Reporting Contributions Bundled by Lobbyists, Registrants and the PACs of Lobbyists and Registrants, 7285-7304 [E9-2838]
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Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 74, No. 30
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Parts 100, 104 and 110
[Notice 2009–03]
Reporting Contributions Bundled by
Lobbyists, Registrants and the PACs
of Lobbyists and Registrants
Federal Election Commission.
Final Rules and Transmittal of
Regulations to Congress.
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Federal Election
Commission is promulgating regulations
implementing new statutory provisions
regarding the disclosure of information
about bundled contributions provided
by certain lobbyists, registrants, and
political committees established or
controlled by lobbyists and registrants.
The final rules require authorized
committees, leadership PACs, and
political committees of political parties
to disclose certain information about
lobbyists, registrants, and lobbyists’ and
registrants’ political committees that
provide bundled contributions. Further
information is provided in the
supplementary information that follows.
DATES: These rules are effective on
March 19, 2009. However, compliance
with paragraphs (b) and (e) of 11 CFR
104.22 is not required until May 18,
2009. Political committees that are
‘‘lobbyist/registrant PACs’’ must amend
their FEC Form 1 (Statement of
Organization) by March 30, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Amy L. Rothstein, Assistant General
Counsel, Ms. Cheryl A.F. Hemsley, or
Ms. Esther Heiden, Attorneys, 999 E
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20463,
(202) 694–1650 or (800) 424–9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission is promulgating final rules
to implement Section 204 of Public Law
110–81, 121 Stat. 735, the ‘‘Honest
Leadership and Open Government Act
of 2007,’’ signed September 14, 2007
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(‘‘HLOGA’’). See 2 U.S.C. 434(i).
HLOGA amended the Federal Election
Campaign Act of 1971, as amended (2
U.S.C. 431 et seq.) (‘‘FECA’’) by
requiring certain political committees to
disclose information about each
registered lobbyist 1 and registrant 2
(‘‘lobbyist/registrant’’), and each
political committee established or
controlled by a lobbyist or registrant
(‘‘lobbyist/registrant PAC’’ 3), that
forwards, or is credited with raising,
two or more bundled contributions
aggregating in excess of the reporting
threshold during a specific period of
time. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i). These new
disclosure requirements apply only to
authorized committees of Federal
candidates, political committees
directly or indirectly established,
financed, maintained or controlled by a
candidate or an individual holding
Federal office (‘‘leadership PACs’’), and
party committees.
HLOGA Section 204 requires that the
reporting threshold be indexed for
inflation annually. HLOGA Section 204
states that the indexing requirement
‘‘shall apply’’ to the reporting threshold
beginning ‘‘[i]n any calendar year after
2007.’’ See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(3)(B); 2
U.S.C. 441a(c)(1)(B). Thus, although
HLOGA set the initial reporting
threshold at $15,000 in 2007, the
reporting threshold as indexed for
inflation is $16,000 for 2009. The
Commission is publishing elsewhere in
this Federal Register a notice of the
reporting threshold for 2009.
The Commission is implementing
these provisions by adding two new
1 The term ‘‘lobbyist’’ is defined as any individual
‘‘who is employed or retained by a client for
financial or other compensation for services that
include more than one lobbying contact, other than
an individual whose lobbying activities constitute
less than 20 percent of the time engaged in the
services provided by such individual to that client
over a 3-month period.’’ 2 U.S.C. 1602(10). Any
lobbyist who makes more than one lobbying contact
or who is employed or retained to make lobbying
contacts, and exceeds the work activity threshold,
must register with the Secretary of the Senate and
the Clerk of the House of Representatives (‘‘Clerk
of the House’’) if certain income or expense levels
are exceeded. See 2 U.S.C. 1603(a).
2 Any organization that has one or more
employees who are lobbyists must register on behalf
of its lobbyist employees. See 2 U.S.C. 1603(a); see
also https://www.senate.gov/legislative/common/
briefing/lobby_disc_briefing.htm#3; https://
lobbyingdisclosure.house.gov/lda_guide.html.
3 ‘‘PAC’’ is an acronym often used to refer to a
political action committee other than an authorized
committee or a political committee of a political
party.
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paragraphs to 11 CFR 100.5(e), which
sets forth examples of ‘‘political
committees.’’ In addition, the
Commission is adding new section
104.22 to 11 CFR Part 104, which
governs reports by political committees
and other persons. Finally, in addition
to addressing, in new 11 CFR 104.22(g),
the price indexing of the new bundling
reporting threshold, the Commission is
revising one paragraph and adding
another in 11 CFR 110.17, which
provides for the price indexing and
publication of certain contribution and
expenditure limits.
