Coordinated Communications, 33190-33211 [06-5195]
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33190
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 110 / Thursday, June 8, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(3) The lender must certify that the
equity requirement was determined
using balance sheets prepared in
accordance with GAAP and met upon
giving effect to the entirety of the loan
in the calculation, whether or not the
loan itself is fully advanced, as of the
date the guaranteed loan is closed.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: May 30, 2006.
Thomas C. Dorr,
Under Secretary, Rural Development.
[FR Doc. E6–8891 Filed 6–7–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–XY–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
certificates, registrations, and approvals
who either filed for termination of their
licenses or approvals or filed for
possession only/storage licenses before
October 1, 2005, and permanently
ceased licensed activities entirely by
September 30, 2005.’’
§ 171.19
[Corrected]
4. On page 30756, in the first complete
paragraph, the third sentence is
corrected to read, ‘‘The materials
licensees that are billed on the
anniversary date of the license are those
covered by fee categories 1C, 1D,
2(A)(2), 2(A)(3), 2(A)(4), 2B, 2C, 3A
through 3P, and 4B through 9D.’’
I
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 2nd day
of June, 2006.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Peter J. Rabideau,
Acting Chief Financial Officer.
[FR Doc. E6–8923 Filed 6–7–06; 8:45 am]
10 CFR Parts 170 and 171
RIN: 3150–AH83
Revision of Fee Schedules; Fee
Recovery for FY 2006; Correction
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; correction.
AGENCY:
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Part 109
This document corrects a
final rule appearing in the Federal
Register on May 30, 2006 (71 FR 30722)
concerning the licensing, inspection,
and annual fees charged to NRC
applicants and licensees in compliance
with the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1990, as amended.
This action is necessary to correct
typographical and printing errors.
DATES: Effective Date: July 31, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tammy Croote, telephone 301–415–
6041; Office of the Chief Financial
Officer, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001.
SUMMARY:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. On page 30735, in the third column,
in the last line of the continued
paragraph, the reference to ‘‘Section
III.B.3.a–’’ is corrected to read ‘‘Section
III.B.3.a–h’’.
I 2. On page 30741, under Table XIV.—
ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY
CALCULATIONS FOR THE SPENT
FUEL STORAGE/REACTOR
DECOMMISSIONING FEE CLASS, in
the first column, in the fourth line, the
phrase ‘‘60 prorated annual fee’’ is
corrected to read ‘‘60 percent prorated
annual fee’’.
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I
§ 171.16
[Corrected]
3. On page 30755, the second sentence
of footnote 1 is corrected to read,
‘‘However, the annual fee is waived for
those materials licenses and holders of
I
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[Notice 2006–10]
Coordinated Communications
Federal Election Commission.
ACTION: Final rules and transmittal of
rules to Congress.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Federal Election
Commission is revising its regulations
regarding communications that are
coordinated with Federal candidates
and political party committees. The
Commission’s rules set out a threeprong test for determining whether a
communication is ‘‘coordinated’’ with,
and therefore an in-kind contribution to,
a Federal candidate or a political party
committee. These final rules implement
the recent decision of the Court of
Appeals in Shays v. Federal Election
Commission, in which the court
determined that the Commission needs
to provide a more complete explanation
and justification for its rules pursuant to
the Administrative Procedure Act. To
comply with the court’s decision, and to
address other issues involving the
coordinated communication rules, the
Commission is issuing these Final Rules
and Explanation and Justification.
Further information is provided in the
supplementary information that follows.
DATES: Effective July 10, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Brad C. Deutsch, Assistant General
Counsel, Mr. Ron B. Katwan, Ms.
Margaret G. Perl, or Ms. Esa L. Sferra,
Attorneys, 999 E Street, NW.,
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Washington, DC 20463, (202) 694–1650
or (800) 424–9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Scope of Regulatory Changes
The Commission is revising its
regulations regarding communications
that are coordinated with Federal
candidates and political party
committees. The Commission is: (1)
Revising the fourth content standard at
11 CFR 109.21(c)(4) to establish separate
time frames for communications
referring to political parties,
Congressional and Presidential
candidates; (2) creating a safe harbor for
certain endorsements and solicitations
by Federal candidates; (3) revising the
temporal limit of the common vendor
and former employee conduct
standards; (4) creating a safe harbor for
the use of publicly available
information; (5) creating a safe harbor
for the establishment and use of a
firewall; (6) clarifying that the payment
prong of the coordinated
communication test is satisfied if an
outside person pays for only part of the
costs of a communication; and (7)
revising 11 CFR 109.37 to include the
applicable time frame and safe harbor
revisions in 11 CFR 109.21.
Transmission of Final Rules to
Congress
Under the Administrative Procedure
Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(d), and the
Congressional Review of Agency
Rulemaking Act, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1),
agencies must submit final rules to the
Speaker of the House of Representatives
and the President of the Senate and
publish them in the Federal Register at
least 30 calendar days before they take
effect. The final rules that follow were
transmitted to Congress on June 2, 2006.
Explanation and Justification
I. Background
A. Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act and
2002 Coordination Rulemaking
The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act
of 2002,1 (‘‘BCRA’’), repealed the
Commission’s pre-BCRA regulations
regarding ‘‘coordinated general public
political communications’’ and directed
the Commission to promulgate new
regulations on ‘‘coordinated
communications’’ in their place.2
Congress specified in BCRA that the
Commission’s new regulations ‘‘shall
not require agreement or formal
collaboration to establish coordination.’’
1 Pub. L. 107–155, 116 Stat. 81 (2002); amending
the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, as
amended, 2 U.S.C. 431 et seq. (the ‘‘Act’’ or
‘‘FECA’’).
2 Pub. L. 107–155, sec. 214(b), (c) (2002).
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BCRA, sec. 214(c), 116 Stat. 81 at 95.
‘‘Apart from this negative command—
‘shall not require’—BCRA merely listed
several topics the rules ‘shall address,’
providing no guidance as to how the
FEC should address them.’’ Shays v.
FEC, 414 F.3d 76, 97–98 (D.C. Cir.
2005). On December 17, 2002, the
Commission promulgated regulations as
required by BCRA. See 11 CFR 109.21;
see also, Final Rules and Explanation
and Justification on Coordinated and
Independent Expenditures, 68 FR 421
(Jan. 3, 2003) (‘‘2002 Coordination Final
Rules’’).
The Commission’s 2002 coordinated
communication regulations set forth a
three-prong test for determining
whether a communication is a
coordinated communication, and
therefore an in-kind contribution to, and
an expenditure by, a candidate, a
candidate’s authorized committee, or a
political party committee. See 11 CFR
109.21(a). First, the communication
must be paid for by someone other than
a candidate, a candidate’s authorized
committee, a political party committee,
or their agents (the ‘‘payment prong’’).
See 11 CFR 109.21(a)(1). Second, the
communication must satisfy one of four
content standards (the ‘‘content prong’’).
See 11 CFR 109.21(a)(2) and (c). Third,
the communication must satisfy one of
five conduct standards (the ‘‘conduct
prong’’). See 11 CFR 109.21(a)(3) and
(d). A communication must satisfy all
three prongs to be a ‘‘coordinated
communication.’’
B. Content Prong Challenged in Shays v.
FEC
In 2003, Representatives Shays and
Meehan brought suit in Federal District
Court challenging, among other
Commission regulations, the content
prong of the Commission’s coordination
regulations. See Shays v. FEC, 337 F.
Supp. 2d 28 (D.D.C. 2004) (‘‘Shays
District’’), aff’d, Shays v. FEC, 414 F.3d
76 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (‘‘Shays Appeal’’)
(pet. for reh’g en banc denied Oct. 21,
2005) (No. 04–5352). The content prong
is comprised of four sub-categories of
communications. A communication that
falls in any of the four categories
satisfies the prong. The purpose of the
content prong is to ‘‘ensure that the
coordination regulations do not
inadvertently encompass
communications that are not made for
the purpose of influencing a Federal
election,’’ and therefore are not
‘‘expenditures’’ subject to regulation
under the Act. See 2002 Coordination
Final Rules at 426. Accordingly, each of
the four content standards that comprise
the ‘‘content prong’’ identifies a
category of communications whose
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‘‘subject matter is reasonably related to
an election.’’ Id. at 427.
The first content standard is satisfied
if the communication is an
electioneering communication. See 11
CFR 109.21(c)(1).3 This content
standard implements the statutory
directive that disbursements for
coordinated electioneering
communications be treated as in-kind
contributions to, and expenditures by,
the candidate or political party
supported by the communication.
The second content standard is
satisfied by a public communication 4
made at any time that disseminates,
distributes, or republishes campaign
materials prepared by a candidate, a
candidate’s authorized committee, or
agents thereof. See 11 CFR 109.21(c)(2).
This content standard implements
Congress’s mandate that the
Commission’s rules on coordinated
communications address the
‘‘republication of campaign materials.’’
See Pub. L. 107–155, sec. 214(c)(1)
(2002). The Commission concluded that
communications that disseminate,
distribute, or republish campaign
materials, no matter when such
communications are made, can be
reasonably construed only as for the
purpose of influencing an election.
The third content standard is satisfied
if a public communication made at any
time expressly advocates 5 the election
or defeat of a clearly identified
candidate for Federal office. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(3). The Commission
concluded that express advocacy
communications, no matter when such
communications are made, can be
reasonably construed only as for the
purpose of influencing an election.
3 The Act and Commission regulations define an
‘‘electioneering communication’’ as any broadcast,
cable, or satellite communication that (1) refers to
a clearly identified candidate for Federal office; (2)
is publicly distributed within 60 days before a
general election or 30 days before a primary
election for the office sought by the candidate
referenced in the communication; and (3) can be
received by 50,000 or more persons within the
geographic area that the candidate referenced in the
communication seeks to represent. See 2 U.S.C.
434(f)(3); 11 CFR 100.29.
4 11 CFR 100.26 defines a ‘‘public
communication’’ as ‘‘a communication by means of
any broadcast, cable or satellite communication,
newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility,
mass mailing or telephone bank to the general
public, or any other form of general public political
advertising. The term general public political
advertising shall not include communications over
the Internet, except for communications placed for
a fee on another person’s Web site.’’ See Final Rules
and Explanation and Justification: Internet
Communications, 71 FR 18589 (published April 12,
2006; effective May 12, 2006); see also 2 U.S.C.
431(22).
5 The term ‘‘expressly advocating’’ is defined in
the Commission’s regulations at 11 CFR 100.22.
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The fourth content standard in the
2002 rule is satisfied if a public
communication (1) refers to a political
party or a clearly identified Federal
candidate; (2) is publicly distributed or
publicly disseminated 120 days or fewer
before an election; 6 and (3) is directed
to voters in the jurisdiction of the
clearly identified Federal candidate or
to voters in a jurisdiction in which one
or more candidates of the political party
appear on the ballot. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4) (2002).
In incorporating the 120-day time
frame into the fourth content standard,
the Commission sought to create a
bright-line rule that provided clear
guidance for those seeking to produce
and distribute public communications
that do not republish campaign
materials and do not contain express
advocacy, communications that are
already covered by the second and third
content standards, respectively. The
120-day time frame ‘‘focuses the
regulation on activity reasonably close
to an election, but not so distant from
the election as to implicate political
discussion at other times.’’ 2002
Coordination Final Rules at 430. The
Commission noted that its intent was
‘‘to require as little characterization of
the meaning or the content of the
communication, or inquiry into the
subjective effect of the communication
on the reader, viewer, or listener as
possible.’’ Id. (citing Buckley v. Valeo,
424 U.S. 1, 42–44 (1976)). The
Commission emphasized that the
regulation ‘‘is applied by asking if
certain things are true or false about the
face of the public communication or
with limited reference to external facts
on the public record.’’ Id.
In adopting this time frame, the
Commission relied in part on the fact
that, in BCRA, Congress defined
‘‘Federal election activity’’ (‘‘FEA’’) as,
inter alia, voter registration activity
‘‘during the period that begins on the
date that is 120 days’’ before a Federal
election. The Commission concluded
that, in doing so, Congress ‘‘deem[ed]
that period of time before an election to
be reasonably related to that election.’’
Id. (citing 2 U.S.C. 431(20)(A)(i)).
1. Shays District Court Decision
The District Court held that the
‘‘content prong’’ of the Commission’s
coordinated communication regulations
satisfied the first step of Chevron
analysis, but did not satisfy the second
6 The term ‘‘election’’ includes general elections,
primary elections, runoff elections, caucuses or
conventions, and special elections. See 11 CFR
100.2.
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step of Chevron review.7 Shays District
at 62–65. The District Court concluded
that limiting the coordinated
communication definition to
communications that satisfy the content
standards at 11 CFR 109.21(c)(1)
through (4), ‘‘undercuts FECA’s
statutory purposes and therefore these
aspects of the regulations are entitled to
no deference.’’ Shays District at 65. The
District Court reasoned that
communications that have been
coordinated with a candidate, a
candidate’s authorized committee, or a
political party committee have value for,
and therefore are in-kind contributions
to, that candidate or committee,
regardless of the content, timing, or
geographic reach of the
communications. Id. at 63–64.
Therefore, the Commission’s exclusion
of communications under the 120-day
test failed the second step of Chevron
review. Id. at 64–65.
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2. Shays Court of Appeals Decision
The Commission appealed the District
Court’s decision. In 2005, a three-judge
panel of the Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit considered the
Commission’s appeal. See Shays Appeal
at 97–102. The Court of Appeals found
that the Commission’s regulations
satisfied Chevron step one, and,
contrary to the District Court’s opinion,
satisfied Chevron step two as well.
Shays Appeal at 99–100. The Court of
Appeals concluded: ‘‘Accordingly, we
reject Shays’s and Meehan’s argument
that FECA precludes content-based
standards under Chevron step one. And
for the same reasons, we disagree with
the district court’s suggestion that any
standard looking beyond collaboration
to content would necessarily ‘create an
immense loophole,’ thus exceeding the
range of permissible readings under
Chevron step two.’’ Shays Appeal at 99–
100.
In reaching its holding, the Court of
Appeals found that Congress provided
the Commission with an ‘‘open-ended
directive’’ under which to promulgate
7 The District Court described the first step of the
Chevron analysis, which courts use to review an
agency’s regulations: ‘‘a court first asks ‘whether
Congress has directly spoken to the precise question
at issue. If the intent of Congress is clear, that is
the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the
agency, must give effect to the unambiguously
expressed intent of Congress.’ ’’ See Shays District
at 51 (quoting Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res.
Def. Council, 467 U.S. 837, 842–43 (1984)).
According to the District Court, in the second step
of the Chevron analysis, the court determines if the
agency’s interpretation is a permissible construction
of the statute that does not ‘‘unduly compromise’’
the Act’s purposes by ‘‘creat[ing] the potential for
gross abuse.’’ See Shays District at 91 (citing Orloski
v. FEC, 795 F.2d 156, 164–65) (D.C. Cir. 1986)
(internal citations omitted).
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coordination regulations. Shays Appeal
at 97–98. ‘‘[I]n the BCRA provision most
clearly on point—the directive calling
for new regulations—Congress
studiously avoided prescribing any
specific standard, save abrogation of the
‘collaboration or agreement’ test. Given
this ‘lack of guidance in the statute,’ we
cannot say that BCRA clearly forecloses
the FEC’s approach. Nor do we see
clearly contrary intent, as do Shays and
Meehan, in FECA’s preexisting
‘expenditure’ and ‘contribution’
definitions.’’ Id. at 99 (internal citation
omitted).
The Court of Appeals noted that
under the statute, a communication that
is a coordinated expenditure ‘‘shall be
considered to be a contribution,’’ and
the Commission ‘‘lacks discretion to
exclude that communication from its
coordinated communication rule.’’ Id. at
99. ‘‘Yet to qualify as [an] ‘expenditure’
in the first place, spending must be
undertaken ‘for the purpose of
influencing’ a federal election (or else
involve ‘financing’ for redistribution of
campaign materials).’’ Id. (emphasis
added). The Court of Appeals
emphasized that ‘‘time, place, and
content may be critical indicia of
communicative purpose.’’ Shays Appeal
at 99. The Court of Appeals recognized,
‘‘Insofar as such statements may relate
to political or legislative goals
independent from any electoral race—
goals like influencing legislators’ votes
or increasing public awareness—we
cannot conclude that Congress
unambiguously intended to count them
as ‘expenditures’ (and thus as
‘contributions’ when coordinated). To
the contrary, giving appropriate Chevron
deference, we think the FEC could
construe the expenditure definition’s
purposive language as leaving space for
collaboration between politicians and
outsiders on legislative and political
issues involving only a weak nexus to
any electoral campaign. Moreover, we
can hardly fault the FEC’s efforts to
develop an ‘objective, bright-line test
[that] does not unduly compromise the
Act’s purposes,’ considering that we
approved just such a test for
‘contribution’ in Orloski. 795 F.2d at
165.’’ Id. Accordingly, the Court of
Appeals concluded that the
Commission’s regulation satisfied
Chevron steps one and two. Id. at 99–
100.
While finding the content prong was
a permissible construction of
Congressional intent, the Court of
Appeals held that the content prong was
inadequately explained under the
Administrative Procedure Act. Id. at
100. The Court of Appeals stated,
‘‘while we accept the FEC’s premise that
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time, place, and content may illuminate
communicative purpose and thus
distinguish FECA ‘expenditures’ from
other communications, we detect no
support in the record for the specific
content-based standard the Commission
has promulgated.’’ Id. at 102. In
response to this finding by the Court of
Appeals, the Commission opened the
present rulemaking.
C. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and
Supplemental Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
The Commission published a Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking (‘‘NPRM’’) on
December 14, 2005, in which it sought
comment on a number of alternatives for
retaining or revising the content
standard of the coordinated
communication regulations and on
several other issues involving the
coordinated communication rules. See
70 FR 73946 (December 14, 2005). The
comment period closed on January 13,
2006. The Commission received written
comments from 28 commenters. The
Commission held a public hearing on
January 25 and 26, 2006, at which 18
witnesses testified. The comments and a
transcript of the public hearing are
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/
law_rulemakings.shtml#coordinated.8
In the NPRM, the Commission
specifically requested that commenters
submit empirical data showing the time
period before an election during which
campaign communications generally
occur. NPRM at 73949. None of the
commenters provided empirical data in
response to the Commission’s request,
either in written comments or at the
public hearing. One joint comment did
provide a compilation of selected
advertisements run during recent
election cycles.
Because no commenters provided
empirical data in response to the
Commission’s request, the Commission
licensed data from TNS Media
Intelligence/CMAG (‘‘CMAG’’) regarding
television advertising spots run by
Presidential, Senate, and House of
Representatives candidates during the
2004 election cycle. CMAG is a leading
provider of political advertising tracking
and provides media analysis services to
a wide variety of clients, including
national media organizations,
foundations, academics, and Fortune
100 companies. See www.tnsmicmag.com. CMAG also provided data to
the Brennan Center in conjunction with
its 2000 study ‘‘Buying Time,’’ which
was cited by BCRA’s principal sponsors
8 For purposes of this document, the terms
‘‘comment’’ and ‘‘commenter’’ apply to both written
comments and oral testimony at the public hearing.
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in support of BCRA’s provisions. See,
e.g., 148 Cong. Rec. S2141 (daily ed.
March 20, 2002) (statement of Sen.
McCain) (‘‘According to the Brennan
Center’s ‘Buying Time 2000’ study, less
than one percent of the group-sponsored
soft-money ads covered by this
provision of the bill were genuine issue
discussion, more than 99 percent of
these ads were campaign ads. This
degree of accuracy is more than
sufficient to overcome any claim of
substantial overbreadth.’’).
The Commission produced graphical
representations derived from the CMAG
data and made these graphs and the
underlying data available on its Web
site. The Commission then published a
Supplemental Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (‘‘SNPRM’’) in the Federal
Register on March 15, 2006, that reopened the comment period for this
rulemaking. 71 FR 13306 (March 15,
2006). The graphs and data are available
at the Commission’s Web site at
https://www.fec.gov/pdf/nprm/
coord_commun/
suppNPRMmaterials.shtml.9 In the
SNPRM, the Commission sought
additional comment, in light of the
information presented by the data, on
the issues and questions raised in the
NPRM regarding the content prong time
frame.
The reopened comment period for the
SNPRM closed on March 22, 2006. The
Commission received written comments
on the SNPRM from 12 commenters,
which are also available at https://
www.fec.gov/law/
law_rulemakings.shtml#coordinated.
II. Revised Time Frames for
Coordinated Communications (11 CFR
109.21(c)(4))
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A. The Commission Has Determined To
Retain the Content Prong With Revised
Time Frames
The Shays Court of Appeals
emphasized that retaining a time frame
as part of the fourth content standard
requires the Commission to undertake a
factual inquiry to determine whether the
temporal line it draws ‘‘reasonably
defines the period before an election
when non-express advocacy likely
relates to purposes other than
9 Available at https://www.fec.gov/pdf/nprm/
coord_commun/suppNPRMmaterials.shtml are ten
graphs covering Presidential election data, four
graphs covering Senate election data, and four
graphs covering House election data, as well as an
explanation of the methodology used for each
graph. These graphs are titled, and referenced
herein, as P1–P10, S1–S4, and H1–H4, respectively.
An additional chart regarding Presidential spending
in individual ‘‘battleground’’ States, see note 21,
below, is available at https://www.fec.gov/pdf/nprm/
coord_commun/chart_20060407.pdf. This chart is
referenced herein as Chart P11.
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‘influencing’ a federal election.’’ Shays
Appeal at 101–02. The Court presented
three questions to guide the
Commission’s inquiry: (1) ‘‘Do
candidates in fact limit campaignrelated advocacy to the four months
surrounding elections, or does
substantial election-related
communication occur outside that
window?’’; (2) ‘‘Do congressional,
senatorial, and presidential races—all
covered by this rule—occur on the same
cycle, or should different rules apply to
each?’’; and (3) ‘‘[T]o the extent
election-related advocacy now occurs
primarily within 120 days, would
candidates and collaborators aiming to
influence elections simply shift
coordinated spending outside that
period to avoid the challenged rules’
restrictions?’’ Id. at 102.
