FEC Won't Impose New Limits on Political Groups
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Thursday, May 13, 2004
WASHINGTON Federal regulators on Thursday refused to
impose new restrictions on political groups that are spending
millions on the presidential election. Republicans predicted
the decision would open the spending floodgates on their side.
Several Democrat groups have already begun spending large
donations on advertising and get-out-the-vote activities.
Republicans had asked to step in and stop the activities under the
campaign law that broadly banned big checks known as "soft money"
from federal elections.
But four of the six Federal Election Commission members on
Thursday refused to step in, tabling the issue for at least three
months.
Democrat commissioner Scott Thomas, who joined Republican
Michael Toner as the only two to favor imposing new fund-raising
and spending limits on the groups, predicted the decision would
allow Republicans and Democrats to engage in no-holds-barred
spending this election year. He predicted pro-Republican groups,
who have held their fire pending the FEC decision, would quickly
surpass the Democrats.
"I think it is possible the Democrats could wind up, from this
point on, worse off," Thomas said, adding that he thought much of
the new soft-money donations that used to go to parties before the
law went into effect in 2002 would flow to new tax-exempt groups
that don't have to disclose their fund raising and spending.
Democrat commissioner Ellen Weintraub, one of four
commissioners who voted against new limits, said she supported a
proposal by FEC lawyers to take another three months to study the
issue.
"I said at the outset I didn't think we had given ourselves
enough time to do the job right," Weintraub said.
The FEC's lawyers this week urged commissioners to delay a
decision until late summer because the issue was of such importance
that more time was necessary to consider it.
Under debate is how the campaign finance law affects nonparty
groups that are spending soft money - corporate, union or unlimited
contributions - in the presidential and congressional elections.
The law broadly bans soft money from federal elections, including
the raising of the big contributions by national party committees.
'Reform' Not So Popular Now
The Republican Party, President Bush's re-election campaign and
several campaign watchdog groups accuse Democrats of violating the
ban by creating a network of pro-Democrat soft-money groups that
are raising and spending millions of dollars to air anti-Bush ads
and pay for get-out-the-vote activities. Critics call the groups a
shadow party.
That spending helped flood the airwaves with negative
commercials about Bush at a time when the Republican incumbent was
airing millions of dollars of ads critical of presumptive
Democrat nominee John Kerry, who was working to rebuild his
campaign's finances before going up with his own commercials after
the primaries.
The anti-Bush groups argue that their spending is legal, in part
because they stop short of calling for Bush's defeat or for Kerry's
election. The FEC was considering whether the use of soft money to
promote or criticize a federal candidate is enough to violate the
soft-money ban, and Thursday decided against saying yes.
Several Republicans had predicted that if the FEC declined to
impose new rules GOP donors would flock to pro-Bush groups that so
far have operated on a more modest scale than the pro-Democrat
groups.
Thomas and Toner had urged the commission to make most partisan
tax-exempt groups follow donation limits and disclose contributions
and spending to the FEC.
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