The Commission published a Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking in the Federal
Register on November 6, 2007. See
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on
Reporting Contributions Bundled by
Lobbyists, Registrants and the PACs of
Lobbyists and Registrants, 72 FR 62600
(November 6, 2007) (the ‘‘NPRM’’). The
comment period closed on November
30, 2007. The Commission received
eight comments from twelve
commenters.4 The comments are
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/
law_rulemakings.shtml#bundling. Six of
the commenters testified at a hearing
held on September 17, 2008. For the
purposes of this document, the term
‘‘comment’’ applies to both written
comments and oral testimony at the
public hearing.
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 thirty calendar days before they
take effect. The final rules that follow
were transmitted to Congress on
February 4, 2009.
These regulations are effective thirty
days after publication in the Federal
Register. Reporting committees,
however, must comply with the
disclosure requirements of Section 204
of HLOGA and with the corresponding
provisions of new 11 CFR 104.22—that
is, with paragraph (b) (Reporting
Requirement for Reporting Committees)
and paragraph (e) (When to File)—only
with respect to reports filed more than
4 One of these comments was from the Internal
Revenue Service, stating that the Internal Revenue
Service did not find any conflict between its
regulations and the Commission’s proposed rules.
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three months after these final rules are
published in the Federal Register.
This delayed compliance date is
required by Section 204(b) of HLOGA,
which provides that ‘‘the amendment
made by [Section 204(a)] shall apply
with respect to reports filed under [2
U.S.C. 434] after the expiration of the 3month period which begins on the date
that the regulations required to be
promulgated by the [Commission] under
[2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)] become final.’’
Regulations are final upon their
publication in the Federal Register. See
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.
v. EPA, 683 F.2d 752 (3d Cir. 1982).
Reports required to be filed after these
final rules are published (and any
records corresponding to such reports,
as discussed below) need not include
activity before the effective date of these
regulations, and activity before the
effective date does not count toward any
aggregate amount for the purposes of the
reporting threshold. Thus, monthly
filers must begin reporting under new
11 CFR 104.22(b) in May 2009, for
bundled contributions that are received
in April. Quarterly filers must begin
reporting under new 11 CFR 104.22(b)
in July 2009, for bundled contributions
that are received in April through June
30. Finally, semi-annual filers must
begin reporting under new 11 CFR
104.22(b) in July 2009, for bundled
contributions that are received
beginning on the effective date of these
rules (i.e., thirty days after publication
in the Federal Register) through June
30. The Commission is not requiring the
reporting of contributions bundled by
lobbyists/registrants received as of
January 1, 2009 through the effective
date of these regulations (i.e., 30 days
after publication in the Federal
Register), because such a requirement
would be a retroactive application of the
regulation. Contributions bundled by
entities that may be lobbyist/registrant
PACs and received through 30 days after
the effective date of these regulations
(i.e., 60 days after publication in the
Federal Register) also need not be
reported.
Because the Commission is requiring
reporting committees to report bundled
contributions received as of the effective
date of these regulations, but is
providing an additional ten days for
lobbyist/registrant PACs to amend their
FEC Form 1, there will be at least a tenday period during which reporting
committees may be unable to determine
definitively whether an entity is a
lobbyist/registrant PAC. Moreover,
because the Commission is unable to
update its Web site instantaneously to
provide real-time information regarding
amended FEC Form 1 or to provide a list
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that is reasonably searchable with
respect to whether an entity is a
lobbyist/registrant PAC, the
Commission anticipates an additional
delay between the deadline by which
lobbyist/registrant PACs are required to
amend their FEC Form 1 and when such
information becomes available to
reporting committees. Accordingly, the
Commission is delaying the
implementation of these rules with
respect to contributions bundled by
entities that may be lobbyist/registrant
PACs for an additional 30 days after the
effective date of these regulations (i.e.,
60 days after publication in the Federal
Register), during which time reporting
committees are not required to report
contributions bundled by such entities.
Explanation and Justification
I. Background
Prior to HLOGA, FECA and
Commission regulations imposed
certain reporting and recordkeeping
requirements for contributions received
and forwarded by any person to a
political committee. Each person who
received and forwarded contributions to
a political committee was also required
to forward certain information
identifying the original contributor. See
2 U.S.C. 432(b); 11 CFR 102.8.
Additionally, 2 U.S.C. 441a(a)(8) and 11
CFR 110.6 imposed certain reporting
and recordkeeping requirements for
contributions received and forwarded
by persons known as ‘‘conduits’’ or
‘‘intermediaries’’ to the authorized
committees of Federal candidates. The
Commission did not propose and is not
implementing any changes to these
rules.