Based on its inquiry into the Court of
Appeals’ questions, the Commission has
decided to retain the existing content
prong, but revise the applicable time
frames in the fourth content standard at
11 CFR 109.21(c)(4). The revision
creates separate time frames for
communications based on whether they
refer to (1) Congressional candidates, (2)
Presidential candidates, or (3) political
parties. For those communications that
refer to Senate and House of
Representatives candidates in
Congressional primary 10 and general
elections, the revised time frame begins
90 days before each candidate’s election
and ends on the date of that candidate’s
election. For communications that refer
to Presidential candidates, the revised
time frame covers, on a State-by-State
basis, the period of time from 120 days
before the date of a Presidential primary
up to and including the date of the
general election.11
For those communications that
reference political parties and do not
reference a clearly identified Federal
candidate, when such communications
occur in a non-Presidential election
cycle, the revised time frame period
10 The method of choosing nominees for election
to Federal office, either by a primary or a preference
election, a caucus, or a convention, differs from
State to State. This document uses the term
‘‘primary election’’ to refer to any election that
chooses a nominee for the general election. See also
note 6, above.
11 Thus, if State A conducts its Presidential
primary on February 1st of the Presidential election
year, the time frame in State A for Presidential
candidates would begin on approximately October
1st of the year preceding the Presidential election
and would end on the date of the Presidential
general election. Similarly, if State B held its
Presidential primary on June 1st of the Presidential
election year, the time frame in State B for
Presidential candidates would begin on
approximately February 1st of the Presidential
election year and end on the date of the Presidential
general election.
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begins 90 days before each election and
ends on the date of that election; when
such communications occur in a
Presidential election cycle, the revised
time period covers, on a State-by-State
basis, the period of time from 120 days
before the date of a primary through the
general election. For communications
that reference a political party and a
clearly identified Federal candidate, the
applicable time frame is either the
Congressional or Presidential candidate
time period, depending upon (1)
whether the communication is
coordinated with the political party
committee or the candidate, (2) whether
the upcoming general election is a
Presidential or non-Presidential
election, and (3) whether the
communication is aired in the
referenced candidate’s jurisdiction.
1. Senate and House Candidates
Conduct Nearly All Campaign-Related
Advocacy Within 60 Days of an Election
The data obtained by the Commission
respond directly to the first question
posed by the Court of Appeals: ‘‘Do
candidates in fact limit campaignrelated advocacy to the four months
surrounding elections, or does
substantial election-related
communication occur outside that
window?’’ Shays Appeal at 102. This
question is relevant to the Commission’s
inquiry because the purpose of the
content standard is to provide a brightline delineation between those
coordinated advertisements that are for
the purpose of influencing an election—
and therefore are ‘‘expenditures’’
regulated by the Act—and those that are
not. As the Shays Court of Appeals
stated, ‘‘Insofar as such statements may
relate to political or legislative goals
independent from any electoral race—
goals like influencing legislators’ votes
or increasing public awareness—we
cannot conclude that Congress
unambiguously intended to count them
as ‘‘expenditures’’ (and thus as
‘contributions’ when coordinated).’’
Shays Appeal at 99 (‘‘[T]o qualify as [an]
‘expenditure’ in the first place, spending
must be undertaken ‘for the purpose of
influencing’ a federal election.’’).
Any time a candidate uses campaign
funds to pay for an advertisement, it can
be presumed that this advertisement is
aired for the purpose of influencing the
candidate’s election. Additionally,
candidates and their campaign staff are
experienced and knowledgeable in
matters of advertising strategy and are
highly motivated to run advertisements
at a time when they are likely to
influence voters. Thus, data showing
when candidates spend their own
campaign funds on advertisements
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provide an empirical basis for
predicting when advertising that has the
purpose of influencing a Federal
election occurs. Moreover, in the
context of coordination, a candidate has
an incentive to ask an outside group to
pay for advertisements to be aired
precisely during the time period when
the candidate believes these
advertisements would be effective.
Advertisements run outside of the
effective time frame are of little value to
the candidate, and therefore do not
present the potential for corruption or
the appearance of corruption that BCRA
and the Act intend to prevent.
Commenters agreed that a time frame
is helpful in identifying
communications that are made for the
purpose of influencing an election. As
one commenter noted: ‘‘The
Commission is reasonable in its belief
that election-influencing
communications are generally
susceptible of temporal definition and
limitation. The Commission should
continue to determine where that
temporal limitation is.’’ Moreover,
commenters generally agreed that
proximity to an election factors into the
value of the communication.
The data analyzed by the Commission
show that nearly all Senate and House
candidate advertising takes place within
60 days of an election. Senate
candidates aired 91.60 percent and
94.73 percent of their advertisements
within 60 days of the primary and
general election, respectively.12 This
represented 93.32 percent and 97.20
percent of the estimated costs of
advertisements the Senate candidates
ran before the primary and general
elections, respectively.13 House
candidates aired 88.16 percent and
98.09 percent of their advertisements
within 60 days of the primary and
general elections, respectively.14 This
represented 92.68 percent and 98.75
percent of the estimated costs of the
advertisements House candidates ran
before the primary and general
elections, respectively.15
The data show that a minimal amount
of activity occurs between 60 and 90
days before an election, and that beyond
90 days, the amount of candidate
advertising approaches zero. Senate
candidates aired only 0.87 percent and
0.39 percent of their advertisements
more than 90 days before their primary
and general elections, respectively,16
which represented 0.66 percent and
12 See
Graphs S1 and S3.
Graphs S2 and S4.
14 See Graphs H1 and H3.
15 See Graphs H2 and H4.
16 See Graphs S1 and S3.
0.15 percent of the total estimated costs
of advertisements run by Senate
candidates before the primary and
general elections, respectively.17
Similarly, House candidates aired only
8.56 percent and 0.28 percent of their
advertisements more than 90 days
before their primary and general
elections, respectively.18 This
represented 3.79 percent and 0.13
percent of the total estimated costs of
advertisements run by House candidates
before the primary and general
elections, respectively.19
The data are consistent with the
comments received by the Commission.
Commenters stated that a 60-day time
frame comports with the practical
reality of when candidates run
advertisements. Comments submitted by
the Democratic National Committee, the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign
Committee, the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee, the
National Republican Senatorial
Committee, and the National
Republican Congressional Committee
(‘‘NRCC’’) all stated that in their
experience, coordinated activities
occurred within 60 days of the 2004
elections. The NRCC further stated that
both its coordinated and independent
expenditures for the 2004 general
election were all made within 60 days
of that election.
A 60-day time frame is also consistent
with past Congressional, Supreme
Court, and Commission findings. As one
commenter stated, ‘‘this time period [60
days] would be consistent with
Congressional line-drawing in the
context of electoral and political speech
in the BCRA itself.’’ Comments
submitted by the BCRA Congressional
sponsors in 2002 stated, ‘‘Title II of
BCRA reflects congressional judgment
that communications concerning federal
elected officials during the 60 day
period prior to a general election and
the 30 day period prior to a primary is
usually campaign related.’’ In
McConnell v. FEC, the Supreme Court
upheld the 30- and 60-day time frames
for electioneering communications,
concluding that Congress had
adequately explained its decision to
regulate the ‘‘virtual torrent of televised
election-related ads during the periods
immediately preceding federal
elections’ and that ‘‘[t]he record amply
justifies Congress’ line drawing.’’
McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 207–08
(2003). As the FEC successfully argued
in McConnell:
13 See
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17 See
Graphs S2 and S4.
Graphs H1 and H3.
19 See Graphs H2 and H4.
18 See
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The timing requirement is also directly tied
to Congress’s objective of capturing
advertisements that are likely to influence
the outcome of federal elections. The record
‘overwhelmingly demonstrate[s] the
appropriateness of BCRA’s sixty and thirty
day benchmarks,’ and confirms with
remarkable clarity the common-sense
conclusion ‘that issue advertisements aimed
at influencing federal elections are aired in
the period right before an election. Supp.
App. 725sa–728sa, 847sa–848sa (KollarKotelly) (discussing evidence); see id. at
851sa (‘The sixty and thirty day figures are
not arbitrary numbers selected by Congress,
but appropriate time periods tied to
empirically verifiable data.’)
Brief for the Federal Election
Commission et al. at 94, McConnell v.
FEC, 540 U.S. 93 (2003) (discussing the
timing requirement under the definition
of electioneering communication).
The record before Congress when
passing BCRA and before the Supreme
Court in McConnell included the
Brennan Center’s ‘‘Buying Time’’ study,
which further supports the conclusion
that the vast majority of election related
advocacy occurs immediately before an
election. The Brennan Center found
that, ‘‘[i]n the 2000 election, genuine
issue ads are rather evenly distributed
throughout the year, while groupsponsored electioneering ads make a
sudden and overwhelming appearance
immediately before elections.’’ Craig B.
Holman and Luke P. McLoughlin,
‘‘Buying Time 2000: Television
Advertising in the 2000 Federal
Elections,’’ 56 (2002). Another study
supported the 60-day time frame and
was entered into the Congressional
Record by Senator Snowe. Jonathan
Krasno and Kenneth Goldstein, ‘‘The
Facts About Television Advertising and
the McCain-Feingold Bill,’’ 35(2) PS:
Political Science and Politics 207
(2002); see also 147 Cong. Rec. S3070–
01, S3074. This study found that in
1998 and 2000 ‘‘the greatest deluge of
issue ads began appearing after Labor
Day.’’ Id. at S3075.
The 60-day time frame is also
consistent with existing Commission
regulations. As a commenter stated,
‘‘Setting the time period at 60 days is
also supported by the FEC’s regulatory
time periods for the depreciation of
polling data in 11 CFR 106.4(g), under
which the FEC has determined that on
the 61st day after the polling event, the
data is worth only 5% of its original
value.’’
Therefore, in response to the Court of
Appeals’ first question, the data
analyzed and comments reviewed by
the Commission establish that Senate
and House candidates focus their
campaign advocacy not during the last
120 days before an election, but during
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the last 60 days before an election.
Moreover, beyond 90 days from an
election, Senate and House candidate
advertising nearly ceases. As suggested
by the Court of Appeals’ second
question, however, the data on
Presidential candidates show a different
advertising pattern, and are discussed
below.
2. Campaign Advertising in Presidential
Races Occurs on a Different Cycle Than
in Senate and House Races
The data and comments examined by
the Commission respond directly to the
second question posed by the Court of
Appeals: ‘‘Do congressional, senatorial,
and presidential races—all covered by
this rule—occur on the same cycle, or
should different rules apply to each?’’
Shays Appeal at 102. The data show
that advertising in the Presidential race
does in fact occur on a different cycle
than advertising in Senate and House
races. Appreciable spending occurred
outside of the 120-day time frame with
regard to the Presidential general
election.20 Specifically, in the media
markets contained within individual
‘‘battleground’’ States,21 the 120-day
time frame before the general election
covered less than 75 percent of the
estimated spending.22
Under the Commission’s 2002
regulations, the general election
coordinated communication window
effectively extended further back than
120 days before the general election
because the Presidential nominating
conventions of the political parties are
also elections for purposes of
determining whether a communication
satisfies the fourth content standard in
former 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4). See 11 CFR
100.2(e). Accordingly, in 2004, the
general election coordinated
communication window overlapped
with the coordinated communication
windows before the Presidential
20 See
Graphs P2 and P4.
Commission decided to limit the data
appearing in these graphical representations to
those States in which the 2004 Presidential race
was the most highly contested. The States
determined to be the 2004 ‘‘battleground’’ States
are: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Iowa,
Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri,
Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North
Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. A list
of ‘‘battleground’’ States was determined from the
following sources: Cook Political Report (https://
www.cookpolitical.com/column/2004/021704.php);
ABC News/Washington Post (https://www/
abcnews.go.com/sections/us/WorldNewsTonight/
battlegrounds_poll_040422.html); National Journal
(https://nationaljournal.com/members/campaign/
2004/swingstates/); Wall Street Journal/Zogby
International (https://online.wsj.com/public/
resources/documents/info-battleground04print.html).
22 See Graph P10.
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21 The
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nominating conventions and therefore
the coordination regulations applied for
the entire 184 days before the general
election for Republican Presidential
candidates and for 219 days before the
general election for Democratic
Presidential candidates.23 Even with
this extended general election window,
however, in several States there was still
a time period between the primary
elections and the start of the extended
window during which public
communications were not covered by
the 120-day time frame in the 2002 rules
(‘‘gap period’’). Moreover, the length of
the gap period was solely a function of
the parties’ selection of convention
dates. To the extent advertising was
continuous during the time period
between the primary and general
elections, the amount that was subject to
the existing 120-day rule depended on
the dates the parties set for their
conventions, rather than on the
purposeful application of the rule.
The Commission received several
comments addressing the issue of
communications made during the
Presidential gap periods. Some
commenters were in favor of regulating
communications run during this gap
period, noting that post-primary
communications are ‘‘overwhelmingly
likely to be for the purpose of
influencing the candidate’s election.’’
One joint commenter submitted
voluminous appendices and argued that
a significant amount of campaign
advertising occurs during this gap
period.24 As another commenter argued,
‘‘a period starting 120 days prior to a
primary and running all the way to the
general election would be appropriate to
capture ads that are most likely to
influence an election.’’ In contrast, other
commenters argued against extending
the regulation into this gap period,
asserting that campaigns do not
advertise significantly during this time,
and therefore, according to some,
regulation would unnecessarily infringe
on constitutionally protected speech. A
commenter representing a political
party committee argued that political
party committees would already be
23 The general election coordinated
communication window began on July 5, 2004, for
all candidates. The Republican National
Convention was held on August 30–September 2,
2004, and the coordinated communication window
for that convention began on May 2, 2004, which
was 184 days before the general election. The
Democratic National Convention was held on July
27–29, 2004, and the coordinated communication
window for that convention began on March 28,
2004, which was 219 days before the general
election.
24 Some of the advertisements presented by the
commenter were run during the pre-convention
window, and therefore, were covered by the
Commission’s existing coordination regulations.
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33195
covered by Federal reporting and
spending limitations and that covering
this gap period is therefore unnecessary.
The CMAG data show that, in 2004,
Presidential candidates spent
appreciable amounts on advertisements
run during the gap period between the
State primaries and the beginning of the
184-day Republican and the 219-day
Democratic extended general election
windows, respectively. Specifically, in
media markets contained fully within
individual ‘‘battleground’’ States, the
Republican Presidential candidate spent
a total of $9,475,679 on television
advertisements run during the gap
period, which amounted to 14 percent
of the total costs of media spots aired by
the Republican Presidential candidate
in those media markets after the State
primaries.25 In some of these media
markets, the percentage was
significantly higher.26 For example, in
the Seattle, WA, media market, 38
percent of the post-primary Republican
spending occurred during the gap
period, and, in the Madison and
Milwaukee, WI, media markets, 20
percent of the post-primary Republican
spending occurred during the gap
period.27 Democratic Presidential
candidates spent $1,221,045 on postprimary television advertisements that
occurred during the gap period.28 Thus,
nearly $10.7 million was spent by
Presidential candidates on television
advertisements during the gap
periods.29
In response to the Court of Appeals’
second question, the data and comments
confirm that campaign advertising in
Presidential races does in fact take place
on a different cycle than Senate and
House races. Rather than the 60-day
cycle in Senate and House races, the
data and comments confirm that nearly
all Presidential advertisement spending
took place during the time period from
120 days before the primary elections
up through the date of the general
election. According to the data, in the
2004 election cycle, over 99 percent of
the estimated media spot spending by
Presidential candidates in media
markets fully contained within
individual ‘‘battleground’’ States
occurred during this time period.30 This
time period is now fully covered by the
Commission’s revised content standard
at 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4).
25 See
Chart P11.
Chart P11.
27 See Chart P11.
28 See CMAG Data.
29 See Chart P11 and CMAG Data.
30 See Graphs P8 and P10.
26 See
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3. The Minimal Value of Advertising
Outside of the Revised Time Frames
Limits the Risk of Corruption From
Candidates and Collaborators Shifting
Coordinated Spending to Outside the
Time Frames
The data and comments reviewed by
the Commission also respond to the
third question posed by the Court of
Appeals: ‘‘[T]o the extent electionrelated advocacy now occurs primarily
within 120 days, would candidates and
collaborators aiming to influence
elections simply shift coordinated
spending outside that period to avoid
the challenged rules’ restrictions?’’
Shays Appeal at 102. As discussed
above, candidates have little incentive
to ask outside groups to pay for
advertisements aired outside of periods
where the candidates’ own spending
indicates they would be effective.
Therefore, outside of those time periods
where candidate advertising occurs,
there is little risk that coordinated
activity presents the risk or appearance
of corruption.
As discussed above, the data and
comments analyzed in response to the
Court of Appeals’ first question
overwhelmingly support a 60-day time
frame for Congressional candidate
communications. However, in order to
foreclose the possibility that candidates
and groups will shift spending outside
the applicable time frame, the
Commission has determined to set the
Congressional time frame at 90 days.
Congressional candidates aired a
minimal percentage of their
advertisements more than 60 days
before an election, and beyond 90 days
aired virtually no advertisements.31
Candidates have little or no incentive to
shift spending beyond 90 days. The
limited value of advertising beyond 90
days is reflected in the data, with Senate
candidates spending less than a quarter
of one percent of their television
advertising budgets on spots that aired
between 90 and 120 days before either
a primary or a general election.32
Similarly, House candidates spent less
than three percent of their television
advertising budgets on spots that aired
between 90 and 120 days before a
primary election 33 and less than a
quarter of one percent of their television
advertising budgets on spots that aired
between 90 and 120 days before a
general election.34
For Presidential candidates, while the
data show that the existing 120-day time
frames captured a majority of
31 See
Graphs S1, S3 and H1, H3.
Graphs S2 and S4.
33 See Graph H2.
34 See Graph H4.
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(4) A public communication, as defined in
11 CFR 100.26, made by a political
committee, which is an expenditure directed
to voters in the jurisdiction of the candidate
with whom the communication is
coordinated, or if coordinated with a political
party, is an expenditure directed to voters in
a jurisdiction in which one or more
candidates of the political party appear on
the ballot.
(5) A public communication, as defined in
11 CFR 100.26, made by an organization
described in section 527 of the Internal
Revenue Code and not registered as a
political committee, which:
(i)(A) Is distributed or disseminated during
the period beginning 30 days prior to the
primary election or 60 days prior to the
general election of the federal candidate with
whom the communication is coordinated, or,
if coordinated with a political party, during
the period beginning 30 days prior to the
primary election or 60 days prior to the
general election in which one or more
candidates of the political party appear on
the ballot, and (B) is directed to voters in the
jurisdiction of that candidate or to voters in
a jurisdiction in which one or more
candidates of the political party appear on
the ballot, regardless of whether the
communication refers to a clearly identified
candidate for federal office, or party; or
(ii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated
during the period beginning 120 days prior
to the primary election and ending on the
day of the general election, (B) refers to a
clearly identified candidate for federal office
or to a political party, and (C) is directed to
voters in the jurisdiction of the clearly
identified candidate, or to voters in a
jurisdiction in which one or more candidates
of the political party appear on the ballot; or
(iii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated more
than 120 days prior to the primary election,
35 See
Chart P11.
figure represents Presidential spending in
media markets fully contained within individual
‘‘battleground’’ States. See Graphs P8 and P10.
32 See
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Presidential spending, some appreciable
spending occurred in the gap period not
covered by the current 120-day rule.35
Accordingly, the Commission has
determined to close the gap period and
extend the applicable time frame from
120 days before the primary election in
a State continuously through the day of
the general election in that State. This
revised time frame would have covered
more than 99 percent of Presidential
advertising spending in 2004.36
One group of commenters, including
plaintiffs in the Shays litigation, argued
that the 120-day time frame was underinclusive and should be supplemented
with a complex, multi-factored
approach that would use a different test,
based not on time but instead on the
identity of the entity paying for any
communication made outside of the
120-day time period. The commenters
proposed the Commission adopt the
following regulation:
36 This
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(B) promotes, attacks, supports or opposes a
clearly identified candidate for federal office,
or if the ad is coordinated with a political
party, promotes, attacks, supports or opposes
the party or its candidates, and (C) is directed
to voters in the jurisdiction of the clearly
identified candidate, or to voters in a
jurisdiction in which one or more candidates
of the political party appear on the ballot.
(6) A public communication, as defined in
11 CFR 100.26, made by any person other
than a political committee or other
organization described in section 527 of the
Internal Revenue Code which:
(i)(A) Is distributed or disseminated during
the period beginning 30 days prior to the
primary election or 60 days prior to the
general election of the federal candidate with
whom the communication is coordinated, or,
if coordinated with a political party, during
the period beginning 30 days prior to the
primary election or 60 days prior to the
general election in which one or more
candidates of the political party appear on
the ballot, and (B) is directed to voters in that
candidate’s jurisdiction, regardless of
whether the communication refers to a
clearly identified candidate for federal office,
or party; or
(ii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated
during the period beginning 120 days prior
to the primary election and ending on the
day of the general election, (B) refers to a
clearly identified candidate for federal office
or to a political party, and (C) is directed to
voters in the jurisdiction of the clearly
identified candidate, or to voters in a
jurisdiction in which one or more candidates
of the political party appear on the ballot; or
(iii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated more
than 120 days prior to the primary election,
(B) refers to the character or the
qualifications or fitness for office of a clearly
identified candidate for federal office, or if
the ad is coordinated with a political party,
refers to the character or the qualifications or
fitness for office of the party generically or
of candidates of that party, and (C) is directed
to voters in the jurisdiction of the clearly
identified candidate, or to voters in a
jurisdiction in which one or more candidates
of the political party appear on the ballot.
The Commission believes the record
does not support the time frames in the
commenters’ proposed regulation, nor
the disparate regulatory schemes for
various entities. Moreover, the
Commission agrees with other witnesses
at the hearing that if the Commission
were to adopt the proposed regulation,
its complexity would likely place an
extreme burden upon the regulated
community. The commenters also
submitted summaries of advertisements
from recent election cycles that,
according to the commenters, were run
more than 120 days before the primary
or general election they were intended
to influence. However, at the hearing,
these commenters acknowledged that
there was no evidence that any of these
advertisements had been coordinated
with a candidate or a political party
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committee. The lack of evidence that
these advertisements were coordinated
with candidates comports with the
conclusion drawn from the CMAG data
and comments; specifically, that
candidates perceive little value in airing
advertisements beyond 90 days from an
election, and have little incentive to
seek such advertising in exchange for
political favoritism.
