HP0689
LD 976
Session - 128th Maine Legislature
 
LR 1573
Item 1
Bill Tracking, Additional Documents Chamber Status

An Act Regarding Primary Election Contribution Limits and Contribution Limits for Unenrolled Candidates

Be it enacted by the People of the State of Maine as follows:

Sec. 1. 21-A MRSA §1004-A, sub-§2,  as enacted by PL 2003, c. 628, Pt. A, §1, is amended to read:

2. Contribution in excess of limitations.   A person that accepts or makes a contribution that exceeds the limitations set out in section 1015, subsections subsection 1 and 2 may be assessed a penalty of no more than the amount by which the contribution exceeded the limitation.

Sec. 2. 21-A MRSA §1015, sub-§1,  as amended by PL 2011, c. 382, §1, is further amended to read:

1. Individuals; committees; corporations; associations; organizations.   An individual , political committee, political action committee, other committee, firm, partnership, corporation, association or organization may not make contributions to a candidate in support of the candidacy of one person aggregating more than $1,500 in any election for a gubernatorial candidate, more than $350 for a legislative candidate, more than $350 for a candidate for municipal office and beginning January 1, 2012 more than $750 for a candidate for municipal office or more than $750 in any election for any other candidate. This limitation does not apply to contributions in support of a candidate by that candidate or that candidate's spouse or domestic partner. Beginning December 1, 2010, contribution limits in accordance with this subsection are adjusted every 2 years based on the Consumer Price Index as reported by the United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics and rounded to the nearest amount divisible by $25. The commission shall post the current contribution limit and the amount of the next adjustment and the date that it will become effective on its publicly accessible website and include this information with any publication to be used as a guide for candidates.

Sec. 3. 21-A MRSA §1015, sub-§2,  as amended by PL 2011, c. 382, §2, is repealed.

Sec. 4. 21-A MRSA §1015, sub-§2-A  is enacted to read:

2-A Contributions for a primary election; applicability to a general election.   A candidate seeking a party's nomination by primary election may accept contributions designated for both the primary election and the general election up to the date of the primary election. Contributions received after the primary election and before the general election are considered to be designated for the general election. Contributions received that are designated for the primary election must be segregated from those received or designated for the general election. The candidate shall indicate the election to which each contribution applies in campaign finance reports required to be filed with the commission. Contributions received and designated for the primary election may subsequently be designated for the general election in accordance with paragraphs A and B.
A If a candidate is seeking a party's nomination by primary election and no other candidate for the same office has qualified for the primary election by the deadline for submitting petitions prescribed by section 335, all contributions designated for the primary election that have not been spent as of the deadline are deemed to be contributions for the general election. The candidate shall indicate which of the candidate's primary election contributions apply to the general election in campaign finance reports required to be filed with the commission. Such contributions are to be counted toward a donor's contribution limit established in subsection 1 for the general election.
B A candidate who wins an opposed primary election may carry forward any unspent contributions designated for the primary election to the general election or return the primary election contributions to the donors who contributed them, as long as no donor receives more than the amount that donor contributed. Unspent contributions designated for the primary election that have not been returned to the donors are deemed to be contributions for the general election. Such contributions are applied to the donor's contribution limit established in subsection 1 for the general election. A candidate is considered opposed in a primary election when at least one other candidate for the same office has qualified for the primary election by petition under section 335.
C If a candidate carries forward to the general election a contribution designated for the primary election and that contribution, when added to a contribution from the same donor for the general election, exceeds the limit established in subsection 1, the candidate shall return to the donor an amount greater than or equal to the amount by which the contribution limit was exceeded.
D A candidate may not spend funds received for the primary election for goods or services that primarily promote the candidate in the general election, such as advance purchases for research, advertising or staff.

Sec. 5. 21-A MRSA §1015, sub-§3,  as amended by PL 2007, c. 443, Pt. A, §12, is repealed.

Sec. 6. 21-A MRSA §1015-B,  as enacted by PL 2013, c. 334, §7, is amended to read:

§ 1015-B. Donations to an individual considering whether to become a candidate

If an individual receives funds, goods or services for the purpose of deciding whether to become a candidate, the funds, goods or services may not exceed the limitations in section 1015, subsections subsection 1 and 2. The individual shall keep an account of such funds, goods or services received and all payments and obligations incurred in deciding whether to become a candidate. If the individual becomes a candidate, the funds, goods and services received are contributions and the payments and obligations are expenditures. The candidate shall disclose the contributions and expenditures in the first report filed by the candidate or the candidate's authorized campaign committee, in accordance with the commission's procedures.

summary

This bill is presented in response to the United States District Court decision in Woodhouse, et al. v. Maine Commission on Governmental Ethics and Election Practices, et al., United States District Court, District of Maine, Docket No. 1:14-CV-266-DBH.

The bill provides that contributions received by a candidate for a primary election must be segregated from those received for the general election. The bill allows a candidate who is unopposed in a primary election to use in the general election primary election contributions received prior to the deadline by which primary candidates must submit petitions to take part in a primary election. Contributions carried forward from the primary election to the general election are subject to the dollar limits that apply to contributions made to a candidate by a single donor. The bill permits a candidate who defeats a primary opponent to carry forward to the general election unspent contributions received for the primary election. Regardless of whether the candidate was opposed in a primary election, if the sum of a primary election contribution and a general election contribution from the same donor exceeds contribution limits, the candidate must return at least the excess amount to the donor.

The bill specifies that contributions received for the purpose of supporting a candidate in a primary election may not be used primarily to support the candidate's general election campaign.

The bill repeals the limit of $25,000 per calendar year on an individual's aggregate contributions to all political candidates.

Finally, the bill also makes technical, cross-reference changes.


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