Section 204 of HLOGA requires each
authorized committee of a Federal
candidate, leadership PAC and political
committee of a political party to
disclose certain information about any
person reasonably known by the
committee to be a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC that forwards to
the reporting committee, or is credited
with raising for the reporting committee,
two or more bundled contributions
aggregating in excess of the reporting
threshold within a ‘‘covered period’’ of
time. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(1), (2), (3) and
(8). Accordingly, Section 204 of HLOGA
requires reporting committees to
disclose information about two distinct
types of bundled contributions: (1)
Contributions that are forwarded to a
reporting committee by a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC,
and (2) contributions that, although
received by the reporting committee
directly from a contributor, are credited
by the reporting committee to a
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lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC through records, designations or
other means of recognizing that a certain
amount of money has been raised by
that lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC. Id. Under Section 204 of
HLOGA, a reporting committee must
disclose the name and address of the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC, the lobbyist/registrant’s employer
(for individuals), and the aggregate
amount of bundled contributions within
the covered period. See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(1).
II. 11 CFR 100.5—Political Committee
(2 U.S.C. 431(4), (5), (6))
Section 100.5(e) of 11 CFR provides
examples of types of political
committees. The Commission is adding
two new paragraphs, (e)(6) and (e)(7), to
section 100.5 regarding ‘‘leadership
PAC’’ and ‘‘lobbyist/registrant PAC,’’
respectively, as examples of political
committees.
A. 11 CFR 100.5(e)(6)—Leadership PAC
The term ‘‘leadership PAC’’ is defined
in Section 204(a) of HLOGA as ‘‘a
political committee that is directly or
indirectly established, financed,
maintained or controlled by [a]
candidate [for Federal office] or [an]
individual [holding Federal office] but
which is not an authorized committee of
the candidate or individual and which
is not affiliated with an authorized
committee of the candidate or
individual, except that such term does
not include a political committee of a
political party.’’ 5 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(B).
The new definition of ‘‘leadership
PAC’’ is relevant to two areas of HLOGA
that fall within the Commission’s
purview: (1) The disclosure
requirements in Section 204 of HLOGA
for contributions bundled by lobbyists/
registrants and lobbyist/registrant PACs;
and (2) restrictions on candidate travel
in section 601 of HLOGA. See Public
Law No. 110–81, section 601(a)
(codified at 2 U.S.C. 439a(c)(2)).
The Commission announced its plans
to initiate rulemakings for these two
provisions on September 24, 2007.6 The
candidate travel NPRM responsive to
section 601 of HLOGA initially
proposed a definition of ‘‘leadership
PAC’’ as that term applies to both
provisions. See Notice of Proposed
5 This definition is consistent with the
Commission’s rules that treat such committees as
unaffiliated with a candidate’s authorized
committee. See 11 CFR 100.5(g).
6 See News Release, Federal Election Commission
Announces Plans to Issue New Regulations to
Implement the Honest Leadership and Open
Government Act of 2007, available at https://
www.fec.gov/press/press2007/
20070924travel.shtml.
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Rulemaking on Candidate Travel, 72 FR
59953 (October 23, 2007) (‘‘Candidate
Travel NPRM’’). The NPRM for this
bundling disclosure rulemaking cited to
the proposed definition in the
Candidate Travel NPRM as the
definition to be used. See NPRM, 72 FR
at 62600, fn. 3; see also Candidate
Travel NPRM, 72 FR at 59954. Because
these bundling disclosure rules are
becoming final before the candidate
travel rules, the Commission is
including the definition of ‘‘leadership
PAC’’ in these final rules.
The Commission is defining
‘‘leadership PAC’’ at 11 CFR 100.5(e)(6)
as proposed in the Candidate Travel
NPRM. The definition follows the
definition of ‘‘leadership PAC’’ in
Section 204 of HLOGA.7 The
Commission received one comment on
the proposed definition in response to
the Candidate Travel NPRM that
supported the substance and location of
the new definition, and did not receive
any comments opposing it.8
B. 11 CFR 100.5(e)(7)—Lobbyist/
Registrant PAC
New paragraph (e)(7) refers the reader
to the definition in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(3) of the term ‘‘lobbyist/
registrant PAC,’’ which is discussed
below.
III. New 11 CFR 104.22—Disclosure of
Bundling by Lobbyists/Registrants and
Lobbyist/Registrant PACs (2 U.S.C.
434(i))
To implement the requirements of
HLOGA Section 204, the Commission is
adopting new 11 CFR 104.22. New
paragraph (a) defines key terms;
paragraphs (b) and (c) set forth the
reporting requirements under these new
rules; paragraphs (d) and (e) govern
where to file and when to file,
respectively; paragraph (f) establishes
recordkeeping requirements; and
paragraph (g) addresses the annual
indexing for inflation of the threshold
amount of bundled contributions that
trigger the reporting requirement for a
covered period.
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A. 11 CFR 104.22(a)—Definitions
The Commission is adding several
new definitions in new 11 CFR
104.22(a).