4. Communications That Refer to
Political Parties
As set forth in new 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii) and (iv),
communications that refer to political
parties are now subject to different time
periods depending upon: (1) Whether
the communication is coordinated with
a candidate or political party committee;
(2) whether the upcoming general
election is a midterm or Presidential
election; and (3) if the communication
also refers to a clearly identified Federal
candidate, whether it is run in the
clearly identified candidate’s
jurisdiction.
When communications are paid for by
outside groups, refer to a political party,
are coordinated with a candidate, and
are publicly distributed or otherwise
disseminated in that candidate’s
jurisdiction, they can generally be
presumed to be for the purpose of
influencing that candidate’s election
whether or not they also refer to the
candidate with whom they are
coordinated. Accordingly, it is
appropriate to use the time frame
established for communications that
refer to a House or Senate candidate (90
days before a primary, special, or
general election) where the
communications refer only to a political
party and not to a clearly identified
Federal candidate, but are coordinated
with a House or Senate candidate and
distributed in that candidate’s
jurisdiction, even if such
communications are distributed during
a Presidential election cycle. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii)(A). Similarly, if a
communication were coordinated with a
Presidential candidate, it would be
appropriate to use the same 120-day
time period established for
communications referring to
Presidential candidates. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii)(A).
A communication that refers to a
political party without referring to a
clearly identified Federal candidate,
otherwise satisfies the content prong, is
paid for by an outside group, and is
coordinated with a political party, can
generally be presumed to be for the
purpose of influencing the elections of
all of the party’s candidates within that
jurisdiction during the relevant time
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period before an election. During a
midterm election cycle (in which only
House and Senate candidates are on the
ballot), new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii)(B)
provides that communications referring
to political parties are subject to the
same 90-day time period as
communications referring to House and
Senate candidates. Likewise, the new
rules provide that during a Presidential
election cycle, communications
referring to political parties are
presumed to be for the purpose of
influencing the elections of all of the
party’s candidates, including the party’s
Presidential candidate. Accordingly,
such communications are subject to the
same 120-day time period as
communications referring to
Presidential candidates. See new 11
CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii)(C).
If the communication refers to both a
political party and a clearly identified
Federal candidate, the communication
is subject to the time frame applicable
to that clearly identified candidate
under 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(i) or (ii)
when the communication is coordinated
with either a candidate or a political
party and is distributed or disseminated
within the clearly identified candidate’s
jurisdiction. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iv)(A) and (B). Such
communication is subject to the
applicable time frames for party
references when coordinated with a
political party and distributed and
disseminated outside the candidate’s
jurisdiction. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iv)(C). Any such
communication coordinated with a
candidate, but distributed outside that
candidate’s jurisdiction, would not
constitute a coordinated
communication.
5. Other Considerations
In the Commission’s judgment, the
foregoing time frames encompass the
periods in which effective political
party, Congressional, and Presidential
election-related advertising occurs, and
therefore political parties, candidates,
and collaborators will have little
incentive to shift spending outside of
these time frames. None of the
commenters submitted any evidence
that, during the recent election cycles
during which the Commission’s 2002
coordination rules were in effect, House
or Senate candidates asked outside
groups to run advertisements more than
90 days before House or Senate primary
or general elections. Since the 2002 rule
took effect, the Commission has
received very few complaints alleging
that House or Senate candidates or their
agents coordinated with outside groups
to produce or distribute
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communications that ran between 90
and 120 days before a House or Senate
primary or general election. Moreover,
commenters did not submit any
evidence that during the recent election
cycles in which the Commission’s 2002
coordination rules were in effect,
Presidential candidates or their agents
asked outside groups to run
advertisements more than 120 days
before Presidential primaries or the
general election.
Retaining a longer time frame that is
not supported by the record could
potentially subject political speech
protected under the First Amendment to
Commission investigation. Subjecting
activity to investigation that the
evidence shows is unlikely to be for the
purpose of influencing Federal elections
could chill legitimate lobbying and
legislative activity. As the Supreme
Court has emphasized, where First
Amendment rights are affected,
‘‘[p]recision of regulation must be the
touchstone,’’ Edenfield v. Fane, 507 U.S.
761, 777 (1993).
The Court of Appeals emphasized that
it ‘‘can hardly fault the [Commission’s]
effort to develop an objective, brightline test.’’ Shays Appeal at 99. As the
D.C. Circuit noted in an analogous
context, ‘‘a subjective test based on a
totality of the circumstances * * *
would inevitably curtail permissible
conduct.’’ Orloski v. FEC, 795 F.2d 156
(D.C. Cir. 1986). In Orloski, the D.C.
Circuit further warned that:
[A] subjective test would also unduly burden
the FEC with requests for advisory opinions
* * * and with complaints by disgruntled
opponents who could take advantage of a
totality of the circumstances test to harass the
sponsoring candidate and his supporters. It
would further burden the agency by forcing
it to direct its limited resources toward
conducting a full-scale, detailed inquiry into
almost every complaint, even those involving
the most mundane allegations.
Id. at 165.
Considering the political, expressive,
and associational rights at stake, the
Commission has determined not to
extend the time frame beyond that
period supported by the record.
B. Revised 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)
The Commission continues to believe
that an objective, bright-line
coordination test provides the clearest
guidance to candidates, political party
committees, and outside organizations.
Moreover, as discussed above, the
CMAG data show that in the 2004
election cycle, nearly all television
advertisements paid for by candidates
were aired within certain time frames
before an election. These data, therefore,
provide empirical support for the
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Commission’s decision to use time
frames as part of a bright-line test for
determining whether a communication
is made for the purpose of influencing
Federal elections.
Accordingly, as set forth in new 11
CFR 109.21(c)(4)(i), public
communications that refer to a Senate or
House of Representatives candidate are
subject to two 90-day time periods. One
time period runs from 90 days before
any primary in which the Congressional
candidate is on the ballot through the
date of the primary. Then, another time
period starts 90 days before any general
election in which the candidate is on
the ballot and runs through the date of
the general election. In some States,
these periods will overlap if a primary
election is held fewer than 90 days
before a general election.
Under new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(ii),
communications that refer to a
candidate for President or Vice
President are subject to a single time
period that begins 120 days before a
State’s primary election up to and
including the date of the general
election.
Under new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii),
communications that refer to a political
party but not to a clearly identified
Federal candidate are subject to
different time periods under different
circumstances. For those
communications that are coordinated
with a candidate and reference a
political party, but do not reference a
clearly identified Federal candidate, the
time frame that would be applicable if
that candidate were clearly identified in
the communication under 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(i) or (ii) applies when the
communication is distributed or
disseminated within that candidate’s
jurisdiction. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii)(A). For communications
coordinated with a political party
committee and distributed during the
two-year election cycle ending in a nonPresidential general election, one time
period runs from 90 days before any
primary in which a candidate of that
party is on the ballot through the date
of the primary. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii)(B). Then, another time
period begins 90 days before any general
election in which a candidate of that
party is on the ballot and runs through
the date of the general election. In some
States, these periods will overlap if a
primary election is held fewer than 90
days before a general election. For
communications coordinated with a
political party committee and
distributed during the two-year election
cycle ending in a Presidential general
election, a single time period begins 120
days before a candidate of that party’s
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primary election in a State up to and
including the date of the general
election. See 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii)(C).
Under new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iv),
communications that refer to both a
political party and a clearly identified
candidate are subject to the time frame
applicable to that clearly identified
candidate under 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(i)
or (ii) when the communication is
distributed or disseminated within the
clearly identified candidate’s
jurisdiction. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iv)(A) and (B). However,
communications that refer to both a
political party and a clearly identified
candidate, are coordinated with a
political party committee, and are
distributed outside the clearly identified
candidate’s jurisdiction are subject to
the time period that would apply to
communications that refer only to a
political party. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iv)(C).
C. Clarification of Time Frame
Requirement
The Commission is also taking this
opportunity to clarify that a public
communication satisfies the content
standards in 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(i) and
(ii) with respect to a candidate for
Federal office only if the public
communication is publicly distributed
or otherwise publicly disseminated
during the relevant time periods before
an election in which that candidate or
another candidate seeking election to
the same office is on the ballot.
This clarification addresses the
situation presented in Advisory Opinion
2004–01 (Bush-Cheney/Kerr). This
advisory opinion concerned President
Bush’s appearance in a television
advertisement paid for by a
Congressional candidate in which
President Bush endorsed that
Congressional candidate. The
Commission determined that any airing
of the advertisement that occurred more
than 120 days before the Presidential
primary in a State in which the
advertisement aired was not an in-kind
contribution to President Bush because
it did not satisfy the fourth content
standard (i.e., 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)).
Thus, in determining whether the
Congressional candidate’s payment for
the communication would be an in-kind
contribution to President Bush, the
Commission looked at whether the
communication was aired within 120
days before President Bush’s election
rather than whether it was aired within
the time period applicable to the paying
Congressional candidate.
In the NPRM, the Commission sought
comment on whether it should clarify
its coordinated communication rules to
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incorporate the approach taken in
Advisory Opinion 2004–01 and to make
clear that a public communication
satisfies the content prong with respect
to a Federal candidate only if it is
distributed within the applicable time
period before that candidate’s election.
For example, a Senator whose reelection
is not until 2008 appears in an
advertisement with a 2006 candidate for
the House of Representatives. The
advertisement is aired within 90 days of
the House candidate’s election, is paid
for by the House candidate’s campaign
committee, and is disseminated in the
State where the Senator will seek
reelection in 2008. The proposed
clarification of the rule would explain
that the advertisement would not be an
in-kind contribution to the Senator
because the advertisement was not aired
within 90 days of the Senator’s 2008
election. Two commenters supported
the proposed clarification and no
commenters opposed it. Accordingly,
the Commission is revising 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(i) and (ii) to make clear that
the public communication at issue must
be publicly distributed or otherwise
publicly disseminated in the clearly
identified candidate’s jurisdiction
before the clearly identified candidate’s
election in that jurisdiction. Read in
conjunction with the ‘‘payment prong’’
at 11 CFR 109.21(a), which requires that
the communication be paid for by
someone other than the candidate at
issue, this revision codifies the
Commission’s decision in Advisory
Opinion 2004–01. See also Advisory
Opinion 2005–18 (Reyes) (Concurring
opinion of Commissioners Thomas,
Toner, Mason, McDonald, and
Weintraub).
The Commission notes that 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(i) and (ii) also cover
advertisements coordinated with a
candidate and disseminated within the
applicable time period before an
election of that candidate’s opponent or
potential opponent.37 For example,
Candidate Smith has already won the
Democratic nomination for the U.S.
Senate in State A, but the Republican
Party has not yet held its primary in that
State. At the request or suggestion of
Candidate Smith, Organization X pays
to run advertisements a week before the
Republican primary attacking Candidate
Jones, who is the frontrunner in the
Republican primary race for U.S. Senate
in State A and hopes to compete in the
subsequent general election against
Smith. Although Candidate Smith is not
on the ballot in the Republican primary
37 See note 44, below (defining ‘‘potential
opponent’’ and identifying criteria that must be met
for a person to be a ‘‘candidate’’ under the Act.).
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in State A and his general election is
more than 90 days away, the
advertisement attacking Candidate Jones
is an in-kind contribution to Candidate
Smith because its purpose is to oppose
Candidate Smith’s potential opponent
in the general election and thus
influence Smith’s election.
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III. Alternative Proposals for Revising
the Content Prong Not Adopted
The NPRM presented seven
alternatives for retaining or revising the
‘‘content prong’’ of the 2002
coordination rules at 11 CFR 109.21(c).
The Commission sought comment on
each of these alternatives, as well as on
whether a combination of components
from different alternatives would be
appropriate. Alternative 1 was to retain
the 120-day time frame and Alternative
2 was to replace it with another time
frame. In light of the Court of Appeals’
rejection of the District Court’s
conclusion that ‘‘FECA precludes
content-based standards,’’ (Shays
Appeal, 414 F.3d at 99), and in light of
the Court of Appeals’ ruling that ‘‘time,
place, and content may be critical
indicia of communicative purpose,’’ (Id.
at 99) the Commission has decided to
adopt a combination of Alternative 1
and Alternative 2 based on a careful
review of the comments and the CMAG
data on candidate advertising during the
2004 election cycle. The Commission
has therefore decided not to adopt any
of the remaining five alternatives, each
of which is discussed briefly below.
Alternative 3
Alternative 3 was to eliminate the
time frame from the fourth content
standard altogether. Commenters
generally opposed this approach
because they believed it would be
unconstitutionally overbroad and would
unnecessarily sweep into the area of
‘‘grassroots lobbying’’ efforts. One group
of commenters argued that such an
approach was adequate for political
committees, but was overbroad with
regard to speakers other than political
committees.
The Commission agrees with the
majority of the commenters who believe
that eliminating the time frame from the
fourth content standard in 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4) would unnecessarily
capture a substantial amount of speech
that is unrelated to elections, thereby
raising substantial First Amendment
issues. This alternative would apply to
any public communication that refers to
a Federal candidate and is publicly
disseminated in the jurisdiction of the
Federal candidate, even if the
communication is made years before
any election in which the candidate
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participates and is made without any
purpose of influencing a Federal
election. Such an approach is
inconsistent with the Court of Appeals’
recognition that ‘‘to qualify as [an]
‘expenditure’ in the first place, spending
must be undertaken ‘for the purpose of
influencing’ a federal election.’’ Shays
Appeal at 99. Such an approach also
runs counter to the Court of Appeals’
conclusion that the Commission may
appropriately apply a content standard
to determine which communications are
made for the purpose of influencing a
Federal election and that the timing of
a communication may be a critical
indicium of an election-influencing
purpose. Shays Appeal at 99. Such an
approach is not justified by the need to
prevent circumvention of the Act’s
contribution limits because, as
discussed above, the CMAG data show
that public communications made by
candidates for the purpose of
influencing a Federal election
overwhelmingly take place within
certain limited time frames before
elections (i.e., 90 days before House and
Senate elections and 120 days before
Presidential primaries through the day
of the general election).
Alternative 4
Alternative 4 proposed to replace the
time frame in the fourth content
standard with a test based on whether
a communication promotes, supports,
attacks, or opposes (‘‘PASOs’’) 38 a
political party or clearly identified
Federal candidate. No commenter fully
supported Alternative 4. One group of
commenters argued that a PASO
standard should not be applied to
political committees but should be
applied to entities described in section
527 of the Internal Revenue Code that
are not registered with the Commission
38 The PASO standard is found in BCRA and
applies to candidates and political party
committees with respect to Federal Election
Activity (‘‘FEA’’). See 2 U.S.C. 431(20)(A)(iii).
Congress also applied the PASO standard to the
activity of certain tax-exempt organizations. For
example, BCRA prohibits party committees from
soliciting funds for, or making or directing
donations to, certain tax-exempt organizations that
make expenditures or disbursements for FEA,
which includes public communications that PASO
a Federal candidate. See 2 U.S.C. 431(20)(A)(iii) and
441i(d)(1). In addition, BCRA directed the
Commission not to exempt any communications
that PASO a clearly identified Federal candidate
from the electioneering communication provisions.
See 2 U.S.C. 434(f)(3)(B)(iv). The Supreme Court, in
rejecting a constitutional vagueness challenge to the
PASO standard, held that ‘‘the words ‘promote,’
‘oppose,’ ‘attack,’ and ‘support’ * * * provide
explicit standards for those who apply them and
‘give the person of ordinary intelligence a
reasonable opportunity to know what is
prohibited.’ ’’ McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 170
n.64 (2003) (quoting Grayned v. City of Rockford,
408 U.S. 104, 108–109 (1972)).
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33199
as political committees. Other
commenters proposed combining the
PASO standard with a time restriction,
namely, the 30/60-day time frame used
in the ‘‘electioneering communication’’
regulations.39 Other commenters
opposed adoption of a PASO standard,
arguing that a PASO standard in place
of a time frame is unworkable,
inadequate, and overly broad. One joint
commenter asserted that the legislative
history in BCRA’s coordination
provisions implies that the Commission
lacks the authority to use a PASO
standard as part of the coordinated
communication test. In rejecting a PASO
standard, most commenters agreed that
the Commission should continue to use
a bright-line rule to determine whether
a communication satisfies the content
prong of the coordinated
communication test. As one commenter
stressed, ‘‘We agree with the Court of
Appeals when it said it could ‘hardly
fault the [Commission’s] effort to
develop an objective, bright-line test
[that] does not unduly compromise the
Act’s purpose.’ Thus, we urge the
Commission to maintain a bright-line
test in the area of coordination.’’
The Commission agrees with the
commenters that an objective, brightline test, based on a sound evidentiary
record, provides the clearest guidance to
those seeking to comply with the
coordination regulations. The
Commission also invited comment on
whether under Alternative 4, instead of
using a PASO standard, the Commission
should create a safe harbor exemption
from the coordinated communication
rules for certain types of
communications that are not made for
the purpose of influencing Federal
elections. Several commenters
supported the creation of such a safe
harbor. One joint commenter argued
that adopting a more focused safe harbor
is both ‘‘the most supportive [approach]
of political speech and the most
consistent with the legislative history of
BCRA’s coordination provisions.’’ In
this vein, as discussed below, the
Commission is adding a safe harbor for
public communications in which a
Federal candidate endorses another
candidate, or solicits contributions for
certain tax-exempt organizations,
candidates, and political committees.
See Section V, below, and new 11 CFR
109.21(g). The Commission, however,
has determined that a temporal
standard, rather than a PASO standard,
best effectuates the purposes of the Act,
while providing clear guidance to the
regulated community.
39 See
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Alternative 5
Alternative 5 proposed to eliminate
the time frame from the fourth content
standard for political committees only.
Many of the commenters opposed this
approach. Several commenters argued
that by eliminating a time frame only for
political committees, the Commission
would be presuming that
communications paid for by political
committees are made solely for the
purpose of influencing Federal
elections, when they believed that many
of a political committee’s
communications are made for other
purposes, such as issue advocacy.
Another commenter objected that such
an approach would retain the existing
time frame for organizations that are not
subject to the prohibitions and
limitations of the Act while tightening
regulation for organizations that are
already subject to numerous regulations
because of their status as political
committees. As that commenter pointed
out, political committees are subject to
the Act’s contribution limits and
prohibitions, are required to disclose
their activities to the Commission, and
receive relatively small contributions,
mostly from individuals. In addition,
several commenters opposed this
alternative because it is not supported
by empirical evidence. One joint
commenter, however, supported
Alternative 5 based on the assertion that
groups whose ‘major purpose’ is to
influence elections should be subject to
broader regulatory standards.
Accordingly, the joint commenter
concluded that under Alternative 5, ‘‘an
‘expenditure’ by a political committee
should satisfy the ‘content’ test without
regard to a time frame.’’ For the same
reason, the commenter also urged the
Commission to abolish the time frame
for public communications made by
entities described in section 527 of the
Internal Revenue Code.
The Commission has decided not to
adopt Alternative 5 because, as
discussed above, the Court of Appeals
rejected the argument that ‘‘FECA
precludes content-based standards’’ and
concluded that ‘‘time, place, and
content may be critical indicia of
communicative purpose.’’ Shays Appeal
at 99. As discussed above, the CMAG
data provide overwhelming empirical
support for the Commission’s decision
to use time frames as part of a brightline test for determining whether a
communication is made for the purpose
of influencing Federal elections. In
contrast, there is no evidence that
political committees are more likely
than other groups to coordinate
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communications outside of these time
frames.
Alternative 6
In Alternative 6, the Commission
proposed to replace the fourth content
standard with a test that simply relies
on the statutory language ‘‘made for the
purpose of influencing a Federal
election.’’ The majority of commenters
were opposed to this standard because
they believe it would require the
Commission to determine whether a
public communication is a coordinated
communication based on a totality of
the circumstances test and would fail to
give those subject to the Commission’s
regulations adequate notice of what
behavior will come within the
coordination regulations. One joint
commenter believed that adoption of
this alternative would deter individuals
and organizations from making public
communications regarding policy
matters because ‘‘they would have no
idea whether their subsequent public
communication would be covered by
the prohibition on coordinated
expenditures.’’
On the other hand, some commenters
argued that modified versions of
Alternative 6 might be acceptable. For
example, one commenter suggested that
the alternative should include the 30/
60-day temporal limit used in the
electioneering communication
regulations.40 Another joint commenter
supported the use of a ‘‘for the purpose
of influencing a Federal election’’ test as
part of a complex, tiered approach that
would apply different content standards
depending on the identity of the entity
paying for the communication.
The Commission has decided not to
adopt Alternative 6 because a bright-line
test based on proximity to an election
provides the clearest guidance to those
seeking to comply with the regulations
and provides a more manageable
standard for enforcement than the more
general ‘‘for the purpose of influencing
a Federal election’’ standard.
Alternative 7
Alternative 7 proposed to eliminate
the entire content prong in 11 CFR
109.21(c) and replace it with the
requirement that the communication be
a public communication as defined in
11 CFR 100.26. This approach was
universally rejected by commenters.
Some commenters disapproved of this
alternative on the grounds that it would
be overbroad, was not supported by any
evidence in the record or indication of
Congressional intent, would have
unintended consequences, and would
40 See
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unnecessarily chill constitutionally
protected speech. Another commenter
asserted that this proposal was in direct
contradiction with the legislative
history of BCRA, which demonstrated
that Congress ‘‘affirmatively intended
that any coordination regulation issued
by the Commission should protect
against interference with lobbying and
similar activities.’’
When the Commission promulgated
the 2002 Coordination Final Rules, it
stated ‘‘the Commission believes that a
content standard provides a clear and
useful component of a coordination
definition in that it helps ensure that the
coordination regulations do not
inadvertently encompass
communications that are not made for
the purpose of influencing a federal
election.’’ 2002 Coordination Final
Rules, 68 FR at 426. In order to ensure
that the coordination regulations do not
inadvertently encompass
communications not made for the
purpose of influencing a Federal
election, the Commission is rejecting
Alternative 7.
IV. The ‘‘Directed to Voters’’
Requirement in 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)
The 2002 rules provided that to
satisfy the fourth content standard, a
public communication must be directed
to voters in the jurisdiction where the
clearly identified Federal candidate is
on the ballot or where one or more
candidates of the political party are on
the ballot. See former 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii). The Commission is
removing the phrase ‘‘directed to voters
in the jurisdiction.’’ In the revised rule,
to satisfy the content standard in 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4), a public communication
must be ‘‘publicly distributed or
otherwise publicly disseminated in the
clearly identified candidate’s
jurisdiction’’ or, if the public
communication refers to a political
party, but not to a clearly identified
Federal candidate, in a jurisdiction in
which one or more candidates of a
political party appear on the ballot.
