Dear Mr. Kirkpatrick:
This opinion is in response to your questions asking for an interpretation of certain provisions of the campaign finance disclosure law.
Your first question asks whether a candidate who has had a candidate committee in a prior campaign is eligible for the exemption in §
Section
1. No candidate shall be required to comply with the requirements to file a statement of organization or disclosure reports of contributions and expenditures for any election in which neither the aggregate contributions received nor the aggregate expenditures made on behalf of such candidate exceed five hundred dollars and no single contributor, other than the candidate, has contributed more than fifty dollars of the aggregate contributions received, provided that:
(1) The candidate files a sworn exemption statement with the appropriate officer that he does not intend to either receive contributions or make expenditures in the aggregate of more than five hundred dollars or receive contributions from any single contributor, other than himself, that aggregate more than fifty dollars and that the total of all contributions received or expenditures made by him and all committees or any other person with his knowledge and consent in support of his candidacy will not exceed five hundred dollars and that the aggregate of contributions received from any one contributor will not exceed fifty dollars. . . .
Section
1. Every committee which is required to file a statement of organization, including a candidate who has elected to serve as his own candidate committee, shall file a legibly printed or typed disclosure report of receipts and expenditures for any election for which the committee makes expenditures or contributions or for which the committee receives contributions with the intent to make expenditures or contributions. . . .
Subsection 4(2) of §
No disclosure report need be filed by the treasurer of any committee if by the closing date for the report the committee has neither received contributions nor made expenditures in the aggregate in excess of one hundred dollars since the closing date of the previously filed disclosure report and if the treasurer files under oath a notarized statement with the appropriate officer stating that neither the aggregate amount of contributions received nor the aggregate amount of expenditures made by the committee during the reporting period exceeded one hundred dollars. Any contributions received or expenditures made which are not reported because this statement is filed in lieu of a disclosure report, must be included in the next disclosure report filed by the committee. This statement shall not be filed in lieu of two or more consecutive reports if either the contributions received or expenditures made in the aggregate during those reporting periods exceed one hundred dollars. This statement may not be filed in lieu of the report required to be filed not later than the thirtieth day after an election if that report would show a deficit in excess of five hundred dollars.
Under §
It seems clear that a candidate who has an existing candidate committee (for termination of such committee see subsection 8 of §
We are also of the view, in answer to your last question, that expenditures made by a candidate committee after its last report for the previous election such as charitable donations and political travel expenses even though apparently not directly related to a specific election are reportable expenditures for the next election in which the individual is a candidate. Such candidate committees by definition exist to make expenditures on behalf of the candidates candidacy. Subsection 6 of §
CONCLUSION
It is the opinion of this office that a candidate committee formed for a prior election and still in existence is required to make a disclosure report of expenditures and contributions under §
The foregoing opinion which I hereby approve was prepared by my Assistant, John C. Klaffenbach.
Very truly yours,
JOHN ASHCROFT Attorney General