7 The term ‘‘political committee’’ applies only to
those organizations that are for the purpose of
influencing Federal elections. The definition of
‘‘leadership PAC’’ does not cover committees that
are not included in the definition of ‘‘political
committee’’ (such as State leadership PACs that are
established, financed, maintained, or controlled by
a State official who runs for Federal office).
8 Comments filed in the candidate travel
rulemaking are available at https://www.fec.gov/law/
law_rulemakings.shtml#travel07.
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1. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(1)—Reporting
Committee
HLOGA adds reporting requirements
that apply to three types of political
committees: authorized committees of a
candidate, leadership PACs, and party
committees. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(6). New
11 CFR 104.22(a)(1) defines ‘‘reporting
committee’’ to encompass these three
types of political committees, as they
are defined in 11 CFR 100.5(e)(4), new
(e)(6), and (f)(1). The Commission
requested but received no comments on
the proposed definition, which is the
same as the final rule.
2. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(2)—Lobbyist/
Registrant
HLOGA Section 204 applies to
contributions bundled by ‘‘a current
registrant under section 4(a) of the
Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 [the
‘LDA’] (2 U.S.C. 1603(a)); an individual
who is listed on a current registration
filed under section 4(b)(6) of [the LDA]
(2 U.S.C. 1603(b)(6)) or a current report
under section 5(b)(2)(C) of [the LDA] (2
U.S.C. 1604(b)(2)(C)); 9 or a political
committee established or controlled by
such a registrant or individual.’’ 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(7). The NPRM proposed
creating a new term, ‘‘lobbyist/
registrant,’’ to encompass both current
registrants and individuals listed on a
current registration or report filed under
the LDA.
The NPRM requested comments on
whether the reporting requirements of
HLOGA Section 204 should also apply
to contributions forwarded by or
received and credited to a registrant’s
employee, where that employee is not
listed by the registrant as an in-house
lobbyist. Six comments addressed this
issue. Four comments said that the crux
of the matter would depend on whether
the employee was raising funds on
behalf of the employee’s registrant
employer or was acting on the
employee’s own behalf. Three of these
comments suggested various standards
that the Commission might employ to
determine on whose behalf the nonlobbyist employee is acting. One
comment suggested using a standard
based on the law of agency. A second
comment suggested using a standard
analogous to that used in determining
9 Under
Section (4)(b)(6) of the LDA, each
registration filed with the Secretary of the Senate
or Clerk of the House must include the name of
each employee of the registrant who has acted or
whom the registrant expects to act as a lobbyist on
behalf of the registrant or a client; under Section
5(b)(2)(C), each registrant must file quarterly reports
with the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of
the House that include a list of the registrant’s
employees who acted as lobbyists on behalf of a
client of the registrant during the quarter. See 2
U.S.C. 1603(b)(6); 2 U.S.C. 1604(b)(2)(C).
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whether corporate facilitation has taken
place, that is, examining whether the
employee was ordered or directed by
the employee’s superior to undertake
the activity. See 11 CFR 114.2(f)(2)(i)(A).
A third comment suggested creating a
rebuttable presumption that certain
employees, such as senior officers and
government relations employees of a
registrant, are acting on behalf of their
registrant employer.
By contrast, two comments stated that
HLOGA covers only activity by
lobbyists/registrants and lobbyist/
registrant PACs. One of these comments
stated that the Commission has no
authority to go beyond the plain
statutory language by requiring the
disclosure of information about
individuals who are employed by
registrants but are not themselves
lobbyists.
The Commission agrees with the latter
two comments. By its express terms,
HLOGA requires the disclosure of
information only about lobbyists and
registrants. 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(7). This
interpretation is further supported by a
section-by-section analysis of HLOGA
that was made a part of the record in the
Senate debate on HLOGA by Senator
Feinstein. In her remarks, Senator
Feinstein stated ‘‘I ask unanimous
consent to have printed in the
[Congressional] Record a section-bysection analysis of the bill [HLOGA] we
are about to vote on, including
legislative history endorsed by the three
principal Senate authors of the
legislation: myself, Chairman [of the
Senate Committee on Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs]
Lieberman and Majority Leader Reid.’’
153 Cong. Rec. S10708 (daily ed. August
2, 2007) (‘‘Section-by-Section
Analysis’’).
The Section-by-Section Analysis
specifically states that the disclosure
requirements apply only to lobbyists
and registrants:
This provision covers only contributions
credited to registered lobbyists, as defined in
subsection 204(a)(7). Contributions credited
to others, including others who may share a
common employer with, or work for a
lobbyist, are not covered by this section so
long as any credit is genuinely received by
the non-lobbyist and not the lobbyist.
