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Important Dates: Federal Campaign Finance Legislation
This selection was excerpted from www.opensecrets.org
1867: Naval Appropriations Bill
The first federal attempt to regulate campaign finance · Prohibited officers and employees of the government from soliciting money from naval yardworkers
1883: Civil Service Reform Act
Extended the above rule to all federal civil service workers · Previously,
government workers were expected to make campaign contributions in order to
keep their jobs.
1905: Teddy Roosevelt's Message to Congress
President Theodore Roosevelt proposed that "(a)ll contributions by corporations
to any political committee or for any political purpose should be forbidden by
law." The proposal, however, included no restrictions on campaign contributions
from the people who owned and ran corporations. Roosevelt also called for
public financing of federal candidates via their political parties.
1907: Tillman Act
Prohibited corporations and nationally chartered (interstate) banks from making
direct financial contributions to federal candidates · However, weak
enforcement mechanisms made the Act unenforceable.
1910: Federal Corrupt Practices Act
Established disclosure requirements for U.S. House candidates · Legislation
in 1911 extended requirements to cover U.S. Senate candidates and established
expenditure limits for House and Senate campaigns. Lacking mechanisms for
verification and enforcement, these measures proved meaningless.
1925: Federal Corrupt Practices Act (Revised)
Codified and revised previous campaign reform legislation regarding expenditure
limits and disclosure · Served as basic federal campaign finance law until
1971 · However, with power of enforcement vested in Congress, the Act was
routinely ignored.
1940: Hatch Act Amendments
Set limit of $5,000 per year on individual contributions to a federal candidate
or political committee (but it didn't prevent contributors from giving that
amount to multiple committees, each working for the same candidate) · Made
campaign finance regulations applicable to primaries as well as general
elections · Barred contributions to federal candidates from individuals and
businesses working for the federal government
1943: Smith-Connally Act
Extended to unions the prohibition on contributions to federal candidates from
corporations and interstate banks (following major increase, beginning in 1936,
in labor's use of union dues to support federal candidates)
1944: Formation of First PAC
First political action committee (PAC) was formed by Congress of Industrial
Organizations (CIO) in 1944 to raise money for re-election of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt. Because PAC money came from voluntary contributions from
union members, rather than from union treasuries (i.e., union dues), it was not
prohibited by the Smith-Connally Act.
1947: Taft-Hartley Act
Made permanent the ban on contributions to federal candidates from unions,
corporations, and interstate banks, and extended the prohibition to include
primaries as well as general elections
1967: House Campaign Finance Reports Collected for First Time
Former Congressman W. Pat Jennings was first Clerk of the House of
Representatives to perform his duty under 1925 Corrupt Practices Act to collect
campaign finance reports and to report violators · However, the Justice
Department ignored his list of violators.
1971: Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA)
Repealed Corrupt Practices Act and created comprehensive framework for
regulation of federal campaign financing of primaries, runoffs, general
elections, and conventions · Required full and timely disclosure · Set
ceilings on media advertising · Established limits on contributions from
candidates and their families · Permitted unions and corporations to
solicit voluntary contributions from members, employees, and stockholders, and
allowed union and corporate treasury money to be used for overhead in operating
PACs
1971: Revenue Act
Companion legislation to FECA · Created public campaign fund for eligible
presidential candidates (starting with 1976 election) through provision of
voluntary one-dollar check-off on federal income tax returns · Provided
option of $50 tax deduction (for individual filers) for contributions to local,
state, or federal candidates (provision eliminated in 1978) or $12.50 tax
credit (amount raised to $50 in 1978, provision eliminated in 1986)
1974: FECA Amendments (Post-Watergate)
Provided option of full public financing for presidential general elections,
matching funds for presidential primaries, and public funds for presidential
nominating conventions · Set spending limits for presidential primaries and
general elections, and for House and Senate primaries · Revised (previously
unenforced) spending limits for House and Senate general elections ·
Created individual contribution limit of $1,000 to a candidate per election and
PAC contribution limit of $5,000 to a candidate per election (triggering PAC
boom of late '70s) · Limited aggregate individual contributions to $25,000
per year · Limited candidates' personal contributions to their own
campaigns · Limited independent expenditures on behalf of a candidate to
$1,000 per election · Ended 1940 ban on contributions from individuals and
groups working on government contracts · Abolished limits on media
advertising · Created Federal Election Commission (FEC) to administer
campaign law, with Congress to appoint four of six commissioners
1976: Buckley v. Valeo
Restrictions in FECA (as amended in 1974) challenged as unconstitutional
violations of free speech · Supreme Court upheld disclosure
requirements, limits on individual contributions, and voluntary public
financing, and affirmed President's authority to appoint all six FEC
commissioners · Court struck down, as infringement on free speech,
limits on candidate expenditures (unless candidate accepts public financing),
limits on contributions by candidates and their families to their own
campaigns, and limits on "independent expenditures" (election spending not
coordinated with candidates or their committees).
1976: FECA Amendments
(following Buckley )
Brought FECA into conformity with Buckley decision · Limited
individual contributions to national parties to $20,000 per year, and
individual contributions to a PAC to $5,000 per year
1979: FECA Amendments
Increased amount volunteers could contribute in-kind (use of home, food,
vehicle) from $500 to $1,000 · Raised threshold for reporting contributions
from $100 to $200 · Effectively prohibited FEC from conducting random
audits · Allowed state and local parties to promote federal candidates by
spending unlimited amounts on campaign materials (signs, bumper stickers, etc.)
used by volunteers and on voter registration and get-out-the-vote drives |