为独立支出的新时代更新信息披露

Richard Briffault
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引用次数: 12

摘要

在最近的选举中,最引人注目的发展之一是独立委员会的支出激增,特别是超级政治行动委员会和501(c)非营利公司,它们在技术上不隶属于特定的候选人或政党,但经常致力于促进或反对特定的候选人或政党。在许多选举中,这些委员会实际上是他们所帮助的候选人的代理人。尽管我们的披露法在获得候选人和政党的捐助者身份披露方面相当有效,但它们未能有效地向独立委员会披露捐助者的身份。“联合公民”案的裁决表明,扩大信息披露以解决激增的问题主要是一个独立的技术和政治问题,而不是宪法问题,因为最高法院强烈支持信息披露法及其对独立委员会的适用。本文提出了一项改革议程,以使我们的信息披露法适应这个独立支出的新时代。它解决了四个问题:如何获得向从事独立支出的组织捐款的捐助者的身份;如何界定引发披露义务的选举相关活动;如何获得公司捐款和支出背后的自然人身份;以及如何确保及时披露信息。在早期的工作中,我曾建议我们需要过多地披露相对较小的捐赠者的个人信息。然而,我们目前提供的关于为独立委员会提供资金的捐助者的信息太少,这些委员会对我们的选举影响越来越大。为了让选民了解我们候选人背后的经济力量,我们需要提高披露的金额门槛,并扩大披露的范围,将为独立支出买单的捐赠者也包括在内。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Updating Disclosure for the New Era of Independent Spending
One of the most striking developments in recent elections has been the upsurge in spending by independent committees, particularly Super PACs and 501(c) nonprofit corporations, that are not technically affiliated with specific candidates or parties but that frequently work to promote or oppose specific candidates or parties. In many elections, these committees are de facto surrogates for the candidates they are aiding. Although our disclosure laws are reasonably effective at obtaining the disclosure of the identities of donors to candidates and parties, they fail to provide effective disclosure of the identities of the donors to independent committees. The Citizens United decision indicates that expanding disclosure to address the surge is independent is primarily a technical and political one, not a constitutional one, as the Court has strongly endorsed the disclosure laws and their application to independent committees.This article lays out a reform agenda for adapting our disclosure laws to this new era of independent spending. It addresses four issues: how to obtain the identities of the donors who contribute to organizations that engage in independent spending; how to define the election-related activity that triggers the duty to disclose; how to obtain the identities of the natural persons behind corporate contributions and expenditures; and how to assure that disclosure is made in a timely fashion.In earlier work, I have suggested that we require too much disclosure of personal information concerning relatively small donors. However, we currently provide too little information about the donors who are financing the independent committees that loom increasingly large over our elections. Rightsizing disclosure to enable voters to understand the financial forces behind our candidates requires that we both raise the monetary thresholds for disclosure and extend the ambit of disclosure to include the donors who are paying for independent spending.
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