153 Cong. Rec. S10709 (daily ed. August
2, 2007).
Thus, the Commission has
determined that non-lobbyist employees
of lobbyists/registrants or lobbyist/
registrant PACs who forward bundled
contributions or receive credit from a
reporting committee for bundling
contributions are outside of the scope of
HLOGA Section 204. However, if the
reporting committee knows that the
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person is forwarding the contributions
on behalf of a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC, such forwarded
contributions are within the scope of
HLOGA Section 204. The final rule
defines ‘‘bundled contribution’’
accordingly. See 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(i);
see also discussion below at III.6.a.
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3. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(3)—Lobbyist/
Registrant PAC
New 11 CFR 104.22(a)(3) defines
‘‘lobbyist/registrant PAC’’ as ‘‘any
political committee that a ‘lobbyist/
registrant’ ‘established or controls’ ’’ as
that term is defined in 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4). This definition tracks the
language of HLOGA, which defines
‘‘persons’’ who raise bundled
contributions to include a ‘‘political
committee established or controlled’’ by
a lobbyist or registrant. 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(7)(C). As discussed below, any
political committee that meets the
definition of ‘‘lobbyist/registrant PAC’’
under 11 CFR 104.22(a)(3) must identify
itself as such on any FEC Form 1
(Statement of Organization) that it files
with the Commission after the effective
date of this rule. See 11 CFR 104.22(c).
Committees that have already filed FEC
Form 1 with the Commission and that
meet the definition of ‘‘lobbyist/
registrant PAC’’ under 11 CFR
104.22(a)(3) are required to amend their
FEC Form 1 to reflect this change in
status within ten days after the effective
date of this rule. Id.; 11 CFR 102.2(a)(2).
Thus, Form 1 must be amended within
forty days after the date this rule is
published in the Federal Register.
Statements of Organization are filed
pursuant to 2 U.S.C. 433, and therefore
are not subject to the mandatory threemonth waiting period under HLOGA
Section 204, which applies to reports
filed under 2 U.S.C. 434(i).
4. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)—Established or
Controls
HLOGA Section 204 requires
reporting committees to disclose
bundled contributions that exceed the
reporting threshold within a covered
period, if those bundled contributions
were forwarded by, or received and
credited to, any political committee
reasonably known by the recipient
reporting committee to be ‘‘established
or controlled’’ by a lobbyist or
registrant. 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(7)(C). The
NPRM asked several questions as to
when a lobbyist/registrant should be
considered to have ‘‘established or [to]
control[ ]’’ a political committee. In the
NPRM, the Commission requested but
received no comments on including the
separate segregated fund (‘‘SSF’’) of any
corporation, labor organization or other
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connected organization (see 11 CFR
100.6) that is a registrant under the
LDA, within the ambit of ‘‘lobbyist/
registrant PACs.’’
The NPRM also requested comments
on when a nonconnected committee
would be considered to be ‘‘controlled’’
by a lobbyist/registrant, and whether a
lobbyist/registrant that is the treasurer
of the political committee controls the
committee per se. One comment on this
issue suggested that ‘‘controlled’’ is a
recognized term of art under FECA: for
example, political committees
‘‘established, financed, maintained or
controlled’’ by the same person or group
of persons are ‘‘affiliated’’ and are
treated as a single committee for
contribution purposes. Several
comments suggested using factors
similar to those used by the Commission
to determine case-by-case affiliation of
political committees under 11 CFR
100.5(g). These comments suggested
using such factors as (1) whether the
lobbyist/registrant has the authority to
direct or participate in the governance
of the political committee; (2) whether
the lobbyist/registrant has the authority
to hire, appoint, demote or otherwise
control the officers of the political
committee; and (3) whether the
lobbyist/registrant provides significant
funding for the political committee on
an ongoing basis. One comment stated
that having a lobbyist on the board of
directors of a nonconnected committee
or serving as an officer would be an
example of per se control by the
lobbyist. Another comment agreed that
having a lobbyist acting as treasurer of
a nonconnected committee would
constitute per se control, but cautioned
against creating a rule that would make
any board membership per se control.
The concept of ‘‘established or
controlled’’ in Section 204 of HLOGA,
which is implemented by the
Commission in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4), relates to the same entities
as does Section 203 of HLOGA, which
is implemented by the Secretary of the
Senate and Clerk of the House under the
LDA. See 2 U.S.C. 1604(d). Therefore, in
addition to the comments’ proposals,
the Commission also considered
following the description of
‘‘established or controlled’’ set out by
the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk
of the House of Representatives in their
guidance on reports filed with them
under the LDA, which includes the
following example:
Lobbyists ‘‘C’’ and ‘‘D’’ serve on the board
of a non-connected PAC as member and
treasurer respectively. As board members,
they are in positions that control direction of
the PAC’s contributions. Since both are
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controlling to whom the PAC’s contributions
are given, they must d
See Secretary of the Senate Guidance
(January 16, 2009), available at https://
www.senate.gov/legislative/resources/
pdf/S1guidance.pdf at page 24; Clerk of
the House Guidance (January 16, 2009),
available at https://
lobbyingdisclosure.house.gov/
amended_lda_guide.html#125update at
section 7.
