the fallout of Citizens United and related court rulings, but it gets another chance in the 60-day legislative session that began last week.

In Citizens United, a divided Supreme Court struck down a federal law that prohibited corporations from spending money on elections, freeing them to make unlimited independent expenditures.

Corporations aren’t just for-profit companies. Generally, anyone can form a corporation. Citizens United, a political advocacy group, is a nonprofit corporation.

The Supreme Court’s decision also opened the door for unions and others to make unlimited independent expenditures on elections. Those are expenditures made independently to support or oppose candidates, meaning they can’t be contributions to candidates or money spent in coordination with candidates.

Because of Citizens United, we now have independent expenditure-only political action committees, commonly known as super PACs, operating in state and federal elections.

Citizens United also set off a sharp jump in election spending by so-called dark money groups. Those are tax-exempt groups that don’t have to disclose their donors – something that super PACs and traditional PACs, which contribute to candidates, must do.

Short of adoption of an amendment to the U.S. Constitution or the Supreme Court reversing itself – both unlikely events, at least in the short term – Citizens United is the law of the land.

Still, states can enact laws regulating some behavior of super PACs and forcing dark money groups to make some donor disclosures.

“It’s incumbent to do what we can do to get this under control,” says Sen. Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe. “We can’t do nothing.”

Super PACs, which aren’t supposed to coordinate with candidates, spent millions of dollars on elections in New Mexico last year, but there is no law that defines what exactly coordination is.

That means super PACs have faced little risk of legal action even if they engaged in obvious coordination, such as working hand in hand with a candidate on a TV ad.

We don’t even know exactly how much super PACs spent in the elections last year, because they aren’t required to distinguish themselves from traditional PACs when registering with the Secretary of State’s Office. Also, a single group can have both a super PAC and a traditional PAC.

Dark money groups have been active in New Mexico elections, as well, although less so than super PACs.

Wirth this week plans to introduce legislation to define prohibited candidate coordination by super PACs. It will be his fifth attempt at passage of such a law since 2011.

His bill also would force donor disclosure by dark money groups and others that purchase certain political advertising but aren’t now required to report their contributors to the state.

“Citizens United turned our (campaign) finance laws on their head,” Wirth says. “We have to do the one thing the court said we could: require disclosure.”

Viki Harrison, director of Common Cause New Mexico, says, “We want to know where the large amounts of money are coming from.”

A final draft of Wirth’s bill wasn’t yet available.

While Wirth will introduce the legislation on super PACs and dark money groups in the Democratic-controlled Senate, Republican Rep. James Smith of Sandia Park will introduce it in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

But while legislation can address some of the fallout of Citizens United, the issue of political inequality will remain.

“Your voice is always going to be drowned out unless you can make those $5,000 and $10,000 donations,” Harrison told a news conference Wednesday at the Capitol to mark the anniversary of the Citizens United ruling.

Tune in tomorrow for further updates and our coverage of new legislation introduced by Rep. Jeff Steinborn on voting issues and disclosure!