These revisions clarify that a
communication is potentially for the
purpose of influencing a Federal
election where the persons receiving the
communication that is coordinated can
vote for or against the referenced
candidate or candidate’s opponent in
that election, or in the case of a general
party reference, a candidate of the
referenced party in that election. The
revisions also clarify that for
communications that refer solely to a
political party and are coordinated with
a candidate, the analysis turns on
whether the communication is publicly
distributed or otherwise publicly
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disseminated in the jurisdiction of the
candidate with whom it is
coordinated.41
The NPRM also sought comment on
whether the fourth content standard at
former 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii) should
be changed to specify a minimum
number of persons that must be able to
receive a communication and, if so,
what the required minimum number of
persons should be. The Act and
Commission regulations defining
‘‘electioneering communication’’ require
that 50,000 or more persons be able to
receive an ‘‘electioneering
communication’’ in the jurisdiction
where the clearly identified Federal
candidate is on the ballot.42 Similarly,
the definitions of ‘‘mass mailing’’ and
‘‘telephone bank’’ contained in the Act
and Commission regulations as part of
the definition of ‘‘public
communication’’ contain a minimum
threshold of 500. See 2 U.S.C. 431(23)
and (24); 11 CFR 100.27, 100.28, and
100.29 (defining ‘‘mass mailing’’ as a
mailing of more than 500 pieces of mail
of an identical or substantially similar
nature sent within a 30-day period and
‘‘telephone bank’’ as more than 500
telephone calls of an identical or
substantially similar nature made
within a 30-day period). In contrast, the
fourth content standard does not specify
how many persons must be able to
receive a communication for it to be
classified as a coordinated
communication. See 2 U.S.C.
434(f)(3)(C); 11 CFR 100.29(b)(3)(ii)(A)
and (b)(5).
The Commission has decided not to
specify a minimum number of persons
that must be able to receive a
communication for the fourth content
standard to apply. While the 50,000
threshold for ‘‘electioneering
communication’’ and the 500 threshold
for mass mailings and telephone banks
are contained in BCRA, there is no
analogous statutory provision to suggest
that Congress intended either of these
thresholds, or any other threshold, for
coordinated communications. Moreover,
because the coordinated communication
rules apply to different types of
communications, no single minimum
threshold is appropriate for all
communications. For example, unlike
the ‘‘electioneering communication’’
provisions, which cover only broadcast,
cable, and satellite communications
(i.e., television and radio
advertisements), the coordinated
communication rules apply to print
41 For
communications coordinated between a
candidate and a political party and paid for by a
political party, see 11 CFR 109.37.
42 See note 3, above.
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media and telephone banks as well.
Adopting, for instance, a 50,000 or even
30,000-person threshold could have the
effect of creating a blanket exemption
for print advertisements placed in small
town newspapers with a relatively low
circulation.
In the NPRM, the Commission also
invited comment on whether a
‘‘directed to voters in the candidate’s
jurisdiction’’ requirement should be
added to the second and third content
standards, which cover the
republication of campaign materials and
express advocacy. Three commenters
supported adding the requirement to the
second and third content standards
because, in the words of one of these
commenters, a communication ‘‘cannot
be said to influence the outcome of an
election if the people cannot vote in that
particular election.’’ In contrast, a
different commenter argued that BCRA
does not permit the Commission to add
a ‘‘directed to voters’’ requirement for
the republication of campaign materials
content standard.
The Commission has decided not to
add a ‘‘directed to voters in the
candidate’s jurisdiction’’ requirement to
the second and third content standards.
The purpose of the content prong of the
coordinated communication test is to
determine whether a communication
has the purpose of influencing a Federal
election. Communications that
expressly advocate the election or defeat
of a Federal candidate or republish
campaign materials are by their very
nature for the purpose of influencing a
Federal election and therefore are inkind contributions if their creation or
distribution is coordinated with a
candidate or political party committee.
V. Safe Harbor for Endorsements and
Solicitations by Federal Candidates
(New 11 CFR 109.21(g))
A. Endorsements of, and Solicitations
for, Federal or Non-Federal Candidates,
Political Committees, and Certain TaxExempt Organizations
The Commission is creating a new
safe harbor in 11 CFR 109.21(g) for
endorsements by Federal candidates of
other Federal and non-Federal
candidates, and for solicitations by
Federal candidates for other Federal and
non-Federal candidates, political
committees, and certain tax-exempt
organizations described in section
501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code as
permitted by 11 CFR 300.65.43
43 11 CFR 300.65 permits a Federal candidate or
officeholder to make certain solicitations of funds
on behalf of any organization described in 26 U.S.C.
501(c) and exempt from taxation under 26 U.S.C.
501(a). See also 2 U.S.C. 441i(e)(4). The
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33201
Specifically, the new regulation
provides that a public communication
in which a candidate for Federal office
endorses another candidate for Federal
or non-Federal office, or solicits funds
for another candidate, or for a political
committee or section 501(c)
organization as permitted by 11 CFR
300.65, is not a coordinated
communication with respect to the
endorsing or soliciting Federal
candidate unless the public
communication PASOs the endorsing or
soliciting candidate, or another
candidate who seeks election to the
same office as the endorsing or
soliciting candidate.44 This safe harbor
applies regardless of the timing and
proximity to an election of the
endorsement or solicitation.
Most commenters who addressed this
issue supported the creation of a safe
harbor on the grounds that such
communications are not intended to
benefit the endorsing or soliciting
candidate’s election and are not made
for the purpose of influencing the
endorsing or soliciting candidate’s
election. See Shays Appeal at 99 (‘‘[T]o
qualify as [an] expenditure in the first
place, spending must be undertaken
‘‘for the purpose of influencing’’ a
federal election.’’). One commenter
stated ‘‘solicitations are regularly
directed to individuals who are not even
eligible to vote for the soliciting
candidate.’’ Another commenter
observed that ‘‘often the solicitation is
directed to an audience whose members
include few, if any, of the candidate’s
own electorate.’’ In the context of
endorsements, one commenter argued
that ‘‘[a] coordinated expenditure,
Commission notes that those organizations not
covered by this safe harbor are not subject to a
coordination finding, unless their activities
separately meet the conduct, content, and payment
prongs.
44 The phrase ‘‘another candidate who seeks
election to the same office as the endorsing or
soliciting candidate’’ covers not only a candidate’s
actual opponent but also a candidate’s potential
opponent, i.e., a candidate who seeks election to the
same office as the endorsing or soliciting candidate
but who has not yet secured his or her party’s
nomination and therefore is not yet the endorsing
or soliciting candidate’s actual opponent. See 11
CFR 100.3(a) and 2 U.S.C. 431(2) (setting forth the
criteria that must be met for a person to be a
‘‘candidate’’ under the Act). Thus, for example, an
advertisement in which a Presidential candidate
endorses a candidate for Senate but that also attacks
one of the opposing party’s candidates for
nomination for President would satisfy the fourth
content standard at 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4) because it
attacks a candidate seeking election to the same
office as the endorsing Presidential candidate. In
Subpart C of 11 CFR Part 109 the term ‘‘opponent’’
includes a candidate’s potential opponent. The term
‘‘candidate’s opponent’’ turns on whether the
opponent will be an opponent of the soliciting or
endorsing candidate during the two-year election
cycle and whether the opponent qualifies as a
candidate for the same office.
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treated as a contribution subject to the
limits and source restrictions, must
meet the test of benefiting a candidate.
This is not true of an endorsement,
which is a speech act performed for the
benefit of another.’’ Similarly, another
commenter noted that the ‘‘purpose of a
federal candidate’s endorsement
message is to aid the endorsed
candidate * * * not to aid the
endorsing candidate’s own election,’’
(emphasis in original) while another
commenter observed that
‘‘endorsements are seldom, if ever, of
electoral value to the endorsing
candidate.’’
The NPRM invited comment on
whether any safe harbor for
endorsements and solicitations by
Federal candidates should be limited to
communications that do not PASO or,
alternatively, do not expressly advocate,
the endorsing or soliciting candidate or
the candidate’s opponent or potential
opponent. Most commenters, including
two who had opposed the proposed safe
harbors in their written comments,
agreed that it would be appropriate for
the Commission to create the proposed
safe harbors so long as they do not
extend to communications intended to
influence the election of the endorsing
or soliciting candidate. Moreover, at the
hearing, most commenters agreed that
the PASO standard would be an
appropriate and workable standard for
determining whether communications
containing endorsements or solicitations
have the purpose of influencing the
endorsing or soliciting candidates’
elections. Congress has already
determined that a State candidate who
wishes to sponsor an advertisement
featuring a Federal candidate is
prohibited by 2 U.S.C. 441i(f) from
promoting or supporting the Federal
candidate with non-Federal funds. See 2
U.S.C. 441i(f) and 11 CFR 300.71. A
witness from a reform organization
stated that ‘‘if the endorsement doesn’t
promote the candidate doing the
endorsement, then it should be okay
* * * [T]here should be a standard,
whether it’s a PASO standard or for the
purpose of influencing.’’
The coordinated communication
regulation identifies communications
that are for the purpose of influencing
a Federal election. See 2 U.S.C. 431(9)
and 11 CFR 109.21. Because the
Commission agrees that endorsements
and solicitations are not made for the
purpose of influencing the endorsing or
soliciting candidate’s own election, the
Commission is adopting a safe harbor
for endorsements of Federal and nonFederal candidates and solicitations
made by a Federal candidate for Federal
or non-Federal candidates, certain tax-
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exempt organizations as permitted by 11
CFR 300.65, and for political
committees. There is no evidence that
Congress intended to restrict the
established practice of candidate
endorsements and solicitations when
the endorsements and solicitations do
not PASO the endorsing or soliciting
candidate. To the contrary, in floor
statements regarding BCRA, Senator
Feingold explained that the relevant
BCRA provisions would not prohibit
‘‘spending non-Federal money to run
advertisements that mention that [State
candidates] have been endorsed by a
Federal candidate * * * so long as
those advertisements do not support,
attack, promote, or oppose the Federal
candidate.’’ 148 Cong. Rec. S2143 (daily
ed. Mar. 20, 2002). The Commission’s
safe harbor for candidate endorsements
is fashioned consistent with this
legislative history.
The new rule at 11 CFR 109.21(g)
provides that a communication is
eligible for the safe harbor only if it does
not PASO the endorsing or soliciting
candidate or another candidate seeking
election to the same Federal office as the
endorsing or soliciting candidate.45
When the safe harbor is applicable, the
endorsing or soliciting candidate (and
the candidate’s agents) may be involved
in the development of the
communication, in determining the
content of the communication, as well
as determining the means or mode and
timing or frequency of the
communication.
The new regulation addresses issues
presented in Advisory Opinions 2004–
01 (Bush-Cheney/Kerr) and 2003–25
(Weinzapfel). As discussed above, in
Advisory Opinion 2004–01, the
Commission considered a television
advertisement that featured President
Bush endorsing a Congressional
candidate. The Commission determined
that, for any advertisement distributed
within 120 days of the Presidential
primary in the State in which the
advertisement aired, the advertisement’s
production and distribution costs paid
for by the Congressional candidate’s
committee but attributable to the
President’s authorized committee were
contributions to the President’s
authorized committee from the
Congressional candidate’s committee.
Similarly, in Advisory Opinion 2003–
25, the Commission considered an
advertisement featuring a U.S. Senator
45 The Act, as amended by BCRA, generally
prohibits Federal candidates and officeholders from
soliciting funds on behalf of other Federal or nonFederal candidates, unless the funds are subject to
the limitations and prohibitions of the Act. 2 U.S.C.
441i(e)(1)(A) and (B). See also 11 CFR 300.61 and
300.62.
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endorsing a mayoral candidate and
concluded that the communication did
not satisfy the fourth content standard
because it was not distributed within
120 days of a Federal election.46
These advisory opinions are
superseded to the extent they concluded
that communications containing
endorsements by Federal candidates are
in-kind contributions to the endorsing
Federal candidate if they otherwise
satisfy the coordinated communication
test, irrespective of whether the
communication PASOs the endorsing
candidate.
B. Endorsements of, and Solicitations
for, State Ballot Initiatives
In the NPRM, the Commission also
sought comment on whether a similar
safe harbor should apply to a Federal
candidate’s appearance in
communications that endorse, or solicit
funds for, State ballot initiatives. Only
two commenters addressed the safe
harbor proposal and both supported
such a safe harbor, arguing that, like
endorsements of other candidates,
endorsements of State ballot initiatives
are not made for the purpose of
influencing the election of the endorsing
candidate, but rather to influence the
outcome of the State ballot initiative. No
other commenters addressed the
proposal. In light of the limited record
produced by the commenters regarding
a safe harbor for ballot initiatives, the
Commission has decided not to extend
a safe harbor for endorsements and
solicitations for State ballot initiatives at
this time.
VI. Amendments to the Conduct Prong
(11 CFR 109.21(d) and (h))
The conduct prong of the
Commission’s coordinated
communication regulations was not
challenged in Shays v. FEC.
Nonetheless, in the NPRM, the
Commission took the opportunity to
seek comment on how certain aspects of
the conduct prong have worked in
practice since the coordination
regulations were promulgated in 2002.
Several issues regarding the conduct
prong are addressed below.
A. The ‘‘Request or Suggest’’ Conduct
Standard (11 CFR 109.21(d)(1))
In the NPRM, the Commission invited
comment on whether a communication
that is paid for by a person other than
a candidate, authorized committee,
political party committee, or their
agents and that satisfies the first
46 The Commission also determined in Advisory
Opinion 2003–25 that the proposed advertisement
did not PASO the endorsing Federal candidate.
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conduct standard (i.e., it is made at the
request or suggestion of a candidate or
a political party) should automatically
qualify as a coordinated communication
without also having to satisfy one of the
content standards. Specifically, the
Commission asked whether a public
communication paid for by another
person that is made at the request or
suggestion of a candidate or a political
party committee presumptively has
value to that candidate, or political
party, regardless of its timing or content.
One commenter supported this
proposal generally, while all other
commenters addressing this issue
opposed it. This latter group of
commenters asserted that the proposal
could turn ‘‘grassroots lobbying,’’ or
issue advocacy communications, into
in-kind contributions solely because the
communication was created at the
request or suggestion of a candidate or
political party committee. One
commenter stated that ‘‘[a]n officeholder
that suggests that his constituents
engage in grassroots lobbying is not
suggesting that the constituents engage
in communications that are for the
purpose of influencing an election.’’
Another commenter asserted that a
request or suggestion by a candidate
should not be enough to show that a
communication is a coordinated
communication under the Commission’s
regulations because ‘‘[a]bsent some
other indicia of an electoral nexus, the
fact that a communication is made at the
request or suggestion of a candidate is
not sufficient to demonstrate that it is
the functional equivalent of a campaign
contribution.’’ Additionally, another
commenter stated that ‘‘interactions
between members of Congress or staff
with citizens and citizens groups on
legislative issues, strategies, and
policies do NOT automatically taint
subsequent public communications
regarding that issue, legislation or
matter by the citizens or citizens
group.’’ (emphasis in original).
The Commission agrees with these
commenters that the ‘‘request or
suggestion’’ conduct prong should not
be amended. In BCRA floor debate,
Senator McCain clarified that:
[N]othing in the section 214 should or can be
read to suggest * * * that lobbying meetings
between a group and a candidate concerning
legislative issues could alone lead to a
conclusion that ads that the group runs
subsequently concerning the legislation that
was the subject of the meeting are
coordinated with the candidate * * *. We do
not intend for the FEC to promulgate rules,
however, that would lead to a finding of
coordination solely because the organization
that runs such ads has previously had
lobbying contacts with a candidate.
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148 Cong. Rec. S2145 (daily ed. Mar. 20,
2002) (statement of Sen. McCain).
When the Commission promulgated
the 2002 Coordination Final Rules, it
stated that ‘‘the Commission believes
that a content standard provides a clear
and useful component of a coordination
definition in that it helps ensure that the
coordination regulations do not
inadvertently encompass
communications that are not made for
the purpose of influencing a federal
election.’’ 2002 Coordination Final
Rules, 68 FR 421, 426. The Court of
Appeals recognized that ‘‘statements
may relate to political or legislative
goals independent from any electoral
race—goals like influencing legislators’’
votes or increasing public awareness’’
and that ‘‘the FEC could construe the
expenditure definition’s purposive
language as leaving space for
collaboration between politicians and
outsiders on legislative and political
issues involving only a weak nexus to
any electoral campaign.’’ Shays Appeal
at 99. Therefore, consistent with the
Court of Appeals’ observations and the
comments received in this proceeding,
and in order to ensure that the
coordination regulations are tailored to
reach only communications made for
the purpose of influencing a Federal
election, the Commission is not
amending the ‘‘request or suggest’’
conduct standard.
B. ‘‘Common Vendor’’ and ‘‘Former
Employee’’ Conduct Standards (11 CFR
109.21(d)(4) and (5))
The fourth and fifth conduct
standards involve common vendors and
former employees, respectively. See 11
CFR 109.21(d)(4) and (5). These two
conduct standards implement the
requirement of BCRA that the
Commission address ‘‘the use of a
common vendor’’ and ‘‘persons who
previously served as an employee of a
candidate or a political party’’ in the
context of coordination. See BCRA, Pub.
L. 107–155, sec. 214(c)(2) and (3) (2002).
The ‘‘common vendor’’ conduct
standard in the 2002 coordination rules
is satisfied if (1) the person paying for
a communication contracts with, or
employs, a ‘‘commercial vendor’’ to
create, produce, or distribute the
communication; (2) the commercial
vendor has provided one or more
specified types of services, within the
‘‘current election cycle,’’ 47 to the clearly
47 The term ‘‘election cycle’’ is defined in 11 CFR
100.3(b) (‘‘An election cycle shall begin on the first
day following the date of the previous general
election for the office or seat which the candidate
seeks * * * The election cycle shall end on the
date on which the general election for the office or
seat that the individual seeks is held.’’).
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identified candidate, or the candidate’s
authorized committee, the candidate’s
opponent, the opponent’s authorized
committee or political party committee;
and (3) the commercial vendor uses or
conveys information about the
campaign plans, projects, activities, or
needs of the candidate or political party
committee that is material to the
creation, production, or distribution of
the communication obtained from the
work done for the candidate or political
party committee when working for the
person paying for the communication.
See former 11 CFR 109.21(d)(4).
Similarly, the ‘‘former employee’’
conduct standard in the 2002
coordination rules is satisfied if (1) the
person paying for a communication was,
or is, employing a person who was a
former employee or independent
contractor, within the ‘‘current election
cycle,’’ of the clearly identified
candidate or the political party
committee referred to in the
communication; and (2) the former
employee uses or conveys material
information about the plans, projects,
activities, or needs of the candidate or
political party committee obtained from
work done for the candidate or political
party committee when working for the
person paying for the communication.
See former 11 CFR 109.21(d)(5).
The NPRM sought comment on
whether these two conduct standards
should be limited to cover only common
vendors and former employees who are
agents of a candidate or political party,
and whether the Commission should
change the temporal limit of the
‘‘current election cycle’’ in the
standards. The Commission has decided
not to limit these conduct standards to
agents, but to revise the temporal limit
in the common vendor and former
employee conduct standards to
encompass 120 days rather than the
entire ‘‘current election cycle.’’
1. Agents
First, the Commission sought
comment on whether it should change
the coordinated communication
regulations to cover common vendors
and former employees only if they are
agents of the candidate or political party
committee under the Commission’s
definition of ‘‘agent’’ in 11 CFR 109.3.
The NPRM also asked if the Commission
should instead eliminate the common
vendor and former employee conduct
standards since restricting these
standards to agents would render these
standards superfluous because, if
limited to agents, the conduct of former
employees and common vendors would
already be covered by the first three
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conduct standards at 11 CFR
109.21(d)(1) through (d)(3).
The commenters were divided as to
whether restricting these conduct
standards to agents, or eliminating the
standards completely, was within the
Commission’s statutory authority. Some
commenters argued that BCRA sections
214(c)(2) and (3) did not mandate that
the Commission restrict common
vendors and former employees, but only
that the Commission consider these
issues when deciding what coordination
rules to adopt. These commenters
argued that the Commission is
authorized to restrict or eliminate these
standards after proper consideration of
the issue. In contrast, other commenters
argued that limiting the common vendor
and former employee conduct standards
would ‘‘fundamentally compromise’’
the purpose and intent of BCRA’s
requirement.
After consideration of the comments
and the BCRA provisions regarding
common vendors and former
employees, the Commission has decided
not to change the conduct standards in
this manner at this time. The
Commission recognizes that these
conduct standards focus on the conduct
of third party vendors and former
employees who might no longer be the
candidate’s or political party
committee’s agents, and therefore apply
to some persons not covered by the
other conduct standards. However,
under 11 CFR 109.21(b)(2), a candidate
or a political party committee with
whom a communication is coordinated
does not receive or accept an in-kind
contribution if the coordination only
results from conduct under the common
vendor and former employee standards.
See 11 CFR 109.21(b)(2). Coupled with
this pre-existing safeguard, these
conduct standards continue to apply
regardless of whether the common
vendor or former employee would be
considered an agent under 11 CFR
109.3.
2. Election Cycle Temporal Limit
The NPRM also sought comment
regarding whether the Commission
should revise the current ‘‘election
cycle’’ temporal limit in the common
vendor and former employee conduct
standards. Many commenters suggested
that including the entire election cycle
in the conduct standard was overinclusive, especially with regard to sixyear Senate election cycles. One
commenter noted that the ‘‘revolving
door’’ ethics rules for Congress limit
subsequent employment for only one
year, and argued that no other ethics
rule included as long a period as the
current rule in these conduct standards.
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One commenter observed that a
‘‘temporal limit of an entire election
cycle creates significant and
unnecessary legal risks for individuals
who are not in a position to violate the
coordination rules.’’ Many commenters
observed that information relevant to
the common vendor and former
employee conduct standards, such as
campaign strategy, tends to have a ‘‘very
short shelf life,’’ that is, it becomes
irrelevant quickly during an election
year. Some commenters suggested
revising the temporal limit to a 60-day
period based upon the Commission’s
long-standing rule at 11 CFR 106.4(g)
regarding the valuation of polling
information, which treats poll results
that are between 61 to 180 days old as
‘‘worth’’ only 5 percent of their initial
value. Poll results more than 180 days
old need not be reported as having any
value. See 11 CFR 106.4(g).