The Commission decided to use a
combination of the House and Senate
guidance and the Commission’s own
factors to determine whether a lobbyist/
registrant established or controls a
political committee. Because of the
overlap between Sections 203 and 204
of HLOGA with respect to the use of the
term ‘‘established or controlled,’’ the
Commission concluded that it was
preferable, to the extent practicable, to
harmonize its rule in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4) with the Secretary of the
Senate and the Clerk of the House’s
implementation of Section 203 of
HLOGA under the LDA.
Accordingly, a lobbyist/registrant
established or controls any political
committee for the purposes of new 11
CFR 104.22(a)(4) if the lobbyist/
registrant is required to disclose such
political committee to the Secretary of
the Senate or the Clerk of the House as
being established or controlled by that
lobbyist/registrant under Section 203 of
HLOGA. If a political committee is able
to obtain definitive guidance from the
Secretary of the Senate or Clerk of the
House that it is, or is not, required to be
disclosed as being established or
controlled by a lobbyist/registrant, then
such determination is conclusive for the
purposes of new 11 CFR 104.22, and the
political committee need not consider
the Commission’s additional criteria
described below.
The Commission is aware, however,
that there may be times when a political
committee will not be able to determine
definitively from guidance issued by the
Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of
the House, or after communicating with
those offices, whether a political
committee is established or controlled
by a lobbyist/registrant. For this reason,
the Commission is issuing additional
criteria on whether a political
committee is established or controlled
by a lobbyist/registrant for the purposes
of HLOGA Section 204. If, after
consulting guidance issued by the
offices of the Secretary of the Senate and
Clerk of the House or after
communicating with those offices, a
political committee is unable to
ascertain whether it is established or
controlled by a lobbyist/registrant, the
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political committee must consult the
additional criteria set forth in new 11
CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii).
Under these additional criteria, a
political committee must first consult
new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(A), which
states that a separate segregated fund
whose connected organization is a
registrant is a lobbyist/registrant PAC. If
the political committee does not meet
the criterion under 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4)(ii)(A), then the political
committee must next look to new 11
CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B), which sets out
two additional independent criteria for
determining whether a political
committee is ‘‘established or controlled’’
by a lobbyist/registrant. The
Commission has decided not to
incorporate the broad affiliation analysis
at 11 CFR 100.5(g). That analysis would
have required the weighing of several
factors in order to determine whether a
lobbyist/registrant established or
controls a political committee. Instead,
to give firm guidance to political
committees, the ‘‘established or
controls’’ analysis in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B) states that a political
committee is established or controlled
by a lobbyist/registrant if it meets either
of the criteria in paragraph (1) or (2).
The Commission notes that HLOGA
Section 204 uses the words ‘‘established
or controlled.’’ The use of the
disjunctive ‘‘or’’ (rather than the
conjunctive ‘‘and’’) means that only one
of those criteria need be present to
trigger application of the law.
Webster’s Dictionary defines
‘‘establish’’ as ‘‘to found, institute,
build, or bring into being on a firm or
stable basis.’’ Random House Webster’s
Unabridged Dictionary, 2nd ed. 663
(Random House 2001). The Commission
recognizes that several individuals may
participate in the establishment of a
political committee. Therefore, the first
criterion, as set out in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B)(1), provides that a
political committee is ‘‘established’’ by
a lobbyist/registrant if a lobbyist/
registrant had a primary role in the
establishment of the political
committee, excluding the provision of
legal or compliance services or advice.
The second criterion, set forth in new
11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B)(2), provides
that a political committee is
‘‘controlled’’ by a lobbyist/registrant if
the lobbyist/registrant directs the
governance or operations of the political
committee, excluding the provision of
legal or compliance services or advice.
This standard derives from the
dictionary definition of ‘‘control:’’ ‘‘to
exercise restraint or direction over;
dominate; command.’’ Id. at 442. The
lobbyist/registrant’s authority to direct,
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which need not be exclusive to any one
person, may derive from the political
committee’s controlling documents,
such as the articles of incorporation or
bylaws. However, a political
committee’s informal procedures or
actual practices may also demonstrate
that a lobbyist/registrant directs the
governance or operations of the
committee. For example, even a
lobbyist/registrant who is a non-voting
member of a political committee’s board
of directors may control the political
committee as long as that lobbyist/
registrant in fact directs the governance
or operations of the political committee.
