Posted on 06/23/2010 4:00:33 PM PDT by wagglebee
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 17, 2010 (LifeSiteNews.com) Delayed, but not undaunted, the leadership of the Democrat-controlled U.S. Congress may force a Thursday vote on a new campaign finance bill, the Orwellian-named Democracy is Strengthened by Casting Light on Spending in Elections (DISCLOSE) Act that has pro-life, pro-family groups, and even the ACLU crying foul. Critics say the measure will have a chilling effect on political free speech, especially with mid-term elections just around the corner.
Late Wednesday afternoon, National Right to Life Legislative Director Douglas Johnson told LifeSiteNews.com that the House Rules Committee was meeting at that moment to make the DISCLOSE Act (HR 5175) ready for a full vote.
The bill forces many organizations to comply with what pro-life groups call onerous reporting requirements. These would disclose the donors and members of their organizations, and frustrate the ability of grassroots entities to communicate effectively about public policy.
Johnson told LSN that the vote could be anytime during the day," but that Democratic leadership could cancel if they feel that anything is going in the wrong direction.
A few weeks ago, the bill seemed dead, but Democrats brought it back after striking a deal Monday that would exempt the powerful National Rifle Association from the requirements of the bill in exchange for their neutrality. A vote was anticipated for last week as well, but Congress went home early for the weekend after a scheduling change.
The NRA deal since modified to cover organizations such as the Sierra Club exempts 501(c)4 groups from having to report their donors if they have at least 500,000 members, over 10 years of existence, chapters in all 50 states, and receive no more than 15 percent of total contributions from corporations. The NRA has over 4 million members; the environmentalist Sierra Club has 750,000 members.
The deal leaves smaller and more numerous grassroots organizations, in particular the pro-life, pro-family movement and the decentralized conservative Tea Party movement, out in the cold.
Other affected entities will likely include vocal liberal and conservative groups that communicate through the internet. While traditional media organizations like newspapers and television stations are exempt from the bill, bloggers, the vanguard of the new media, are not.
Both the White House and House Speaker Pelosi, Johnson revealed, have been heavily involved in the process.
He also noted with irony that the author of the anti-influence bill, Rep. Chris Van Hollen, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, reportedly met with 50 members of his caucus individually over the weekend. Now this is the guy who hands out the bucks for their campaigns, he said.
Im not saying there is anything wrong with that, said Johnson. But the fact that they chose him to be the guy that carries this bill is just one more illustration of what it is about: this bill is nothing but a power grab to seek pure political advantage for the dominant faction of the majority party.
Under the bill, all groups subject to the laws requirements would have to list all donors of $600 or more with the Federal Election Commission (FEC). Groups must also post a hyperlink on their website to the FEC, where a list of the names of their donors can be accessed.
Furthermore, every time an organization runs a campaign ad, its CEO must appear in the ad and state twice his name and the organizations name. The top five funders of the organization behind the ad even if they had nothing to do with the ads funding must also have their names listed in the ad.
In addition, the most significant donor to the organization must list his name, rank, and organization 3 times in the ad. Critics of the bill say that the disclaimers effectively consume valuable air time bought by these groups that would otherwise be used to inform voters about a candidates record.
The public disclosure of donors, pro-life and pro-family groups fear, would make those individuals vulnerable to various forms of political reprisal, as happened in California over Proposition 8, and discourage people from participating in the political process.
Johnson indicated that the bill's passage was far from certain. If they succeed in muscling it through the House, it is still very much a jump ball in the Senate, he said.
Senator Mitch McConnell has signalled that Republicans would very strongly oppose the measure. While no Senate Democrats have come out opposing it, ten of their number refused to co-sponsor the legislation (S 3295), sponsored by Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), meaning some might join a GOP filibuster.
Once passed by the House and Senate and signed into law by President Barack Obama, the act would take effect in 30 days, even if the Federal Elections Commission has not yet crafted new guidelines just in time for the mid-term elections in November.
Both H.R. 5175, and its Senate companion legislation, both contain a severability clause that will keep parts of the bill alive, if the U.S. Supreme Court strikes down any section of the bill.
To find contact information for the U.S. House of Representatives visit here: http://www.house.gov/
To find contact information for the U.S. Senate visit here: http://www.senate.gov/
This was always the plan behind McCain-Feingold.
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Let them do as they wish. We’ll have free speech as long as our ammo lasts. When the ammo runs out, it’s knife and axe time.
I think we may have made our last donation to the NRA.
The GOP has got to stick together in the Senate on this one, how obviously unconstitutional and politically motivated can you get? No amendments or bipartisanship can make this better.
Correction: 87-851-6437 should be 877-851-6437
hmmm
If I contribute to someone I am damn proud of it and eff anyone who wants to bring “pressure”.
I want Nazi Politzi’s list....
Civil disobedience is required. I will donate and I hope organizations accept - I would go to jail over this if necessary.
Me also. But remember that opens things up for your employer to take action against you.
So that they can be harassed and brutalized by ACORN and SEIU. There is no other purpose to this legislation.
Not unless the employer wanted to get in legal trouble.
they are doing this in NJ too, will affect right to life and NRA.
hmmm again
Good point.
Very hard to prove. And being in pro life group is not a protected class.
Interestingly enough, Mike Castle (RINO-DE) co-authored the bill. Now he’s against it, because of pressures. Also, he’s running for a Senate seat and this backfired.
Anyway, if this passes, just ignore the law and do what we will. Good luck trying to arrest Tea Party “leaders”; it’ll be like the final scene in Spartacus.
RESIST! RESIST! RESIST!
>>Under the bill, all groups subject to the laws requirements would have to list all donors of $600 or more with the Federal Election Commission (FEC). <<
Simple solution - just make all contributions $599 or less. Next problem, please.
>>Groups must also post a hyperlink on their website to the FEC, where a list of the names of their donors can be accessed.<<
Again simple enough - a typo will hyperlink to - NOTHING!
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