In contrast, other commenters
opposed any shortening of the temporal
limit for these conduct standards. These
commenters argued that the 2002 rule
properly addresses the danger of
coordination presented by candidates’
campaign committees and political
party committees using common
vendors and by individual employees
moving back and forth between different
candidates and political party
committees during the same election
cycle. These commenters stated that the
‘‘election cycle’’ temporal limit was a
bright-line rule appropriately drawn by
the Commission to avoid the dangers of
coordination.
The Commission explained in the
2002 Coordination Final Rules that the
temporal limit in the common vendor
and former employee standards was not
intended to serve as a ‘‘cooling off’’
period where employment was
forbidden. 2002 Coordination Final
Rules at 438. Nevertheless, many
commenters noted that the ‘‘election
cycle’’ temporal limit operated in
practice as a ‘‘period of
disqualification’’ in which a vendor or
former employee may not work on any
particular matter for particular clients
merely because that vendor or employee
once worked with a candidate or
political party at some point during the
election cycle. These commenters stated
that the rule had a ‘‘chilling effect’’ on
the retention of consultants and
employees because organizations want
to avoid the speculative allegations of
improper coordination. One commenter
asserted that the ‘‘election cycle’’
temporal limit ‘‘caused substantial harm
to individuals who lacked any material
information that could be used for
coordination purposes, and yet who
were targeted in FEC complaints.’’
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These commenters described the
difficult process that political
committees use to interview and
investigate commercial vendors, many
of whom are in short supply, to
determine if the commercial vendor is
‘‘tainted’’ under these standards before
contracting with these vendors for
political work. The record also indicates
that some commercial vendors feel
compelled under this rule to refuse
work from political committees near the
beginning of an election cycle in order
to preserve the ability to work for a
political party or a candidate as the
election approaches.
After considering the comments,
which reflect experience in the recent
election cycles under these rules, the
Commission concludes that an ‘‘election
cycle’’ limit is overly broad and
unnecessary to the effective
implementation of the coordination
provisions. The more appropriate
temporal limit for the common vendor
and former employee conduct standards
is 120 days. This temporal limit begins
on the last day of the most recent
employment or provision of services,
not on the dates when the
communication is publicly distributed
or is paid for. Therefore, the 120-day
period starts on the last day of an
individual’s employment with a
candidate or political party committee,
or on the last day when a commercial
vendor performed any of the services
listed in 11 CFR 109.21(d)(4)(ii) for a
candidate or political party committee.
If the former employee or commercial
vendor performs any work for the
candidate or political party committee
after the official termination of
employment or contract, including any
projects or plans formulated during the
employment or contractual relationship
to be performed after official
termination, the calculation of the 120day period will restart from that date.
Thus, under the Commission’s revised
rule, the 120-day period begins on the
last day that goods or services are
provided.
Reducing the temporal limit to 120
days will not undermine the
effectiveness of the conduct standards
and will not lead to circumvention of
the Act. The record in this rulemaking
indicates that material information
regarding candidate and political party
committee ‘‘campaigns, strategy, plans,
needs, and activities’’—the information
that is central to the common vendor
and former employee conduct
standards—does not remain ‘‘material’’
for long periods of time during an
election cycle. Indeed, both national
and local events tend to render
campaign plans and strategy obsolete on
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a very rapid basis. Moreover, as some
commenters noted, much of the
information gained working for
candidates during primary races
becomes largely irrelevant for general
elections. As one commenter noted:
If you’re involved in a primary race and
you’ve got a competitive primary, you are
totally focused on how to win the
nomination. And all your polling and all the
information that you’re getting; all the
strategy that you’re working out is basically
focused on how do you win that election. It
is an entirely different process when you get
into the general election * * * The
information you had about a primary is
[largely] irrelevant * * * [W]hat is
happening in the world in June could be very
different by the time you get to October or
September * * * [Y]ou’re not going to have
a lot of relevant information that’s going to
make a difference anyway.
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Thus, the Commission agrees that it is
unlikely that participation in early
strategy decisions for a Senate candidate
in the beginning of a six-year election
cycle provides material information that
is relevant and useful to a
communication created five years later
in the final stages of the general election
campaign, or even six months later. This
approach is consistent with the
Commission’s polling regulations,
which recognize that polling
information quickly loses its value with
the passage of time. See 11 CFR
106.4(g).
Based on all the evidence and
comments received by the Commission
and the Commission’s experience in
enforcing the common vendor
regulations in prior enforcement
actions, the Commission concludes that
a limit of 120 days is more than
sufficient to reduce the risk of
circumvention of the Act.
C. Safe Harbor for the Use of Publicly
Available Information (11 CFR
109.21(d)(2)–(5))
In the NPRM, the Commission sought
comment on whether to create a safe
harbor for the use of publicly available
information. Specifically, the safe
harbor was proposed to ensure that the
use or conveyance of publicly available
information in creating, producing, or
distributing a communication would
not, in and of itself, satisfy any of the
conduct standards in 11 CFR 109.21(d).
All commenters addressing this issue
supported a safe harbor to some extent.
The Commission agrees and is adding a
safe harbor for the use of publicly
available information. Although the safe
harbor proposed in the NPRM would
have applied to all five conduct
standards and would have been set forth
in a new paragraph, the Commission has
decided that the new safe harbor more
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appropriately applies to only four of the
five conduct standards, and is being
added to the paragraphs currently
containing those four conduct
standards.
Some commenters expressed concern
that the safe harbor proposed in the
NPRM would preclude certain
communications from satisfying the
coordinated communications test
simply because a portion of a given
communication was based on publicly
available information, even if a
candidate privately conveyed a request
that a communication be made. To
address this concern, the new safe
harbor does not apply to the ‘‘request or
suggestion’’ conduct standard in 11 CFR
109.21(d)(1). Moreover, the four conduct
standards that are being revised to
include a safe harbor for the use of
publicly available information all
concern conduct that conveys material
information that is subsequently used to
create a communication, whereas the
‘‘request or suggestion’’ conduct
standard concerns only a candidate’s or
political party’s request or suggestion
that a communication be created,
produced or distributed, and is not
dependent upon the nature of
information conveyed. See 11 CFR
109.21(d)(2) (requiring material
involvement regarding the
communication’s content, intended
audience, means or mode, specific
media outlet, timing or frequency, and
size, prominence, or duration);
109.21(d)(3) (requiring a substantial
discussion about campaign plans,
projects, activities, or needs); and
109.21(d)(4) and (5) (requiring use or
conveyance by a common vendor or
former employee of information about
campaign plans, projects, activities, or
needs). Thus, new language in
paragraphs 109.21(d)(2), (d)(3),
(d)(4)(iii), and (d)(5)(ii) explains that the
conduct standards contained in 11 CFR
109.21(d)(2) through (d)(5) are not
satisfied if the information material to
the creation, production, or distribution
of the communication was obtained
from a publicly available source.
Under the new safe harbor, a
communication created with
information found, for instance, on a
candidate’s or political party’s Web site,
or learned from a public campaign
speech, is not a coordinated
communication if that information is
subsequently used in connection with a
communication. The Commission
emphasizes that this treatment of the
use of publicly available information is
consistent with the Commission’s
historical treatment of the use of such
information. See 2002 Coordination
Final Rules, 68 FR at 432–434 (noting
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that the conduct standards would not
apply to ‘‘a speech at a campaign rally’’
and could not be satisfied by ‘‘a speech
to the general public’’); see also FEC v.
Public Citizen, 64 F. Supp. 2d 1327
(N.D. Ga. 1999) (finding that an
organization’s expenditures for
communications supporting a candidate
did not qualify as coordinated
expenditures because the organization
used information disseminated to the
public by the candidate’s campaign).
This treatment is also consistent with
legislative history indicating that certain
conduct does not amount to
coordination. See H.R. Conf. Rep. No.
94–1057, at 38 (April 28, 1976) (‘‘[A]
general request for assistance in a
speech to a group of persons by itself
should not be considered to be a
‘‘suggestion’’ that such persons make an
expenditure to further such election or
defeat.’’).
To qualify for the safe harbor, the
person paying for the communication
bears the burden of showing that the
information used in creating, producing,
or distributing the communication was
obtained from a publicly available
source. The person paying for the
communication may meet this burden
in a wide variety of ways. For example,
the person paying for a communication
may demonstrate that media buying
strategies regarding a communication
were based on information obtained
from a television station’s public
inspection file, and not on private
communications with a candidate or
political party committee.48 Other
sources of public information for the
purposes of the safe harbor include, but
are not limited to: Newspaper or
magazine articles; candidate speeches or
interviews; materials on a candidate’s
Web site or other publicly available Web
site; transcripts from television shows;
and press releases.
The Commission emphasizes that a
communication that does not fall within
this safe harbor will not automatically
be presumed to satisfy the conduct
prong of the coordinated
communication test. For a coordinated
communication to be established, the
use of such non-public information
must satisfy the conduct prongs, and the
communication must also satisfy the
content and payment prongs.
48 See, e.g., Matter Under Review (‘‘MUR’’) 5506
(EMILY’s List), First General Counsel’s Report at 7
(the Committee ‘‘states that it made its decisions
about placing and pulling ads based on information
that television stations are required to make
public.’’)
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D. Safe Harbor for Establishment and
Use of a Firewall (New 11 CFR
109.21(h))
The NPRM sought comment on
whether to create a rebuttable
presumption that a common vendor or
former employee has not engaged in
coordinated conduct under 11 CFR
109.21(d)(4) or (5), if the vendor or
employee has taken certain specified
actions, such as the use of ‘‘firewalls,’’
to ensure that no information about the
campaign plans, projects, activities, or
needs of a candidate or political party
committee that is material to the
creation, production or distribution of
the communication is used or conveyed
to a third party. The NPRM did not
include any proposed regulatory text.
The NPRM also discussed the
Commission’s finding in a recent
enforcement matter that the facts
produced by a respondent indicating
that a firewall had been established
within a political committee were
sufficient to refute allegations of
coordination under the first three
conduct standards in 11 CFR
109.21(d)(1)–(3). See MUR 5506
(EMILY’s List), First General Counsel’s
Report at 5–8.
Many commenters supported the idea
of a safe harbor and argued that a
candidate, political party committee, or
other organization should be able to rely
upon assurances from a commercial
vendor that it maintains a firewall to
prevent any coordination with one of
the vendor’s other clients. Some
commenters urged the Commission to
codify its analysis in MUR 5506 and
implement a safe harbor with respect to
all of the conduct standards. These
commenters argued that a safe harbor
applicable to all conduct standards
would reduce the ‘‘chilling effect’’ of the
coordination rules with regard to
organizations conducting lobbyingrelated meetings with officeholders who
are also candidates and would
encourage and enhance compliance
with the coordination regulations. Many
commenters also supported a firewall
safe harbor as a way for organizations to
respond to speculative complaints
alleging coordination when
organizations are faced with trying to
‘‘prove a negative’’ by showing that
coordination did not occur.
Some commenters described various
approaches that political party
committees and other committees have
used in the past to avoid the possibility
of coordination when some employees
of a committee work on independent
expenditures at the same time that other
employees of the committee work with
candidates or political party committees
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on lobbying or other issues. The
commenters described how specific
employees are placed on separate teams
(or ‘‘silos’’) within the organization, so
that information does not pass between
the employees who work on
independent expenditures and the
employees who work with candidates
and their agents.
As these commenters noted, the
Supreme Court has recognized that
political party committees have the right
to make unlimited independent
expenditures 49 and that establishing
firewalls and similar screening policies
is an effective way to simultaneously
protect that right and avoid improper
coordination. Other commenters
opposed the creation of a firewall safe
harbor, arguing that such a safe harbor
could compromise BCRA.
The Commission has decided to add
a safe harbor provision at new 11 CFR
109.21(h) regarding the establishment
and use of a firewall. This safe harbor
codifies the Commission’s conclusions
in MUR 5506 (EMILY’s List). The
Commission concludes that it is
possible for a commercial vendor or
other employer to create an effective
firewall between different employees or
between different units within its
organization that prevents information
obtained from one client from being
used on behalf of another, and thereby
prevents its staff from conveying
information from one client to another.
Similarly, a political committee with an
effective firewall can prevent
involvement by, and discussions
between, a candidate or political party
committee and the individuals creating
the communication. In the context of a
political party committee, use of a
firewall can ensure that staff responsible
for the party’s coordinated party
expenditures do not share or convey
information to staff who are
simultaneously exercising the party’s
constitutional right to make unlimited
independent expenditures.50
Accordingly, the new regulation
provides that the conduct standards in
11 CFR 109.21(d) are not met if a
commercial vendor, former employee,
or political committee has designed and
implemented an effective firewall that
meets the requirements of this new
provision. In order to be eligible for the
safe harbor, the firewall must be
49 See Colorado Republican Federal Campaign
Committee v. Federal Election Commission, 518
U.S. 604, 614, 618 (1996).
50 In McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 213–214
(2003), the Supreme Court struck down a provision
of BCRA (sec. 213) that required political parties to
choose between making coordinated and
independent expenditures after nominating a
candidate.
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designed and implemented to prohibit
the flow of information about the
candidate’s or political party
committee’s campaign plans, projects,
activities, or needs between those
employees or consultants providing
services for the person paying for the
communication and those employees or
consultants who currently provide, or
previously provided, services for the
candidate who is clearly identified in
the communication, or the candidate’s
authorized committee, the candidate’s
opponent, the opponent’s authorized
committee, or a political party
committee. See new 11 CFR
109.21(h)(1).
The safe harbor provision does not
dictate specific procedures required to
prevent the flow of information
referenced in new 109.21(h) because a
firewall is more effective if established
and implemented by each organization
in light of its specific organization,
clients, and personnel. One example of
procedures that, if implemented, would
satisfy this first requirement is the
firewall described by EMILY’s List in
MUR 5506. That organization’s firewall
procedures stated that employees,
volunteers, and consultants who handle
advertising buys were ‘‘barred, as a
matter of policy, from interacting with
Federal candidates, political party
committees, or the agents of the
foregoing. These employees, volunteers,
and consultants [were] also barred from
interacting with others within EMILY’s
List regarding specified candidates or
officeholders.’’ See MUR 5506 (EMILY’s
List), First General Counsel’s Report at
6–7. The EMILY’s List firewall
prohibited personnel who worked
directly with the candidate committees
from discussing and conveying material
information to the staff who handled the
advertising buys.
Any firewall must also be described
in a written policy that is distributed to
all relevant employees, consultants and
clients affected by the policy. See new
11 CFR 109.21(h)(2). ‘‘All relevant
employees’’ includes all employees or
consultants actually providing services
to the person paying for the
communication or the candidate or
political party committee. To ensure
that the firewall is in place before any
information is shared between the
relevant employees, the written firewall
policy should be distributed to all
relevant employees before those
employees begin work on the
communication referencing the
candidate or political party. In an
enforcement context, the Commission
will weigh the credibility and
specificity of any allegation of
coordination against the credibility and
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specificity of the facts presented in the
response showing that the elements of
the safe harbor are satisfied. A person
paying for a communication seeking to
use the firewall safe harbor should be
prepared to provide reliable information
(e.g., affidavits) about an organization’s
firewall, and how and when the firewall
policy was distributed and
implemented.
The Commission notes that common
leadership or overlapping
administrative personnel does not
defeat the use of a firewall. Moreover,
mere contact or communications
between persons on either side of a
firewall does not compromise the
firewall, as long as the firewall prevents
information about the candidate’s or
political party committee’s campaign
plans, projects, activities or needs from
passing between persons on either side
of the firewall.
Once a firewall has been established,
for the firewall to be vitiated and the
safe harbor to be inapplicable, material
information about the candidate’s or
political party committee’s campaign
plans, projects, activities or needs must
pass between persons on either side of
the firewall. The safe harbor does not
apply if there is specific information
indicating that, despite the firewall,
either (1) information about the
candidate’s or political party
committee’s campaign plans, projects,
activities or needs that is material to the
creation, production, or distribution of
the communication was used by the
commercial vendor, former employee,
or political committee; or (2) the
common vendor, former employee, or
political committee conveyed this
information to the person paying for the
communication. See new 11 CFR
109.21(h). The Commission emphasizes
that the addition of this firewall safe
harbor provision to the coordinated
communication rules does not require
commercial vendors, former employees
and political committees to use a
firewall. The Commission will not draw
a negative inference from the lack of
such a screening policy.
VII. Amendment to the Payment Prong
(11 CFR 109.21(a)(1))
The Commission is amending the
payment prong (11 CFR 109.21(a)(1)) of
the Commission’s coordinated
communication test to read, ‘‘Is paid for,
in whole or in part, by a person other
than that candidate, authorized
committee, or political party
committee.’’ The addition of ‘‘in whole
or in part’’ clarifies that the payment
prong is satisfied not only when a
person other than the candidate, the
candidate’s authorized committee, or
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political party committee, pays for the
entire cost of a communication, but also
if that person pays for only part of the
costs. This clarification is consistent
with the approach the Commission has
taken in previous advisory opinions.
See Advisory Opinions 2004–29 (Akin)
and 2004–01 (Bush-Cheney/Kerr). The
Commission notes that where a
candidate or political party committee
pays its allocable share of a joint
communication, the payment prong has
not been triggered and the
communication is not a coordinated
communication with respect to that
candidate or political party.
VIII. Political Party Coordinated
Communication Provisions (11 CFR
109.37)
In the NPRM, the Commission noted
that the party coordinated
communication regulations at 11 CFR
109.37 also contain a three-prong test
for determining whether a
communication is coordinated between
a candidate and a political party
committee. This ‘‘party coordinated
communication’’ test in 11 CFR 109.37,
which governs coordinated
communications paid for by political
party committees, has a content prong
that is substantially the same as the one
for ‘‘coordinated communications’’ in
11 CFR 109.21(c).51 See 11 CFR
109.37(a)(2). Although the party
coordinated communication regulations
were not addressed in the Shays
litigation, the Commission sought
comment on whether it should make
any changes to the 120-day time frame
in 11 CFR 109.37 consistent with any
changes made to the coordinated
communication rules in 11 CFR 109.21.
One commenter focused solely on this
issue and encouraged the Commission
to retain the 120-day time frame while
adding a PASO standard. Other
commenters noted only that their
comments on this issue are the same as
their comments on the coordinated
communication rules in 11 CFR 109.21
regarding the 120-day time frame.
The Commission is revising its rules
regarding party coordinated
communications to ensure consistency
with the revisions to the fourth content
standard at 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4). Thus,
revised section 109.37(a)(2)(iii), like
revised section 109.21(c)(4), establishes
51 11 CFR 109.37(a)(2) differs from 11 CFR
109.21(c) in two ways: first, it does not contain a
separate content standard for electioneering
communications and, second, the content standard
in section 109.37(a)(2)(iii), the equivalent of the
fourth content standard in section 109.21(c)(4), can
be satisfied only by reference to a clearly identified
Federal candidate and not, as in section
109.21(c)(4), also by reference to a political party.
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separate time frames for
communications referring to
Congressional and Presidential
candidates. For communications
referring to Congressional candidates in
primary and general elections, the
revised time frame begins 90 days before
each election and ends on the date of
that election. For communications
referring to Presidential candidates, the
revised time frame covers, on a State-byState basis, the entire period of time
beginning 120 days before the date of a
primary up to and including the date of
the general election. Because the
content standard in 11 CFR 109.37(a)(2)
is not satisfied by a communication that
refers only to a political party, revised
11 CFR 109.37, unlike revised 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4), does not contain a separate
time frame for communications that
refer to political parties.
The justification for the revised time
frame in 11 CFR 109.37(a)(2)(iii) is the
same as the justification for the revision
of 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4). The CMAG data
show that in the 2004 election cycle,
nearly all television advertisements paid
for by House and Senate candidates
were aired within 90 days before
primary or general elections and that
nearly all advertisements paid for by
Presidential candidates were aired
during the time period that begins 120
days before a State’s primary election up
to and including the date of the general
election. As discussed above, data
showing when candidates spend their
own campaign funds on advertisements
provide an empirical basis for
determining when advertising that has
the purpose of influencing a Federal
election occurs. Moreover, a candidate
has an incentive to ask a political party
committee to pay for advertisements to
be aired precisely during the time
period when the candidate believes
these advertisements would be effective,
which, as shown above, are the time
periods when the candidate herself pays
for such advertisements to be aired. The
CMAG data, therefore, provide
empirical support for using the revised
time frames as part of a bright-line test
for determining whether a
communication that is paid for by a
political party committee and is
coordinated with a candidate is made
for the purpose of influencing Federal
elections. Finally, the Commission has
been presented with no evidence that
the revised time frame in 11 CFR
109.37(a)(2)(iii) would permit
circumvention of the Act.
For the reasons discussed above, the
Commission also incorporates into 11
CFR 109.37 the safe harbor provisions at
new 11 CFR 109.21(d)(2)–(5) for use of
publicly available information, as well
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as the safe harbors at new 11 CFR
109.21(g) and (h) for endorsements and
solicitations by Federal candidates, and
for the establishment and use of a
firewall.
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IX. Technical Changes Including
Amendments to References to ‘‘Agents’’
(11 CFR 109.20, 109.21, and 109.23)
The Commission is also making
certain technical, non-substantive
changes to its coordinated
communication rules to simplify them
and enhance readability. One technical
change of note is that the Commission
is adding a sentence to 11 CFR 109.20(a)
that explains that any reference in the
coordinated communication rules to a
candidate, a candidate’s authorized
committee, or a political party
committee, also refers to any agent of
the candidate, the candidate’s
authorized committee, or the political
party committee. The Commission is
adding this sentence to make explicit
that an agent is included whenever a
candidate, an authorized committee, or
a political party committee is
referenced, in order to remove the
duplicative references to agents in 11
CFR 109.21 and 109.23.
Certification of No Effect Pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 605(b) (Regulatory Flexibility
Act)
The Commission certifies that the
attached rules do not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The basis for
this certification is that any individuals
and not-for-profit entities that are
affected by these rules are not ‘‘small
entities’’ under 5 U.S.C. 601. The
definition of ‘‘small entity’’ does not
include individuals, but classifies a notfor-profit enterprise as a ‘‘small
organization’’ if it is independently
owned and operated and not dominant
in its field. 5 U.S.C. 601(4).