Both criteria, as discussed above,
exclude the provision of legal or
compliance services or advice from the
criteria for determining when a political
committee is established or controlled
by a lobbyist/registrant. This exclusion
reflects the Commission’s recognition
that, during and after formation,
political committees often consult
experts who may be lobbyists/
registrants or whose firms are
registrants. The new rule is designed to
reach those situations in which the
lobbyist/registrant is more actively
involved in the formation or operation
of a political committee than merely
providing legal or compliance services
or advice. Thus, a political committee’s
use for compliance purposes of an
attorney or other expert from a firm that
itself is a registrant (or even if the
attorney or expert is a lobbyist/
registrant) will not by itself result in the
political committee being established or
controlled by a lobbyist/registrant.
5. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)—Covered Period
Section 204 of HLOGA requires that
reporting committees disclose
information about any lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC that
forwards, or is credited with raising for
the reporting committee, two or more
bundled contributions aggregating in
excess of the reporting threshold during
any ‘‘covered period.’’ See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(1), (2), (3) and (8). HLOGA
defines ‘‘covered period’’ as January 1
through June 30, July 1 through
December 31 ‘‘and * * * any reporting
period applicable to the committee
under [2 U.S.C. 434] during which any
[lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC] provided two or more bundled
contributions to the committee in an
aggregate amount greater than [the
reporting threshold].’’ 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(2).
HLOGA grants the Commission the
discretion to provide for quarterly
reporting by political committees that
file their campaign finance reports more
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7289
frequently than on a quarterly
basis.10 See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(A).
a. The Proposed Definition
The NPRM presented both a proposed
and an alternative definition of
‘‘covered period.’’ Under the proposed
definition, a ‘‘covered period’’ would be
the semi-annual periods of January 1
through June 30 and July 1 through
December 31. Additionally, in any
calendar year in which a reporting
committee is required to file or files
monthly or quarterly campaign finance
reports, ‘‘covered period’’ would also
include the quarterly periods of January
1 through March 31 and July 1 through
September 30, if during those periods, a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC provided two or more bundled
contributions to the reporting committee
that aggregate in excess of the reporting
threshold.
The Commission received four
comments favoring the proposed
definition. All four comments stated
that the proposed definition was
consistent with HLOGA’s requirement
that the Commission’s regulations
provide for the broadest possible
disclosure of lobbyist/registrant
bundling activity.
The NPRM also asked whether the
statute would support the elimination of
duplicative reporting that would result
from the proposed definition of
‘‘covered period.’’ The NPRM asked, for
example, whether there is a statutory
basis for the Commission to consider
exempting reporting committees from
having to disclose semi-annually
information about lobbyists/registrants
or lobbyist/registrant PACs providing
bundled contributions if the information
was already fully disclosed in a prior
report filed with the Commission. All
four comments were in favor of the
elimination of duplicative reporting. As
such, they suggested that the
Commission design the new reporting
schedule to allow for both quarterly and
semi-annual reporting once the
10 Under FECA, political committees are subject
to the following campaign finance reporting
requirements: national committees of political
parties (including the national congressional
campaign committees) must report monthly in all
calendar years, see 2 U.S.C. 434(a)(4)(B); 11 CFR
104.5(c)(4); state, district and local committees of
political parties are required to file monthly if they
exceed certain levels of Federal election activity,
see 2 U.S.C. 434(e)(4); 11 CFR 300.36(c); most
authorized committees of presidential candidates
are required to file monthly during presidential
election years, see 2 U.S.C. 434(a)(3); 11 CFR
104.5(b); authorized committees of House and
Senate candidates are required to file quarterly, see
2 U.S.C. 434(a)(2); 11 CFR 104.5(a); other political
committees may choose to file on either a monthly
or a quarterly basis, see 2 U.S.C. 434(a)(4); 11 CFR
104.5(c)(1)–(3).
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reporting threshold has been exceeded.
One comment stated that such a
reporting form would assist the public’s
understanding of the data.
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b. The Alternative Definition
The alternative definition in the
NPRM would provide that, in any
calendar year in which a reporting
committee is required to file or files
reports on a quarterly or monthly basis
under 11 CFR 104.5, the covered period
would be defined as the quarterly
periods of January 1 through March 31,
April 1 through June 30, July 1 through
September 30, and October 1 through
December 31. Additionally, in any
calendar year in which a reporting
committee files semi-annual reports, the
covered period would also include the
semi-annual periods of January 1
through June 30 and July 1 through
December 30. The Commission received
one comment in favor of this alternative
definition, noting that the alternative
definition would result in more persons
meeting the reporting threshold, and
thus lead to greater disclosure.
c. Quarterly Covered Periods for
Reporting Committees Which File More
Frequently Than on a Quarterly Basis
Under both the proposed and the
alternative definition of ‘‘covered
period’’ in the NPRM, the Commission
would have exercised its authority
under HLOGA to require reporting
committees that file monthly campaign
finance reports to file their bundling
disclosure reports quarterly, rather than
monthly. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(A).
