Legislature(1995 - 1996)
04/15/1996 01:30 PM Senate JUD
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* first hearing in first committee of referral
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SB 191 ELECTION CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
SENATOR TIM KELLY, prime sponsor of SB 191, stated 33,000 Alaskans
signed an initiative to put a campaign finance reform vote on the
ballot in November if the legislature does not pass similar
legislation. Three legal opinions on SB 191 have been solicited;
all raise constitutional questions. In his opinion, if the
legislature attempts to fix all of the constitutional questions, a
disservice will be done to the 33,000 Alaskans who voted for
campaign finance reform, and the legislation will not be
substantially similar to the initiative. U.S. Representative Don
Young is conducting his annual benchmark poll at this time. At
Senator Kelly's request, the poll contains a question about
campaign finance reform. So far 80.4 percent of those polled favor
reform. He recommended the committee work on version M of SB 191.
Number 051
JACK CHENOWETH, Division of Legal Services, described a draft
committee substitute (version M) of SB 191. Version M accommodates
changes made by the Senate State Affairs, House State Affairs, and
House Judiciary Committees. The starting point for SB 191 was the
initiative that appeared on the ballot. Version M addresses
questions that came up in the committee process, and was directed
by a working group comprised of Senator Kelly, Representatives
James and Finkelstein, and APOC members. The changes in version M
are as follows.
The initiative included an indexing feature so that at five-year
intervals the dollar amounts would be recalculated to account for
inflation: that feature was deleted. The provision in the
initiative requiring individuals to register before making campaign
contributions was also deleted. The cash contribution limit of
$100 was reduced to $25 in the initiative, but restored to $100 in
version M. The prohibition on honoraria payments during the course
of a campaign was changed to allow a limited payment comparable to
honoraria based upon services actually provided by a candidate.
Campaign funds may not be raised in years in which there is no
election. If running for election or re-election for Governor,
funds may be raised during the period beginning January 1 of the
election year. Candidates for legislative offices may raise funds
beginning June 1 of the year in which re-election is sought. For
other offices (state special elections and municipal elections)
there is a five month window period before the date of the
election.
The initiative allows candidates to accept and expend loans from
family members. That provision is not included in version M.
Technical changes were made to the APOC report filing procedure.
The use of surplus campaign funds was expanded to allow return of
contributions to contributors, to allow a carry-forward, or to
allow a portion of a contribution to a legislative office
allowance. Felony criminal penalty provisions were removed so that
all violations are misdemeanor offenses. The "paid for by"
requirements were loosened in light of a U.S. Supreme Court
decision within the last year. The bill includes definitions for
terms used within the initiative such as "publically funded
entities." The use of charitable gaming, with the exception of
raffles and lotteries, for the support of political activities,
would be banned. The ban on contributions from out-of-state
sources was modified to allow a limited contribution. The maximum
amounts that can be contributed to campaigns was increased and
altered depending upon the nature of the campaign. The procedures
for placing questions on campaign practices before APOC and the
Superior Court were amended. The small campaign exemption in which
disclosure is not necessary was raised from $1,000 to $2,500. The
severability provision, which appears in the initiative, was
included. The bill has an immediate effective date, and requires
the Lt. Governor to place the initiative on the ballot if this
legislation is not found to be substantially similar to the
initiative.
Number 186
CHAIRMAN TAYLOR commented the legislation is an attempt to mirror
the initiative, however most people who signed the initiative did
not understand its contents. He asked if the legislation contains
provisions that are patently unconstitutional.
MR. CHENOWETH replied there are provisions in the initiative that
were carried forward to the legislation that are constitutionally
questionable. The law in this area is changing as the Supreme
Court wrestles with various issues and has made only a few key
decisions to date.
CHAIRMAN TAYLOR questioned whether the legislature has the
responsibility to review the initiative and craft a bill that is
constitutional, to rubber stamp the legislation, or let the
initiative appear on the ballot for a vote, knowing full well there
are provisions within it that are unconstitutional. He believed
that would be fraud on the public since the average voter will not
understand the constitutional ramifications of the initiative.
MR. CHENOWETH responded the alternative to passing legislation is
to allow the initiative to go forward as presented. It appears the
Attorney General's Office is prepared to defend the provisions
within the initiative. The Division of Legal Services has
attempted, in response to opinions from Av Gross and Mike Frank, to
pick up the most troublesome features in the initiative and address
them to reduce or eliminate the possibility that those provisions
will be found unconstitutional as a violation of the First
Amendment. He could not guarantee version M will succeed, but
believed the constitutional questions that remain are no worse than
what came to the legislature in the form of the initiative.
CHAIRMAN TAYLOR felt if the legislature knows that something is
patently unconstitutional, it has an obligation to remove it, no
matter how many people signed the initiative. Most of the people
who signed the initiative are most likely unaware that it will
forfeit a good portion of one's constitutional rights.
SENATOR ADAMS arrived at 1:52 p.m.
There being no one else wishing to testify on SB 191, CHAIRMAN
TAYLOR announced the bill would be held until Friday to enable more
work to be done on the measure.
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