Moreover, any State, district, and
local party committees that are affected
by these proposed rules are not-forprofit committees that do not meet the
definition of ‘‘small organization.’’ State
political party committees are not
independently owned and operated
because they are not financed and
controlled by a small identifiable group
of individuals, and they are affiliated
with the larger national political party
organizations. In addition, the State
political party committees representing
the Democratic and Republican parties
have a major controlling influence
within the political arena of their State
and are thus dominant in their field.
District and local party committees are
generally considered affiliated with the
State committees and need not be
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considered separately. To the extent that
any State party committees representing
minor political parties or any other
political committees might be
considered ‘‘small organizations,’’ the
number that are affected by this
proposed rule is not substantial,
particularly the number that coordinate
communications with candidates or
other political committees in connection
with a Federal election.
Furthermore, any separate segregated
funds that are affected by these
proposed rules are not-for-profit
political committees that do not meet
the definition of ‘‘small organization’’
because they are financed by a
combination of individual contributions
and financial support for certain
expenses from corporations, labor
organizations, membership
organizations, or trade associations, and
therefore are not independently owned
and operated.
Most of the other political committees
that are affected by these proposed rules
are not-for-profit committees that do not
meet the definition of ‘‘small
organization.’’ Most political
committees are not independently
owned and operated because they are
not financed by a small identifiable
group of individuals. In addition, most
political committees rely on
contributions from a large number of
individuals to fund the committees’
operations and activities. To the extent
that any other entities fall within the
definition of ‘‘small entities,’’ any
economic impact of complying with
these rules is not significant.
With respect to commercial vendors
whose clients include candidates,
political party committees or other
political committees, the final rules
provide cost-effective methods for
complying with the Act that are not
required and that will reduce certain
regulatory restrictions. Thus, rather than
adding an economic burden, the rules
potentially have a beneficial economic
impact on such commercial vendors.
List of Subjects in 11 CFR Part 109
Elections, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
I For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Federal Election
Commission is amending Subchapter A
of Chapter I of Title 11 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 109—COORDINATED AND
INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES (2
U.S.C. 431(17), 441a(a) AND (d), AND
PUB. L. 107–155 SEC. 214(c))
1. The authority citation for part 109
continues to read as follows:
I
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Authority: 2 U.S.C. 431(17), 434(c),
438(a)(8), 441a, 441d; Sec. 214(c) of Pub. L.
107–155, 116 Stat. 81.
2. In § 109.20, paragraph (a) is revised
to read as follows:
I
§ 109.20
What does ‘‘coordinated’’ mean?
(a) Coordinated means made in
cooperation, consultation or concert
with, or at the request or suggestion of,
a candidate, a candidate’s authorized
committee, or a political party
committee. For purposes of this subpart
C, any reference to a candidate, or a
candidate’s authorized committee, or a
political party committee includes an
agent thereof.
*
*
*
*
*
I 3. Section 109.21 is revised as follows:
I a. Revise paragraph (a)(1);
I b. Revise paragraph (b)(2);
I c. Revise paragraphs (c)(2), (3), and
(4);
I d. Revise paragraphs (d)(1), (2), (3),
(4), and (5);
I e. Revise paragraph (e);
I f. Add paragraph (g);
I g. Add paragraph (h);
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
§ 109.21 What is a ‘‘coordinated
communication’’?
(a) * * *
(1) Is paid for, in whole or in part, by
a person other than that candidate,
authorized committee, or political party
committee;
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) In-kind contributions resulting
from conduct described in paragraphs
(d)(4) or (d)(5) of this section.
Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, the candidate, authorized
committee, or political party committee
with whom or which a communication
is coordinated does not receive or
accept an in-kind contribution, and is
not required to report an expenditure,
that results from conduct described in
paragraphs (d)(4) or (d)(5) of this
section, unless the candidate,
authorized committee, or political party
committee engages in conduct described
in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) A public communication, as
defined in 11 CFR 100.26, that
disseminates, distributes, or
republishes, in whole or in part,
campaign materials prepared by a
candidate or the candidate’s authorized
committee, unless the dissemination,
distribution, or republication is
excepted under 11 CFR 109.23(b). For a
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communication that satisfies this
content standard, see paragraph (d)(6) of
this section.
(3) A public communication, as
defined in 11 CFR 100.26, that expressly
advocates the election or defeat of a
clearly identified candidate for Federal
office.
(4) A public communication, as
defined in 11 CFR 100.26, that satisfies
paragraph (c)(4)(i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) of
this section:
(i) References to House and Senate
candidates. The public communication
refers to a clearly identified House or
Senate candidate and is publicly
distributed or otherwise publicly
disseminated in the clearly identified
candidate’s jurisdiction 90 days or fewer
before the clearly identified candidate’s
general, special, or runoff election, or
primary or preference election, or
nominating convention or caucus.
(ii) References to Presidential and
Vice Presidential candidates. The public
communication refers to a clearly
identified Presidential or Vice
Presidential candidate and is publicly
distributed or otherwise publicly
disseminated in a jurisdiction during
the period of time beginning 120 days
before the clearly identified candidate’s
primary or preference election in that
jurisdiction, or nominating convention
or caucus in that jurisdiction, up to and
including the day of the general
election.
(iii) References to political parties.
The public communication refers to a
political party, does not refer to a clearly
identified Federal candidate, and is
publicly distributed or otherwise
publicly disseminated in a jurisdiction
in which one or more candidates of that
political party will appear on the ballot.
(A) When the public communication
is coordinated with a candidate and it
is publicly distributed or otherwise
publicly disseminated in that
candidate’s jurisdiction, the time period
in paragraph (c)(4)(i) or (ii) of this
section that would apply to a
communication containing a reference
to that candidate applies;
(B) When the public communication
is coordinated with a political party
committee and it is publicly distributed
or otherwise publicly disseminated
during the two-year election cycle
ending on the date of a regularly
scheduled non-Presidential general
election, the time period in paragraph
(c)(4)(i) of this section applies;
(C) When the public communication
is coordinated with a political party
committee and it is publicly distributed
or otherwise publicly disseminated
during the two-year election cycle
ending on the date of a Presidential
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general election, the time period in
paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section
applies.
(iv) References to both political
parties and clearly identified Federal
candidates. The public communication
refers to a political party and a clearly
identified Federal candidate, and is
publicly distributed or otherwise
publicly disseminated in a jurisdiction
in which one or more candidates of that
political party will appear on the ballot.
(A) When the public communication
is coordinated with a candidate and it
is publicly distributed or otherwise
publicly disseminated in that
candidate’s jurisdiction, the time period
in paragraph (c)(4)(i) or (ii) of this
section that would apply to a
communication containing a reference
to that candidate applies;
(B) When the public communication
is coordinated with a political party
committee and it is publicly distributed
or otherwise publicly disseminated in
the clearly identified candidate’s
jurisdiction, the time period in
paragraph (c)(4)(i) or (ii) of this section
that would apply to a communication
containing only a reference to that
candidate applies;
(C) When the public communication
is coordinated with a political party
committee and it is publicly distributed
or otherwise publicly disseminated
outside the clearly identified
candidate’s jurisdiction, the time period
in paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(B) or (C) of this
section that would apply to a
communication containing only a
reference to a political party applies.
(d) * * *
(1) Request or suggestion. (i) The
communication is created, produced, or
distributed at the request or suggestion
of a candidate, authorized committee, or
political party committee; or
(ii) The communication is created,
produced, or distributed at the
suggestion of a person paying for the
communication and the candidate,
authorized committee, or political party
committee assents to the suggestion.
(2) Material involvement. This
paragraph, (d)(2), is not satisfied if the
information material to the creation,
production, or distribution of the
communication was obtained from a
publicly available source. A candidate,
authorized committee, or political party
committee is materially involved in
decisions regarding:
(i) The content of the communication;
(ii) The intended audience for the
communication;
(iii) The means or mode of the
communication;
(iv) The specific media outlet used for
the communication;
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(v) The timing or frequency of the
communication; or
(vi) The size or prominence of a
printed communication, or duration of a
communication by means of broadcast,
cable, or satellite.
(3) Substantial discussion. This
paragraph, (d)(3), is not satisfied if the
information material to the creation,
production, or distribution of the
communication was obtained from a
publicly available source. The
communication is created, produced, or
distributed after one or more substantial
discussions about the communication
between the person paying for the
communication, or the employees or
agents of the person paying for the
communication, and the candidate who
is clearly identified in the
communication, or the candidate’s
authorized committee, the candidate’s
opponent, the opponent’s authorized
committee, or a political party
committee. A discussion is substantial
within the meaning of this paragraph if
information about the candidate’s or
political party committee’s campaign
plans, projects, activities, or needs is
conveyed to a person paying for the
communication, and that information is
material to the creation, production, or
distribution of the communication.
(4) Common vendor. All of the
following statements in paragraphs
(d)(4)(i) through (d)(4)(iii) of this section
are true:
(i) The person paying for the
communication, or an agent of such
person, contracts with or employs a
commercial vendor, as defined in 11
CFR 116.1(c), to create, produce, or
distribute the communication;
(ii) That commercial vendor,
including any owner, officer, or
employee of the commercial vendor, has
provided any of the following services
to the candidate who is clearly
identified in the communication, or the
candidate’s authorized committee, the
candidate’s opponent, the opponent’s
authorized committee, or a political
party committee, during the previous
120 days:
(A) Development of media strategy,
including the selection or purchasing of
advertising slots;
(B) Selection of audiences;
(C) Polling;
(D) Fundraising;
(E) Developing the content of a public
communication;
(F) Producing a public
communication;
(G) Identifying voters or developing
voter lists, mailing lists, or donor lists;
(H) Selecting personnel, contractors,
or subcontractors; or
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(I) Consulting or otherwise providing
political or media advice; and
(iii) This paragraph, (d)(4)(iii), is not
satisfied if the information material to
the creation, production, or distribution
of the communication used or conveyed
by the commercial vendor was obtained
from a publicly available source. That
commercial vendor uses or conveys to
the person paying for the
communication:
(A) Information about the campaign
plans, projects, activities, or needs of
the clearly identified candidate, the
candidate’s opponent, or a political
party committee, and that information is
material to the creation, production, or
distribution of the communication; or
(B) Information used previously by
the commercial vendor in providing
services to the candidate who is clearly
identified in the communication, or the
candidate’s authorized committee, the
candidate’s opponent, the opponent’s
authorized committee, or a political
party committee, and that information is
material to the creation, production, or
distribution of the communication.
(5) Former employee or independent
contractor. Both of the following
statements in paragraphs (d)(5)(i) and
(d)(5)(ii) of this section are true:
(i) The communication is paid for by
a person, or by the employer of a
person, who was an employee or
independent contractor of the candidate
who is clearly identified in the
communication, or the candidate’s
authorized committee, the candidate’s
opponent, the opponent’s authorized
committee, or a political party
committee, during the previous 120
days; and
(ii) This paragraph, (d)(5)(ii), is not
satisfied if the information material to
the creation, production, or distribution
of the communication used or conveyed
by the former employee or independent
contractor was obtained from a publicly
available source. That former employee
or independent contractor uses or
conveys to the person paying for the
communication:
(A) Information about the campaign
plans, projects, activities, or needs of
the clearly identified candidate, the
candidate’s opponent, or a political
party committee, and that information is
material to the creation, production, or
distribution of the communication; or
(B) Information used by the former
employee or independent contractor in
providing services to the candidate who
is clearly identified in the
communication, or the candidate’s
authorized committee, the candidate’s
opponent, the opponent’s authorized
committee, or a political party
committee, and that information is
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15:35 Jun 07, 2006
Jkt 208001
material to the creation, production, or
distribution of the communication.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Agreement or formal collaboration.
Agreement or formal collaboration
between the person paying for the
communication and the candidate
clearly identified in the communication,
or the candidate’s authorized
committee, the candidate’s opponent,
the opponent’s authorized committee, or
a political party committee, is not
required for a communication to be a
coordinated communication. Agreement
means a mutual understanding or
meeting of the minds on all or any part
of the material aspects of the
communication or its dissemination.
Formal collaboration means planned, or
systematically organized, work on the
communication.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Safe harbor for endorsements and
solicitations by Federal candidates. (1)
A public communication in which a
candidate for Federal office endorses
another candidate for Federal or nonFederal office is not a coordinated
communication with respect to the
endorsing Federal candidate unless the
public communication promotes,
supports, attacks, or opposes the
endorsing candidate or another
candidate who seeks election to the
same office as the endorsing candidate.
(2) A public communication in which
a candidate for Federal office solicits
funds for another candidate for Federal
or non-Federal office, a political
committee, or organizations as
permitted by 11 CFR 300.65, is not a
coordinated communication with
respect to the soliciting Federal
candidate unless the public
communication promotes, supports,
attacks, or opposes the soliciting
candidate or another candidate who
seeks election to the same office as the
soliciting candidate.
(h) Safe harbor for establishment and
use of a firewall. The conduct standards
in paragraph (d) of this section are not
met if the commercial vendor, former
employee, or political committee has
established and implemented a firewall
that meets the requirements of
paragraphs (h)(1) and (h)(2) of this
section. This safe harbor provision does
not apply if specific information
indicates that, despite the firewall,
information about the candidate’s or
political party committee’s campaign
plans, projects, activities, or needs that
is material to the creation, production,
or distribution of the communication
was used or conveyed to the person
paying for the communication.
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
(1) The firewall must be designed and
implemented to prohibit the flow of
information between employees or
consultants providing services for the
person paying for the communication
and those employees or consultants
currently or previously providing
services to the candidate who is clearly
identified in the communication, or the
candidate’s authorized committee, the
candidate’s opponent, the opponent’s
authorized committee, or a political
party committee; and
(2) The firewall must be described in
a written policy that is distributed to all
relevant employees, consultants, and
clients affected by the policy.
I 4. In § 109.23, paragraph (b)(1) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 109.23 Dissemination, distribution, or
republication of candidate campaign
materials.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) The campaign material is
disseminated, distributed, or
republished by the candidate or the
candidate’s authorized committee who
prepared that material;
*
*
*
*
*
I 5. In § 109.37, paragraphs (a)(2) and
(3) are revised to read as follows:
§ 109.37 What is a ‘‘party coordinated
communication’’?
(a) * * *
(2) The communication satisfies at
least one of the content standards
described in paragraphs (a)(2)(i) through
(a)(2)(iii) of this section.
(i) A public communication that
disseminates, distributes, or
republishes, in whole or in part,
campaign materials prepared by a
candidate, the candidate’s authorized
committee, or an agent of any of the
foregoing, unless the dissemination,
distribution, or republication is
excepted under 11 CFR 109.23(b). For a
communication that satisfies this
content standard, see 11 CFR
109.21(d)(6).
(ii) A public communication that
expressly advocates the election or
defeat of a clearly identified candidate
for Federal office.
(iii) A public communication, as
defined in 11 CFR 100.26, that satisfies
paragraphs (a)(2)(iii)(A) or (B) of this
section:
(A) References to House and Senate
candidates. The public communication
refers to a clearly identified House or
Senate candidate and is publicly
distributed or otherwise publicly
disseminated in the clearly identified
candidate’s jurisdiction 90 days or fewer
before the clearly identified candidate’s
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general, special, or runoff election, or
primary or preference election, or
nominating convention or caucus.
(B) References to Presidential and
Vice Presidential candidates. The public
communication refers to a clearly
identified Presidential or Vice
Presidential candidate and is publicly
distributed or otherwise publicly
disseminated in a jurisdiction during
the period of time beginning 120 days
before the clearly identified candidate’s
primary or preference election in that
jurisdiction, or nominating convention
or caucus in that jurisdiction, up to and
including the day of the general
election.
(3) The communication satisfies at
least one of the conduct standards in 11
CFR 109.21(d)(1) through (d)(6), subject
to the provisions of 11 CFR 109.21(e),
(g), and (h). A candidate’s response to
an inquiry about that candidate’s
positions on legislative or policy issues,
but not including a discussion of
campaign plans, projects, activities, or
needs, does not satisfy any of the
conduct standards in 11 CFR
109.21(d)(1) through (d)(6).
Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, the candidate with whom a
party coordinated communication is
coordinated does not receive or accept
an in-kind contribution, and is not
required to report an expenditure that
results from conduct described in 11
CFR 109.21(d)(4) or (d)(5), unless the
candidate, authorized committee, or an
agent of any of the foregoing, engages in
conduct described in 11 CFR
109.21(d)(1) through (d)(3).
*
*
*
*
*
appeared in the Federal Register on
June 5, 2006 (71 FR 32272). This rule
corrects an inadvertent error in the
telephone number listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: section
of the preamble.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
[Corrected] Michael D. Turner, Director,
Office of Export Enforcement, Bureau of
Industry and Security, Department of
Commerce, P.O. Box 273, Washington,
DC 20044; Phone: (202) 482–1208, x3; Email: rpd2@bis.doc.gov; Fax: (202) 482–
0964.
Dated: June 2, 2006.
Michael E. Toner,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. 06–5195 Filed 6–7–06; 8:45 am]
SUMMARY: This final rule implements
Framework Adjustment 18 (Framework
18) to the Atlantic Sea Scallop Fishery
Management Plan (FMP), which was
developed by the New England Fishery
Management Council (Council). The
following management measures are
implemented by this rule: Scallop
fishery specifications for 2006 and 2007
(open area days-at-sea (DAS) and
Scallop Access Area trip allocations);
scallop Area Rotation Program
adjustments; and revisions to
management measures that would
improve administration of the FMP. In
addition, a seasonal closure of the
Elephant Trunk Access Area (ETAA) is
implemented to reduce potential
interactions between the scallop fishery
and sea turtles, and to reduce finfish
and scallop bycatch mortality.
DATES: Effective June 15, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Copies of Framework 18,
the Regulatory Impact Review (RIR),
including the Initial Regulatory
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Industry and Security
15 CFR Parts 736 and 744
[Docket No. 060531141–6141–01]
RIN: 0694–AD76
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with RULES
Correction to General Order
Concerning Mayrow General Trading
and Related Entities
Bureau of Industry and
Security, Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule; Correction
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Industry and
Security is correcting a final rule that
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Eileen Albanese,
Director, Office of Export Services.
[FR Doc. E6–8961 Filed 6–7–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–33–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 060314069–6138–002; I.D.
030306B]
RIN 0648–AT25
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Atlantic Sea Scallop Fishery;
Framework 18
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
33211
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA), and the
Environmental Assessment (EA) are
available on request from Paul J.
Howard, Executive Director, New
England Fishery Management Council
(Council), 50 Water Street,
Newburyport, MA 01950. These
documents are also available online at
https://www.nefmc.org. NMFS prepared
a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(FRFA), which is contained in the
Classification section of the preamble of
this rule. Copies of the FRFA and the
Small Entity Compliance Guide are
available from the Regional
Administrator, Northeast Regional
Office, NMFS, One Blackburn Drive,
Gloucester, MA 01930–2298, and are
also available via the internet at https://
www.nero.nmfs.gov.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this rule
should be submitted to the Regional
Administrator at One Blackburn Drive,
Gloucester, MA, 01930, and by e-mail to
David_Rostker@omb.eop.gov, or to the
Federal e-rulemaking portal https://
www.regulations.gov, or fax to (202)
395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Peter W. Christopher, Fishery Policy
Analyst, 978–281–9288; fax 978–281–
9135.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Council adopted Framework 18
to the Atlantic Sea Scallop FMP on
November 17, 2005, and submitted it to
NMFS on December 16, 2005, for review
and approval. Framework 18 was
developed and adopted by the Council
to meet the FMP’s requirement to adjust
biennially the management measures for
the scallop fishery. The FMP requires
the biennial adjustments to ensure that
measures meet the target fishing
mortality rate (F) and other goals of the
FMP and achieve optimum yield (OY)
from the scallop resource on a
continuing basis. A proposed rule for
Framework 18 was published on March
30, 2006 (71 FR 16091). The public
comment period for the proposed rule
ended on April 14, 2006. This rule
implements management measures for
the 2006 and 2007 fishing years, which
are described in detail below.
Approved Management Measures
In the proposed rule, NMFS requested
comments on all proposed management
measures, and specifically highlighted a
provision relating to the harvest of
research set-aside from within an
Access Area if the yellowtail flounder
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 110 (Thursday, June 8, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 33190-33211]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-5195]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Part 109
[Notice 2006-10]
Coordinated Communications
AGENCY: Federal Election Commission.
ACTION: Final rules and transmittal of rules to Congress.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Election Commission is revising its regulations
regarding communications that are coordinated with Federal candidates
and political party committees. The Commission's rules set out a three-
prong test for determining whether a communication is ``coordinated''
with, and therefore an in-kind contribution to, a Federal candidate or
a political party committee. These final rules implement the recent
decision of the Court of Appeals in Shays v. Federal Election
Commission, in which the court determined that the Commission needs to
provide a more complete explanation and justification for its rules
pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act. To comply with the
court's decision, and to address other issues involving the coordinated
communication rules, the Commission is issuing these Final Rules and
Explanation and Justification. Further information is provided in the
supplementary information that follows.
DATES: Effective July 10, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Brad C. Deutsch, Assistant General
Counsel, Mr. Ron B. Katwan, Ms. Margaret G. Perl, or Ms. Esa L. Sferra,
Attorneys, 999 E Street, NW., Washington, DC 20463, (202) 694-1650 or
(800) 424-9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Scope of Regulatory Changes
The Commission is revising its regulations regarding communications
that are coordinated with Federal candidates and political party
committees. The Commission is: (1) Revising the fourth content standard
at 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4) to establish separate time frames for
communications referring to political parties, Congressional and
Presidential candidates; (2) creating a safe harbor for certain
endorsements and solicitations by Federal candidates; (3) revising the
temporal limit of the common vendor and former employee conduct
standards; (4) creating a safe harbor for the use of publicly available
information; (5) creating a safe harbor for the establishment and use
of a firewall; (6) clarifying that the payment prong of the coordinated
communication test is satisfied if an outside person pays for only part
of the costs of a communication; and (7) revising 11 CFR 109.37 to
include the applicable time frame and safe harbor revisions in 11 CFR
109.21.
