[Lnc-business] Prohibition on raising soft money
Steven Nekhaila
steven.nekhaila at lp.org
Tue Aug 21 18:53:47 EDT 2018
Thank you for the information. This is invaluable advice. The LNC ought to present this information to the introduction of future members to the committee.
In Liberty,
Steven Nekhaila
Region 2 Representative
impotentes defendere liberatum non possunt
“Those without power cannot defend freedom”
>
> On Aug 21, 2018 at 6:22 PM, <Tim Hagan via Lnc-business (mailto:lnc-business at hq.lp.org)> wrote:
>
>
>
> The Federal Election Campaign Act and FEC regulations in Title 11 has a
> restriction that LNC members, as officers of a national political party
> committee, need to be aware of. We cannot solicit nonfederal funds,
> such as contributions to state or local candidates or to affiliates
> that don't file with the FEC, when acting on behalf of the LNC.
> From the FEC Campaign Guide: "National parties may not solicit, raise,
> direct or spend funds, or anything of value, that are not subject to
> the prohibitions, limitations and reporting requirements of the [FECA]
> Act. This prohibition of nonfederal and Levin funds also applies to any
> agent or officer acting on behalf of the national party committee or
> any entity that is directly or indirectly established, financed,
> maintained or controlled by a national party committee."
> What does this mean for us? It does not mean that LNC members can never
> solicit nonfederal funds, such as for Riverside County Supervisor or
> Phoenix mayor. However, do not use your LNC title when soliciting for
> nonfederal funds, because then you can be perceived as acting on behalf
> of the LNC. Do not use LNC resources to ask people to donate to
> nonfederal funds. There are some gray areas, and for those you can ask
> me and I will check with Paula Edwards, our FEC consultant.
> Thanks,
> Tim Hagan
> This is the regulation in Title 11, for your reference:
> §300.10 General prohibitions on raising and spending non-Federal
> funds (52 U.S.C. 30125(a) and (c)).
> (a) Prohibitions. A national committee of a political party, including
> a national congressional campaign committee, must not:
> (1) Solicit, receive, or direct to another person a contribution,
> donation, or transfer of funds, or any other thing of value that is not
> subject to the prohibitions, limitations and reporting requirements of
> the Act;
> (2) Spend any funds that are not subject to the prohibitions,
> limitations, and reporting requirements of the Act; or
> (3) Solicit, receive, direct, or transfer to another person, or
> spend, Levin funds.
> (b) Fundraising costs. A national committee of a political party,
> including a national congressional campaign committee, must use only
> Federal funds to raise funds that are used, in whole or in part, for
> expenditures and disbursements for Federal election activity.
> (c) Application. This section also applies to:
> (1) An officer or agent acting on behalf of a national party
> committee or a national congressional campaign committee; and
> (2) An entity that is directly or indirectly established, financed,
> maintained, or controlled by a national party committee or a national
> congressional campaign committee.
>
> --
> Tim Hagan
> Treasurer, Libertarian National Committee
>
>
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Thank you for the information. This is invaluable advice. The LNC ought
to present this information to the introduction of future members to
the committee.
In Liberty,
Steven Nekhaila
Region 2 Representative
impotentes defendere liberatum non possunt
“Those without power cannot defend freedom”
On Aug 21, 2018 at 6:22 PM, <[1]Tim Hagan via Lnc-business> wrote:
The Federal Election Campaign Act and FEC regulations in Title 11 has a
restriction that LNC members, as officers of a national political party
committee, need to be aware of. We cannot solicit nonfederal funds,
such as contributions to state or local candidates or to affiliates
that don't file with the FEC, when acting on behalf of the LNC.
From the FEC Campaign Guide: "National parties may not solicit, raise,
direct or spend funds, or anything of value, that are not subject to
the prohibitions, limitations and reporting requirements of the [FECA]
Act. This prohibition of nonfederal and Levin funds also applies to any
agent or officer acting on behalf of the national party committee or
any entity that is directly or indirectly established, financed,
maintained or controlled by a national party committee."
What does this mean for us? It does not mean that LNC members can never
solicit nonfederal funds, such as for Riverside County Supervisor or
Phoenix mayor. However, do not use your LNC title when soliciting for
nonfederal funds, because then you can be perceived as acting on behalf
of the LNC. Do not use LNC resources to ask people to donate to
nonfederal funds. There are some gray areas, and for those you can ask
me and I will check with Paula Edwards, our FEC consultant.
Thanks,
Tim Hagan
This is the regulation in Title 11, for your reference:
§300.10 General prohibitions on raising and spending non-Federal
funds (52 U.S.C. 30125(a) and (c)).
(a) Prohibitions. A national committee of a political party, including
a national congressional campaign committee, must not:
(1) Solicit, receive, or direct to another person a contribution,
donation, or transfer of funds, or any other thing of value that is not
subject to the prohibitions, limitations and reporting requirements of
the Act;
(2) Spend any funds that are not subject to the prohibitions,
limitations, and reporting requirements of the Act; or
(3) Solicit, receive, direct, or transfer to another person, or
spend, Levin funds.
(b) Fundraising costs. A national committee of a political party,
including a national congressional campaign committee, must use only
Federal funds to raise funds that are used, in whole or in part, for
expenditures and disbursements for Federal election activity.
(c) Application. This section also applies to:
(1) An officer or agent acting on behalf of a national party
committee or a national congressional campaign committee; and
(2) An entity that is directly or indirectly established, financed,
maintained, or controlled by a national party committee or a national
congressional campaign committee.
--
Tim Hagan
Treasurer, Libertarian National Committee
References
1. mailto:lnc-business at hq.lp.org
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