Transmission of Final Rules to Congress
Under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(d), and the
Congressional Review of Agency Rulemaking Act, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1),
agencies must submit final rules to the Speaker of the House of
Representatives and the President of the Senate and publish them in the
Federal Register at least 30 calendar days before they take effect. The
final rules that follow were transmitted to Congress on June 2, 2006.
Explanation and Justification
I. Background
A. Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act and 2002 Coordination Rulemaking
The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002,\1\ (``BCRA''), repealed
the Commission's pre-BCRA regulations regarding ``coordinated general
public political communications'' and directed the Commission to
promulgate new regulations on ``coordinated communications'' in their
place.\2\ Congress specified in BCRA that the Commission's new
regulations ``shall not require agreement or formal collaboration to
establish coordination.''
[[Page 33191]]
BCRA, sec. 214(c), 116 Stat. 81 at 95. ``Apart from this negative
command--`shall not require'--BCRA merely listed several topics the
rules `shall address,' providing no guidance as to how the FEC should
address them.'' Shays v. FEC, 414 F.3d 76, 97-98 (D.C. Cir. 2005). On
December 17, 2002, the Commission promulgated regulations as required
by BCRA. See 11 CFR 109.21; see also, Final Rules and Explanation and
Justification on Coordinated and Independent Expenditures, 68 FR 421
(Jan. 3, 2003) (``2002 Coordination Final Rules'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Pub. L. 107-155, 116 Stat. 81 (2002); amending the Federal
Election Campaign Act of 1971, as amended, 2 U.S.C. 431 et seq. (the
``Act'' or ``FECA'').
\2\ Pub. L. 107-155, sec. 214(b), (c) (2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission's 2002 coordinated communication regulations set
forth a three-prong test for determining whether a communication is a
coordinated communication, and therefore an in-kind contribution to,
and an expenditure by, a candidate, a candidate's authorized committee,
or a political party committee. See 11 CFR 109.21(a). First, the
communication must be paid for by someone other than a candidate, a
candidate's authorized committee, a political party committee, or their
agents (the ``payment prong''). See 11 CFR 109.21(a)(1). Second, the
communication must satisfy one of four content standards (the ``content
prong''). See 11 CFR 109.21(a)(2) and (c). Third, the communication
must satisfy one of five conduct standards (the ``conduct prong''). See
11 CFR 109.21(a)(3) and (d). A communication must satisfy all three
prongs to be a ``coordinated communication.''
B. Content Prong Challenged in Shays v. FEC
In 2003, Representatives Shays and Meehan brought suit in Federal
District Court challenging, among other Commission regulations, the
content prong of the Commission's coordination regulations. See Shays
v. FEC, 337 F. Supp. 2d 28 (D.D.C. 2004) (``Shays District''), aff'd,
Shays v. FEC, 414 F.3d 76 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (``Shays Appeal'') (pet. for
reh'g en banc denied Oct. 21, 2005) (No. 04-5352). The content prong is
comprised of four sub-categories of communications. A communication
that falls in any of the four categories satisfies the prong. The
purpose of the content prong is to ``ensure that the coordination
regulations do not inadvertently encompass communications that are not
made for the purpose of influencing a Federal election,'' and therefore
are not ``expenditures'' subject to regulation under the Act. See 2002
Coordination Final Rules at 426. Accordingly, each of the four content
standards that comprise the ``content prong'' identifies a category of
communications whose ``subject matter is reasonably related to an
election.'' Id. at 427.
The first content standard is satisfied if the communication is an
electioneering communication. See 11 CFR 109.21(c)(1).\3\ This content
standard implements the statutory directive that disbursements for
coordinated electioneering communications be treated as in-kind
contributions to, and expenditures by, the candidate or political party
supported by the communication.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Act and Commission regulations define an
``electioneering communication'' as any broadcast, cable, or
satellite communication that (1) refers to a clearly identified
candidate for Federal office; (2) is publicly distributed within 60
days before a general election or 30 days before a primary election
for the office sought by the candidate referenced in the
communication; and (3) can be received by 50,000 or more persons
within the geographic area that the candidate referenced in the
communication seeks to represent. See 2 U.S.C. 434(f)(3); 11 CFR
100.29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The second content standard is satisfied by a public communication
\4\ made at any time that disseminates, distributes, or republishes
campaign materials prepared by a candidate, a candidate's authorized
committee, or agents thereof. See 11 CFR 109.21(c)(2). This content
standard implements Congress's mandate that the Commission's rules on
coordinated communications address the ``republication of campaign
materials.'' See Pub. L. 107-155, sec. 214(c)(1) (2002). The Commission
concluded that communications that disseminate, distribute, or
republish campaign materials, no matter when such communications are
made, can be reasonably construed only as for the purpose of
influencing an election.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 11 CFR 100.26 defines a ``public communication'' as ``a
communication by means of any broadcast, cable or satellite
communication, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility,
mass mailing or telephone bank to the general public, or any other
form of general public political advertising. The term general
public political advertising shall not include communications over
the Internet, except for communications placed for a fee on another
person's Web site.'' See Final Rules and Explanation and
Justification: Internet Communications, 71 FR 18589 (published April
12, 2006; effective May 12, 2006); see also 2 U.S.C. 431(22).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The third content standard is satisfied if a public communication
made at any time expressly advocates \5\ the election or defeat of a
clearly identified candidate for Federal office. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(3). The Commission concluded that express advocacy
communications, no matter when such communications are made, can be
reasonably construed only as for the purpose of influencing an
election.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The term ``expressly advocating'' is defined in the
Commission's regulations at 11 CFR 100.22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The fourth content standard in the 2002 rule is satisfied if a
public communication (1) refers to a political party or a clearly
identified Federal candidate; (2) is publicly distributed or publicly
disseminated 120 days or fewer before an election; \6\ and (3) is
directed to voters in the jurisdiction of the clearly identified
Federal candidate or to voters in a jurisdiction in which one or more
candidates of the political party appear on the ballot. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4) (2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The term ``election'' includes general elections, primary
elections, runoff elections, caucuses or conventions, and special
elections. See 11 CFR 100.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In incorporating the 120-day time frame into the fourth content
standard, the Commission sought to create a bright-line rule that
provided clear guidance for those seeking to produce and distribute
public communications that do not republish campaign materials and do
not contain express advocacy, communications that are already covered
by the second and third content standards, respectively. The 120-day
time frame ``focuses the regulation on activity reasonably close to an
election, but not so distant from the election as to implicate
political discussion at other times.'' 2002 Coordination Final Rules at
430. The Commission noted that its intent was ``to require as little
characterization of the meaning or the content of the communication, or
inquiry into the subjective effect of the communication on the reader,
viewer, or listener as possible.'' Id. (citing Buckley v. Valeo, 424
U.S. 1, 42-44 (1976)). The Commission emphasized that the regulation
``is applied by asking if certain things are true or false about the
face of the public communication or with limited reference to external
facts on the public record.'' Id.
In adopting this time frame, the Commission relied in part on the
fact that, in BCRA, Congress defined ``Federal election activity''
(``FEA'') as, inter alia, voter registration activity ``during the
period that begins on the date that is 120 days'' before a Federal
election. The Commission concluded that, in doing so, Congress
``deem[ed] that period of time before an election to be reasonably
related to that election.'' Id. (citing 2 U.S.C. 431(20)(A)(i)).
1. Shays District Court Decision
The District Court held that the ``content prong'' of the
Commission's coordinated communication regulations satisfied the first
step of Chevron analysis, but did not satisfy the second
[[Page 33192]]
step of Chevron review.\7\ Shays District at 62-65. The District Court
concluded that limiting the coordinated communication definition to
communications that satisfy the content standards at 11 CFR
109.21(c)(1) through (4), ``undercuts FECA's statutory purposes and
therefore these aspects of the regulations are entitled to no
deference.'' Shays District at 65. The District Court reasoned that
communications that have been coordinated with a candidate, a
candidate's authorized committee, or a political party committee have
value for, and therefore are in-kind contributions to, that candidate
or committee, regardless of the content, timing, or geographic reach of
the communications. Id. at 63-64. Therefore, the Commission's exclusion
of communications under the 120-day test failed the second step of
Chevron review. Id. at 64-65.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The District Court described the first step of the Chevron
analysis, which courts use to review an agency's regulations: ``a
court first asks `whether Congress has directly spoken to the
precise question at issue. If the intent of Congress is clear, that
is the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the agency, must
give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.' ''
See Shays District at 51 (quoting Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
Res. Def. Council, 467 U.S. 837, 842-43 (1984)). According to the
District Court, in the second step of the Chevron analysis, the
court determines if the agency's interpretation is a permissible
construction of the statute that does not ``unduly compromise'' the
Act's purposes by ``creat[ing] the potential for gross abuse.'' See
Shays District at 91 (citing Orloski v. FEC, 795 F.2d 156, 164-65)
(D.C. Cir. 1986) (internal citations omitted).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Shays Court of Appeals Decision
The Commission appealed the District Court's decision. In 2005, a
three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
considered the Commission's appeal. See Shays Appeal at 97-102. The
Court of Appeals found that the Commission's regulations satisfied
Chevron step one, and, contrary to the District Court's opinion,
satisfied Chevron step two as well. Shays Appeal at 99-100. The Court
of Appeals concluded: ``Accordingly, we reject Shays's and Meehan's
argument that FECA precludes content-based standards under Chevron step
one. And for the same reasons, we disagree with the district court's
suggestion that any standard looking beyond collaboration to content
would necessarily `create an immense loophole,' thus exceeding the
range of permissible readings under Chevron step two.'' Shays Appeal at
99-100.
In reaching its holding, the Court of Appeals found that Congress
provided the Commission with an ``open-ended directive'' under which to
promulgate coordination regulations. Shays Appeal at 97-98. ``[I]n the
BCRA provision most clearly on point--the directive calling for new
regulations--Congress studiously avoided prescribing any specific
standard, save abrogation of the `collaboration or agreement' test.
Given this `lack of guidance in the statute,' we cannot say that BCRA
clearly forecloses the FEC's approach. Nor do we see clearly contrary
intent, as do Shays and Meehan, in FECA's preexisting `expenditure' and
`contribution' definitions.'' Id. at 99 (internal citation omitted).
The Court of Appeals noted that under the statute, a communication
that is a coordinated expenditure ``shall be considered to be a
contribution,'' and the Commission ``lacks discretion to exclude that
communication from its coordinated communication rule.'' Id. at 99.
``Yet to qualify as [an] `expenditure' in the first place, spending
must be undertaken `for the purpose of influencing' a federal election
(or else involve `financing' for redistribution of campaign
materials).'' Id. (emphasis added). The Court of Appeals emphasized
that ``time, place, and content may be critical indicia of
communicative purpose.'' Shays Appeal at 99. The Court of Appeals
recognized, ``Insofar as such statements may relate to political or
legislative goals independent from any electoral race--goals like
influencing legislators' votes or increasing public awareness--we
cannot conclude that Congress unambiguously intended to count them as
`expenditures' (and thus as `contributions' when coordinated). To the
contrary, giving appropriate Chevron deference, we think the FEC could
construe the expenditure definition's purposive language as leaving
space for collaboration between politicians and outsiders on
legislative and political issues involving only a weak nexus to any
electoral campaign. Moreover, we can hardly fault the FEC's efforts to
develop an `objective, bright-line test [that] does not unduly
compromise the Act's purposes,' considering that we approved just such
a test for `contribution' in Orloski. 795 F.2d at 165.'' Id.
Accordingly, the Court of Appeals concluded that the Commission's
regulation satisfied Chevron steps one and two. Id. at 99-100.
While finding the content prong was a permissible construction of
Congressional intent, the Court of Appeals held that the content prong
was inadequately explained under the Administrative Procedure Act. Id.
at 100. The Court of Appeals stated, ``while we accept the FEC's
premise that time, place, and content may illuminate communicative
purpose and thus distinguish FECA `expenditures' from other
communications, we detect no support in the record for the specific
content-based standard the Commission has promulgated.'' Id. at 102. In
response to this finding by the Court of Appeals, the Commission opened
the present rulemaking.
C. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Supplemental Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
The Commission published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (``NPRM'')
on December 14, 2005, in which it sought comment on a number of
alternatives for retaining or revising the content standard of the
coordinated communication regulations and on several other issues
involving the coordinated communication rules. See 70 FR 73946
(December 14, 2005). The comment period closed on January 13, 2006. The
Commission received written comments from 28 commenters. The Commission
held a public hearing on January 25 and 26, 2006, at which 18 witnesses
testified. The comments and a transcript of the public hearing are
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/law_
rulemakings.shtml#coordinated.\8\
_____________________________________-
\8\ For purposes of this document, the terms ``comment'' and
``commenter'' apply to both written comments and oral testimony at
the public hearing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the NPRM, the Commission specifically requested that commenters
submit empirical data showing the time period before an election during
which campaign communications generally occur. NPRM at 73949. None of
the commenters provided empirical data in response to the Commission's
request, either in written comments or at the public hearing. One joint
comment did provide a compilation of selected advertisements run during
recent election cycles.
Because no commenters provided empirical data in response to the
Commission's request, the Commission licensed data from TNS Media
Intelligence/CMAG (``CMAG'') regarding television advertising spots run
by Presidential, Senate, and House of Representatives candidates during
the 2004 election cycle. CMAG is a leading provider of political
advertising tracking and provides media analysis services to a wide
variety of clients, including national media organizations,
foundations, academics, and Fortune 100 companies. See www.tnsmi-
cmag.com. CMAG also provided data to the Brennan Center in conjunction
with its 2000 study ``Buying Time,'' which was cited by BCRA's
principal sponsors
[[Page 33193]]
in support of BCRA's provisions. See, e.g., 148 Cong. Rec. S2141 (daily
ed. March 20, 2002) (statement of Sen. McCain) (``According to the
Brennan Center's `Buying Time 2000' study, less than one percent of the
group-sponsored soft-money ads covered by this provision of the bill
were genuine issue discussion, more than 99 percent of these ads were
campaign ads. This degree of accuracy is more than sufficient to
overcome any claim of substantial overbreadth.'').
The Commission produced graphical representations derived from the
CMAG data and made these graphs and the underlying data available on
its Web site. The Commission then published a Supplemental Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (``SNPRM'') in the Federal Register on March 15,
2006, that re-opened the comment period for this rulemaking. 71 FR
13306 (March 15, 2006). The graphs and data are available at the
Commission's Web site at https://www.fec.gov/pdf/nprm/coord_commun/
suppNPRMmaterials.shtml.\9\ In the SNPRM, the Commission sought
additional comment, in light of the information presented by the data,
on the issues and questions raised in the NPRM regarding the content
prong time frame.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Available at https://www.fec.gov/pdf/nprm/coord_commun/
suppNPRMmaterials.shtml are ten graphs covering Presidential
election data, four graphs covering Senate election data, and four
graphs covering House election data, as well as an explanation of
the methodology used for each graph. These graphs are titled, and
referenced herein, as P1-P10, S1-S4, and H1-H4, respectively. An
additional chart regarding Presidential spending in individual
``battleground'' States, see note 21, below, is available at https://
www.fec.gov/pdf/nprm/coord_commun/chart_20060407.pdf. This chart
is referenced herein as Chart P11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The reopened comment period for the SNPRM closed on March 22, 2006.
The Commission received written comments on the SNPRM from 12
commenters, which are also available at https://www.fec.gov/law/law_
rulemakings.shtml#coordinated.
II. Revised Time Frames for Coordinated Communications (11 CFR
109.21(c)(4))
A. The Commission Has Determined To Retain the Content Prong With
Revised Time Frames
The Shays Court of Appeals emphasized that retaining a time frame
as part of the fourth content standard requires the Commission to
undertake a factual inquiry to determine whether the temporal line it
draws ``reasonably defines the period before an election when non-
express advocacy likely relates to purposes other than `influencing' a
federal election.'' Shays Appeal at 101-02. The Court presented three
questions to guide the Commission's inquiry: (1) ``Do candidates in
fact limit campaign-related advocacy to the four months surrounding
elections, or does substantial election-related communication occur
outside that window?''; (2) ``Do congressional, senatorial, and
presidential races--all covered by this rule--occur on the same cycle,
or should different rules apply to each?''; and (3) ``[T]o the extent
election-related advocacy now occurs primarily within 120 days, would
candidates and collaborators aiming to influence elections simply shift
coordinated spending outside that period to avoid the challenged rules'
restrictions?'' Id. at 102.
Based on its inquiry into the Court of Appeals' questions, the
Commission has decided to retain the existing content prong, but revise
the applicable time frames in the fourth content standard at 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4). The revision creates separate time frames for
communications based on whether they refer to (1) Congressional
candidates, (2) Presidential candidates, or (3) political parties. For
those communications that refer to Senate and House of Representatives
candidates in Congressional primary \10\ and general elections, the
revised time frame begins 90 days before each candidate's election and
ends on the date of that candidate's election. For communications that
refer to Presidential candidates, the revised time frame covers, on a
State-by-State basis, the period of time from 120 days before the date
of a Presidential primary up to and including the date of the general
election.\11\
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\10\ The method of choosing nominees for election to Federal
office, either by a primary or a preference election, a caucus, or a
convention, differs from State to State. This document uses the term
``primary election'' to refer to any election that chooses a nominee
for the general election. See also note 6, above.
\11\ Thus, if State A conducts its Presidential primary on
February 1st of the Presidential election year, the time frame in
State A for Presidential candidates would begin on approximately
October 1st of the year preceding the Presidential election and
would end on the date of the Presidential general election.
Similarly, if State B held its Presidential primary on June 1st of
the Presidential election year, the time frame in State B for
Presidential candidates would begin on approximately February 1st of
the Presidential election year and end on the date of the
Presidential general election.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For those communications that reference political parties and do
not reference a clearly identified Federal candidate, when such
communications occur in a non-Presidential election cycle, the revised
time frame period begins 90 days before each election and ends on the
date of that election; when such communications occur in a Presidential
election cycle, the revised time period covers, on a State-by-State
basis, the period of time from 120 days before the date of a primary
through the general election. For communications that reference a
political party and a clearly identified Federal candidate, the
applicable time frame is either the Congressional or Presidential
candidate time period, depending upon (1) whether the communication is
coordinated with the political party committee or the candidate, (2)
whether the upcoming general election is a Presidential or non-
Presidential election, and (3) whether the communication is aired in
the referenced candidate's jurisdiction.
1. Senate and House Candidates Conduct Nearly All Campaign-Related
Advocacy Within 60 Days of an Election
The data obtained by the Commission respond directly to the first
question posed by the Court of Appeals: ``Do candidates in fact limit
campaign-related advocacy to the four months surrounding elections, or
does substantial election-related communication occur outside that
window?'' Shays Appeal at 102. This question is relevant to the
Commission's inquiry because the purpose of the content standard is to
provide a bright-line delineation between those coordinated
advertisements that are for the purpose of influencing an election--and
therefore are ``expenditures'' regulated by the Act--and those that are
not. As the Shays Court of Appeals stated, ``Insofar as such statements
may relate to political or legislative goals independent from any
electoral race--goals like influencing legislators' votes or increasing
public awareness--we cannot conclude that Congress unambiguously
intended to count them as ``expenditures'' (and thus as `contributions'
when coordinated).'' Shays Appeal at 99 (``[T]o qualify as [an]
`expenditure' in the first place, spending must be undertaken `for the
purpose of influencing' a federal election.'').
Any time a candidate uses campaign funds to pay for an
advertisement, it can be presumed that this advertisement is aired for
the purpose of influencing the candidate's election. Additionally,
candidates and their campaign staff are experienced and knowledgeable
in matters of advertising strategy and are highly motivated to run
advertisements at a time when they are likely to influence voters.
Thus, data showing when candidates spend their own campaign funds on
advertisements
[[Page 33194]]
provide an empirical basis for predicting when advertising that has the
purpose of influencing a Federal election occurs. Moreover, in the
context of coordination, a candidate has an incentive to ask an outside
group to pay for advertisements to be aired precisely during the time
period when the candidate believes these advertisements would be
effective. Advertisements run outside of the effective time frame are
of little value to the candidate, and therefore do not present the
potential for corruption or the appearance of corruption that BCRA and
the Act intend to prevent.
Commenters agreed that a time frame is helpful in identifying
communications that are made for the purpose of influencing an
election. As one commenter noted: ``The Commission is reasonable in its
belief that election-influencing communications are generally
susceptible of temporal definition and limitation. The Commission
should continue to determine where that temporal limitation is.''
Moreover, commenters generally agreed that proximity to an election
factors into the value of the communication.
The data analyzed by the Commission show that nearly all Senate and
House candidate advertising takes place within 60 days of an election.
Senate candidates aired 91.60 percent and 94.73 percent of their
advertisements within 60 days of the primary and general election,
respectively.\12\ This represented 93.32 percent and 97.20 percent of
the estimated costs of advertisements the Senate candidates ran before
the primary and general elections, respectively.\13\ House candidates
aired 88.16 percent and 98.09 percent of their advertisements within 60
days of the primary and general elections, respectively.\14\ This
represented 92.68 percent and 98.75 percent of the estimated costs of
the advertisements House candidates ran before the primary and general
elections, respectively.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See Graphs S1 and S3.
\13\ See Graphs S2 and S4.
\14\ See Graphs H1 and H3.
\15\ See Graphs H2 and H4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The data show that a minimal amount of activity occurs between 60
and 90 days before an election, and that beyond 90 days, the amount of
candidate advertising approaches zero. Senate candidates aired only
0.87 percent and 0.39 percent of their advertisements more than 90 days
before their primary and general elections, respectively,\16\ which
represented 0.66 percent and 0.15 percent of the total estimated costs
of advertisements run by Senate candidates before the primary and
general elections, respectively.\17\ Similarly, House candidates aired
only 8.56 percent and 0.28 percent of their advertisements more than 90
days before their primary and general elections, respectively.\18\ This
represented 3.79 percent and 0.13 percent of the total estimated costs
of advertisements run by House candidates before the primary and
general elections, respectively.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See Graphs S1 and S3.
\17\ See Graphs S2 and S4.
\18\ See Graphs H1 and H3.
\19\ See Graphs H2 and H4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The data are consistent with the comments received by the
Commission. Commenters stated that a 60-day time frame comports with
the practical reality of when candidates run advertisements. Comments
submitted by the Democratic National Committee, the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee, the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, and the
National Republican Congressional Committee (``NRCC'') all stated that
in their experience, coordinated activities occurred within 60 days of
the 2004 elections. The NRCC further stated that both its coordinated
and independent expenditures for the 2004 general election were all
made within 60 days of that election.
A 60-day time frame is also consistent with past Congressional,
Supreme Court, and Commission findings. As one commenter stated, ``this
time period [60 days] would be consistent with Congressional line-
drawing in the context of electoral and political speech in the BCRA
itself.'' Comments submitted by the BCRA Congressional sponsors in 2002
stated, ``Title II of BCRA reflects congressional judgment that
communications concerning federal elected officials during the 60 day
period prior to a general election and the 30 day period prior to a
primary is usually campaign related.'' In McConnell v. FEC, the Supreme
Court upheld the 30- and 60-day time frames for electioneering
communications, concluding that Congress had adequately explained its
decision to regulate the ``virtual torrent of televised election-
related ads during the periods immediately preceding federal elections'
and that ``[t]he record amply justifies Congress' line drawing.''
McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 207-08 (2003). As the FEC successfully
argued in McConnell:
The timing requirement is also directly tied to Congress's objective
of capturing advertisements that are likely to influence the outcome
of federal elections. The record `overwhelmingly demonstrate[s] the
appropriateness of BCRA's sixty and thirty day benchmarks,' and
confirms with remarkable clarity the common-sense conclusion `that
issue advertisements aimed at influencing federal elections are
aired in the period right before an election. Supp. App. 725sa-
728sa, 847sa-848sa (Kollar-Kotelly) (discussing evidence); see id.
at 851sa (`The sixty and thirty day figures are not arbitrary
numbers selected by Congress, but appropriate time periods tied to
empirically verifiable data.')
Brief for the Federal Election Commission et al. at 94, McConnell
v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93 (2003) (discussing the timing requirement under the
definition of electioneering communication).
The record before Congress when passing BCRA and before the Supreme
Court in McConnell included the Brennan Center's ``Buying Time'' study,
which further supports the conclusion that the vast majority of
election related advocacy occurs immediately before an election. The
Brennan Center found that, ``[i]n the 2000 election, genuine issue ads
are rather evenly distributed throughout the year, while group-
sponsored electioneering ads make a sudden and overwhelming appearance
immediately before elections.'' Craig B. Holman and Luke P. McLoughlin,
``Buying Time 2000: Television Advertising in the 2000 Federal
Elections,'' 56 (2002). Another study supported the 60-day time frame
and was entered into the Congressional Record by Senator Snowe.
Jonathan Krasno and Kenneth Goldstein, ``The Facts About Television
Advertising and the McCain-Feingold Bill,'' 35(2) PS: Political Science
and Politics 207 (2002); see also 147 Cong. Rec. S3070-01, S3074. This
study found that in 1998 and 2000 ``the greatest deluge of issue ads
began appearing after Labor Day.'' Id. at S3075.
The 60-day time frame is also consistent with existing Commission
regulations. As a commenter stated, ``Setting the time period at 60
days is also supported by the FEC's regulatory time periods for the
depreciation of polling data in 11 CFR 106.4(g), under which the FEC
has determined that on the 61st day after the polling event, the data
is worth only 5% of its original value.''
Therefore, in response to the Court of Appeals' first question, the
data analyzed and comments reviewed by the Commission establish that
Senate and House candidates focus their campaign advocacy not during
the last 120 days before an election, but during
[[Page 33195]]
the last 60 days before an election. Moreover, beyond 90 days from an
election, Senate and House candidate advertising nearly ceases. As
suggested by the Court of Appeals' second question, however, the data
on Presidential candidates show a different advertising pattern, and
are discussed below.
2. Campaign Advertising in Presidential Races Occurs on a Different
Cycle Than in Senate and House Races
The data and comments examined by the Commission respond directly
to the second question posed by the Court of Appeals: ``Do
congressional, senatorial, and presidential races--all covered by this
rule--occur on the same cycle, or should different rules apply to
each?'' Shays Appeal at 102. The data show that advertising in the
Presidential race does in fact occur on a different cycle than
advertising in Senate and House races. Appreciable spending occurred
outside of the 120-day time frame with regard to the Presidential
general election.\20\ Specifically, in the media markets contained
within individual ``battleground'' States,\21\ the 120-day time frame
before the general election covered less than 75 percent of the
estimated spending.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See Graphs P2 and P4.
\21\ The Commission decided to limit the data appearing in these
graphical representations to those States in which the 2004
Presidential race was the most highly contested. The States
determined to be the 2004 ``battleground'' States are: Arizona,
Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North
Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Washington, West
Virginia, and Wisconsin. A list of ``battleground'' States was
determined from the following sources: Cook Political Report (http:/
/www.cookpolitical.com/column/2004/021704.php); ABC News/Washington
Post (https://www/abcnews.go.com/sections/us/WorldNewsTonight/
battlegrounds_poll_040422.html); National Journal (https://
nationaljournal.com/members/campaign/2004/swingstates/); Wall Street
Journal/Zogby International (https://online.wsj.com/public/resources/
documents/info-battleground04-print.html).
\22\ See Graph P10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Commission's 2002 regulations, the general election
coordinated communication window effectively extended further back than
120 days before the general election because the Presidential
nominating conventions of the political parties are also elections for
purposes of determining whether a communication satisfies the fourth
content standard in former 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4). See 11 CFR 100.2(e).
Accordingly, in 2004, the general election coordinated communication
window overlapped with the coordinated communication windows before the
Presidential nominating conventions and therefore the coordination
regulations applied for the entire 184 days before the general election
for Republican Presidential candidates and for 219 days before the
general election for Democratic Presidential candidates.\23\ Even with
this extended general election window, however, in several States there
was still a time period between the primary elections and the start of
the extended window during which public communications were not covered
by the 120-day time frame in the 2002 rules (``gap period''). Moreover,
the length of the gap period was solely a function of the parties'
selection of convention dates. To the extent advertising was continuous
during the time period between the primary and general elections, the
amount that was subject to the existing 120-day rule depended on the
dates the parties set for their conventions, rather than on the
purposeful application of the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ The general election coordinated communication window began
on July 5, 2004, for all candidates. The Republican National
Convention was held on August 30-September 2, 2004, and the
coordinated communication window for that convention began on May 2,
2004, which was 184 days before the general election. The Democratic
National Convention was held on July 27-29, 2004, and the
coordinated communication window for that convention began on March
28, 2004, which was 219 days before the general election.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission received several comments addressing the issue of
communications made during the Presidential gap periods. Some
commenters were in favor of regulating communications run during this
gap period, noting that post-primary communications are
``overwhelmingly likely to be for the purpose of influencing the
candidate's election.'' One joint commenter submitted voluminous
appendices and argued that a significant amount of campaign advertising
occurs during this gap period.\24\ As another commenter argued, ``a
period starting 120 days prior to a primary and running all the way to
the general election would be appropriate to capture ads that are most
likely to influence an election.'' In contrast, other commenters argued
against extending the regulation into this gap period, asserting that
campaigns do not advertise significantly during this time, and
therefore, according to some, regulation would unnecessarily infringe
on constitutionally protected speech. A commenter representing a
political party committee argued that political party committees would
already be covered by Federal reporting and spending limitations and
that covering this gap period is therefore unnecessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Some of the advertisements presented by the commenter were
run during the pre-convention window, and therefore, were covered by
the Commission's existing coordination regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CMAG data show that, in 2004, Presidential candidates spent
appreciable amounts on advertisements run during the gap period between
the State primaries and the beginning of the 184-day Republican and the
219-day Democratic extended general election windows, respectively.
Specifically, in media markets contained fully within individual
``battleground'' States, the Republican Presidential candidate spent a
total of $9,475,679 on television advertisements run during the gap
period, which amounted to 14 percent of the total costs of media spots
aired by the Republican Presidential candidate in those media markets
after the State primaries.\25\ In some of these media markets, the
percentage was significantly higher.\26\ For example, in the Seattle,
WA, media market, 38 percent of the post-primary Republican spending
occurred during the gap period, and, in the Madison and Milwaukee, WI,
media markets, 20 percent of the post-primary Republican spending
occurred during the gap period.\27\ Democratic Presidential candidates
spent $1,221,045 on post-primary television advertisements that
occurred during the gap period.\28\ Thus, nearly $10.7 million was
spent by Presidential candidates on television advertisements during
the gap periods.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See Chart P11.
\26\ See Chart P11.
\27\ See Chart P11.
\28\ See CMAG Data.
\29\ See Chart P11 and CMAG Data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the Court of Appeals' second question, the data and
comments confirm that campaign advertising in Presidential races does
in fact take place on a different cycle than Senate and House races.
Rather than the 60-day cycle in Senate and House races, the data and
comments confirm that nearly all Presidential advertisement spending
took place during the time period from 120 days before the primary
elections up through the date of the general election. According to the
data, in the 2004 election cycle, over 99 percent of the estimated
media spot spending by Presidential candidates in media markets fully
contained within individual ``battleground'' States occurred during
this time period.\30\ This time period is now fully covered by the
Commission's revised content standard at 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ See Graphs P8 and P10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 33196]]
3. The Minimal Value of Advertising Outside of the Revised Time Frames
Limits the Risk of Corruption From Candidates and Collaborators
Shifting Coordinated Spending to Outside the Time Frames
The data and comments reviewed by the Commission also respond to
the third question posed by the Court of Appeals: ``[T]o the extent
election-related advocacy now occurs primarily within 120 days, would
candidates and collaborators aiming to influence elections simply shift
coordinated spending outside that period to avoid the challenged rules'
restrictions?'' Shays Appeal at 102. As discussed above, candidates
have little incentive to ask outside groups to pay for advertisements
aired outside of periods where the candidates' own spending indicates
they would be effective. Therefore, outside of those time periods where
candidate advertising occurs, there is little risk that coordinated
activity presents the risk or appearance of corruption.
As discussed above, the data and comments analyzed in response to
the Court of Appeals' first question overwhelmingly support a 60-day
time frame for Congressional candidate communications. However, in
order to foreclose the possibility that candidates and groups will
shift spending outside the applicable time frame, the Commission has
determined to set the Congressional time frame at 90 days.
Congressional candidates aired a minimal percentage of their
advertisements more than 60 days before an election, and beyond 90 days
aired virtually no advertisements.\31\ Candidates have little or no
incentive to shift spending beyond 90 days. The limited value of
advertising beyond 90 days is reflected in the data, with Senate
candidates spending less than a quarter of one percent of their
television advertising budgets on spots that aired between 90 and 120
days before either a primary or a general election.\32\ Similarly,
House candidates spent less than three percent of their television
advertising budgets on spots that aired between 90 and 120 days before
a primary election \33\ and less than a quarter of one percent of their
television advertising budgets on spots that aired between 90 and 120
days before a general election.\34\
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\31\ See Graphs S1, S3 and H1, H3.
\32\ See Graphs S2 and S4.
\33\ See Graph H2.
\34\ See Graph H4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For Presidential candidates, while the data show that the existing
120-day time frames captured a majority of Presidential spending, some
appreciable spending occurred in the gap period not covered by the
current 120-day rule.\35\ Accordingly, the Commission has determined to
close the gap period and extend the applicable time frame from 120 days
before the primary election in a State continuously through the day of
the general election in that State. This revised time frame would have
covered more than 99 percent of Presidential advertising spending in
2004.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See Chart P11.
\36\ This figure represents Presidential spending in media
markets fully contained within individual ``battleground'' States.
See Graphs P8 and P10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One group of commenters, including plaintiffs in the Shays
litigation, argued that the 120-day time frame was under-inclusive and
should be supplemented with a complex, multi-factored approach that
would use a different test, based not on time but instead on the
identity of the entity paying for any communication made outside of the
120-day time period. The commenters proposed the Commission adopt the
following regulation:
(4) A public communication, as defined in 11 CFR 100.26, made by
a political committee, which is an expenditure directed to voters in
the jurisdiction of the candidate with whom the communication is
coordinated, or if coordinated with a political party, is an
expenditure directed to voters in a jurisdiction in which one or
more candidates of the political party appear on the ballot.
(5) A public communication, as defined in 11 CFR 100.26, made by
an organization described in section 527 of the Internal Revenue
Code and not registered as a political committee, which:
(i)(A) Is distributed or disseminated during the period
beginning 30 days prior to the primary election or 60 days prior to
the general election of the federal candidate with whom the
communication is coordinated, or, if coordinated with a political
party, during the period beginning 30 days prior to the primary
election or 60 days prior to the general election in which one or
more candidates of the political party appear on the ballot, and (B)
is directed to voters in the jurisdiction of that candidate or to
voters in a jurisdiction in which one or more candidates of the
political party appear on the ballot, regardless of whether the
communication refers to a clearly identified candidate for federal
office, or party; or
(ii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated during the period
beginning 120 days prior to the primary election and ending on the
day of the general election, (B) refers to a clearly identified
candidate for federal office or to a political party, and (C) is
directed to voters in the jurisdiction of the clearly identified
candidate, or to voters in a jurisdiction in which one or more
candidates of the political party appear on the ballot; or
(iii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated more than 120 days prior
to the primary election, (B) promotes, attacks, supports or opposes
a clearly identified candidate for federal office, or if the ad is
coordinated with a political party, promotes, attacks, supports or
opposes the party or its candidates, and (C) is directed to voters
in the jurisdiction of the clearly identified candidate, or to
voters in a jurisdiction in which one or more candidates of the
political party appear on the ballot.
(6) A public communication, as defined in 11 CFR 100.26, made by
any person other than a political committee or other organization
described in section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code which:
(i)(A) Is distributed or disseminated during the period
beginning 30 days prior to the primary election or 60 days prior to
the general election of the federal candidate with whom the
communication is coordinated, or, if coordinated with a political
party, during the period beginning 30 days prior to the primary
election or 60 days prior to the general election in which one or
more candidates of the political party appear on the ballot, and (B)
is directed to voters in that candidate's jurisdiction, regardless
of whether the communication refers to a clearly identified
candidate for federal office, or party; or
(ii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated during the period
beginning 120 days prior to the primary election and ending on the
day of the general election, (B) refers to a clearly identified
candidate for federal office or to a political party, and (C) is
directed to voters in the jurisdiction of the clearly identified
candidate, or to voters in a jurisdiction in which one or more
candidates of the political party appear on the ballot; or
(iii)(A) Is distributed or disseminated more than 120 days prior
to the primary election, (B) refers to the character or the
qualifications or fitness for office of a clearly identified
candidate for federal office, or if the ad is coordinated with a
political party, refers to the character or the qualifications or
fitness for office of the party generically or of candidates of that
party, and (C) is directed to voters in the jurisdiction of the
clearly identified candidate, or to voters in a jurisdiction in
which one or more candidates of the political party appear on the
ballot.
The Commission believes the record does not support the time frames
in the commenters' proposed regulation, nor the disparate regulatory
schemes for various entities. Moreover, the Commission agrees with
other witnesses at the hearing that if the Commission were to adopt the
proposed regulation, its complexity would likely place an extreme
burden upon the regulated community. The commenters also submitted
summaries of advertisements from recent election cycles that, according
to the commenters, were run more than 120 days before the primary or
general election they were intended to influence. However, at the
hearing, these commenters acknowledged that there was no evidence that
any of these advertisements had been coordinated with a candidate or a
political party
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committee. The lack of evidence that these advertisements were
coordinated with candidates comports with the conclusion drawn from the
CMAG data and comments; specifically, that candidates perceive little
value in airing advertisements beyond 90 days from an election, and
have little incentive to seek such advertising in exchange for
political favoritism.
4. Communications That Refer to Political Parties
As set forth in new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii) and (iv),
communications that refer to political parties are now subject to
different time periods depending upon: (1) Whether the communication is
coordinated with a candidate or political party committee; (2) whether
the upcoming general election is a midterm or Presidential election;
and (3) if the communication also refers to a clearly identified
Federal candidate, whether it is run in the clearly identified
candidate's jurisdiction.
When communications are paid for by outside groups, refer to a
political party, are coordinated with a candidate, and are publicly
distributed or otherwise disseminated in that candidate's jurisdiction,
they can generally be presumed to be for the purpose of influencing
that candidate's election whether or not they also refer to the
candidate with whom they are coordinated. Accordingly, it is
appropriate to use the time frame established for communications that
refer to a House or Senate candidate (90 days before a primary,
special, or general election) where the communications refer only to a
political party and not to a clearly identified Federal candidate, but
are coordinated with a House or Senate candidate and distributed in
that candidate's jurisdiction, even if such communications are
distributed during a Presidential election cycle. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii)(A). Similarly, if a communication were coordinated
with a Presidential candidate, it would be appropriate to use the same
120-day time period established for communications referring to
Presidential candidates. See 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii)(A).
A communication that refers to a political party without referring
to a clearly identified Federal candidate, otherwise satisfies the
content prong, is paid for by an outside group, and is coordinated with
a political party, can generally be presumed to be for the purpose of
influencing the elections of all of the party's candidates within that
jurisdiction during the relevant time period before an election. During
a midterm election cycle (in which only House and Senate candidates are
on the ballot), new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii)(B) provides that
communications referring to political parties are subject to the same
90-day time period as communications referring to House and Senate
candidates. Likewise, the new rules provide that during a Presidential
election cycle, communications referring to political parties are
presumed to be for the purpose of influencing the elections of all of
the party's candidates, including the party's Presidential candidate.
Accordingly, such communications are subject to the same 120-day time
period as communications referring to Presidential candidates. See new
11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii)(C).
If the communication refers to both a political party and a clearly
identified Federal candidate, the communication is subject to the time
frame applicable to that clearly identified candidate under 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(i) or (ii) when the communication is coordinated with
either a candidate or a political party and is distributed or
disseminated within the clearly identified candidate's jurisdiction.
See 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iv)(A) and (B). Such communication is subject
to the applicable time frames for party references when coordinated
with a political party and distributed and disseminated outside the
candidate's jurisdiction. See 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iv)(C). Any such
communication coordinated with a candidate, but distributed outside
that candidate's jurisdiction, would not constitute a coordinated
communication.
5. Other Considerations
In the Commission's judgment, the foregoing time frames encompass
the periods in which effective political party, Congressional, and
Presidential election-related advertising occurs, and therefore
political parties, candidates, and collaborators will have little
incentive to shift spending outside of these time frames. None of the
commenters submitted any evidence that, during the recent election
cycles during which the Commission's 2002 coordination rules were in
effect, House or Senate candidates asked outside groups to run
advertisements more than 90 days before House or Senate primary or
general elections. Since the 2002 rule took effect, the Commission has
received very few complaints alleging that House or Senate candidates
or their agents coordinated with outside groups to produce or
distribute communications that ran between 90 and 120 days before a
House or Senate primary or general election. Moreover, commenters did
not submit any evidence that during the recent election cycles in which
the Commission's 2002 coordination rules were in effect, Presidential
candidates or their agents asked outside groups to run advertisements
more than 120 days before Presidential primaries or the general
election.
Retaining a longer time frame that is not supported by the record
could potentially subject political speech protected under the First
Amendment to Commission investigation. Subjecting activity to
investigation that the evidence shows is unlikely to be for the purpose
of influencing Federal elections could chill legitimate lobbying and
legislative activity. As the Supreme Court has emphasized, where First
Amendment rights are affected, ``[p]recision of regulation must be the
touchstone,'' Edenfield v. Fane, 507 U.S. 761, 777 (1993).
The Court of Appeals emphasized that it ``can hardly fault the
[Commission's] effort to develop an objective, bright-line test.''
Shays Appeal at 99. As the D.C. Circuit noted in an analogous context,
``a subjective test based on a totality of the circumstances * * *
would inevitably curtail permissible conduct.'' Orloski v. FEC, 795
F.2d 156 (D.C. Cir. 1986). In Orloski, the D.C. Circuit further warned
that:
[A] subjective test would also unduly burden the FEC with requests
for advisory opinions * * * and with complaints by disgruntled
opponents who could take advantage of a totality of the
circumstances test to harass the sponsoring candidate and his
supporters. It would further burden the agency by forcing it to
direct its limited resources toward conducting a full-scale,
detailed inquiry into almost every complaint, even those involving
the most mundane allegations.
Id. at 165.
Considering the political, expressive, and associational rights at
stake, the Commission has determined not to extend the time frame
beyond that period supported by the record.
B. Revised 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)
The Commission continues to believe that an objective, bright-line
coordination test provides the clearest guidance to candidates,
political party committees, and outside organizations. Moreover, as
discussed above, the CMAG data show that in the 2004 election cycle,
nearly all television advertisements paid for by candidates were aired
within certain time frames before an election. These data, therefore,
provide empirical support for the
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Commission's decision to use time frames as part of a bright-line test
for determining whether a communication is made for the purpose of
influencing Federal elections.
Accordingly, as set forth in new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(i), public
communications that refer to a Senate or House of Representatives
candidate are subject to two 90-day time periods. One time period runs
from 90 days before any primary in which the Congressional candidate is
on the ballot through the date of the primary. Then, another time
period starts 90 days before any general election in which the
candidate is on the ballot and runs through the date of the general
election. In some States, these periods will overlap if a primary
election is held fewer than 90 days before a general election.
Under new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(ii), communications that refer to a
candidate for President or Vice President are subject to a single time
period that begins 120 days before a State's primary election up to and
including the date of the general election.
Under new 11 CFR 109.21(c)(4)(iii), communications that refer to a
political party but not to a clearly identified Federal candidate are
subject to different time periods under different circumstances. For
those communications that are coordinated with a candidate and
reference a political party, but do not reference a clearly identified
Federal candidate, the time frame that would be applicable if that
candidate were clearly identified in the communication under 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(i) or (ii) applies when the communication is distributed
or disseminated within that candidate's jurisdiction. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii)(A). For communications coordinated with a political
party committee and distributed during the two-year election cycle
ending in a non-Presidential general election, one time period runs
from 90 days before any primary in which a candidate of that party is
on the ballot through the date of the primary. See 11 CFR
109.21(c)(4)(iii)(B). Then, another time period begins 90 days before
any general election in which a candidate of that party is on the
ballot and runs through the date of the general election. In some
States, these periods will overlap if a primary election is held fewer
than 90 days before a general election. For communications coordinated
with a political party committee and distributed during the two-year
election cycle ending in a Presidential general election, a single time
period begins 120 days before a candidate of that party's primary
election in a State up to and including the date of the general
election. See 11 CFR 109