The Commission asked whether it
should, instead, require monthly filers
to disclose information about bundled
contributions on a monthly and semiannual basis. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(A)
(‘‘[T]he Commission may * * * provide
for quarterly filing * * * by a
committee which files reports * * *
more frequently than on a quarterly
basis.’’).
The Commission received five
comments on this question. All
supported quarterly filing schedules for
political committees that file their
campaign finance reports on a monthly
basis. One comment noted that quarterly
filing will result in more persons
meeting the reporting threshold, and
thus provide greater disclosure by
reporting committees. The comment
further noted that requiring reporting
committees to determine on a monthly
basis which entities have forwarded or
been credited with raising contributions
in excess of the reporting threshold, and
then to determine for that same period
which of those entities are lobbyists/
registrants or their PACs, would impose
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an undue compliance burden on many
reporting committees.
d. Definition of ‘‘Covered Period’’ in
Final Rule
The Commission’s final rule follows
HLOGA Section 204. The final rule
provides for different ‘‘covered periods’’
as follows:
Semi-Annual Covered Periods—
‘‘Covered period’’ for each reporting
committee is the semi-annual periods of
January 1 through June 30, and July 1
through December 31. See 11 CFR
104.22(a)(5)(i).
Quarterly Covered Periods—For
reporting committees that file campaign
finance reports under 11 CFR 104.5 on
a quarterly basis, the covered periods
also include the quarters beginning on
January 1, April 1, July 1, and October
1, and the applicable pre- and postelection reporting periods in election
years. See 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(ii). In
non-election years, reporting
committees other than those authorized
by a candidate may file lobbyist
bundling disclosure reports only for the
semi-annual covered periods. Id.
Monthly Covered Periods—For
reporting committees that file campaign
finance reports under 11 CFR 104.5 on
a monthly basis, the covered periods
also include each month in the calendar
year, except that in election years, the
pre- and post-general election reporting
periods are covered periods in lieu of
the monthly November and December
reporting periods. 11 CFR
104.22(a)(5)(iii); see also 11 CFR
104.5(c)(3)(ii). This reporting schedule
follows the campaign finance reporting
schedule for political committees other
than authorized committees in 2 U.S.C.
434(a)(4)(B).
HLOGA requires reporting
committees to file lobbyist bundling
disclosure reports both semi-annually
and for ‘‘any reporting period
applicable’’ to the reporting committee
under 2 U.S.C. 434 during which any
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC provided two or more bundled
contributions to the committee in an
aggregate amount exceeding the
reporting threshold. 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(2)(C). Conforming the definition
of ‘‘covered period’’ in 11 CFR
104.22(a)(5) with the reporting
committee’s campaign finance reporting
periods under 2 U.S.C. 434 thus more
closely tracks the language of HLOGA
than did either the proposed rule or its
alternative in the NPRM.
Furthermore, requiring reporting
committees to file lobbyist bundling
disclosure reports according to their
usual campaign finance reporting
schedule, including pre- and post-
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election reports, means that quarterly
filers will disclose information about
lobbyist bundling activity during the
crucial period immediately before an
election, as will monthly filers in the
period immediately before a general
election. The proposed rule and the
alternative in the NPRM would have
resulted in the disclosure of lobbyist/
registrant and lobbyist/registrant PAC
bundling information by quarterly and
monthly filers only after the close of
each calendar quarter which, in some
cases, would have been after the
relevant election. The Commission’s
decision to require pre-election
disclosure is consistent with the
requirement in HLOGA that the
Commission promulgate rules that
‘‘provide for the broadest possible
disclosure.’’ 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(D).
The Commission’s decision to
conform the definition of ‘‘covered
period’’ to a reporting committee’s
campaign finance reporting schedule
alleviates the concern expressed in
several comments that reporting
committees might find it difficult to try
to implement two different reporting
schedules—one for campaign finance
reports under 11 CFR 104.5 and one for
lobbyist bundling disclosure reports
under 11 CFR 104.22. Requiring the
filing of bundling disclosure reports and
campaign finance reports on the same
timeline reduces or alleviates any
possible confusion, while at the same
time reducing the burden of the
reporting requirement. In addition,
placing both types of reports on the
same timeline will facilitate the public’s
ability to compare the two types of
reports accurately, thereby further
helping to achieve the public disclosure
objectives of HLOGA. See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(5)(D). Accordingly, 11 CFR
104.22(a)(5)(ii) and (iii) define ‘‘covered
period’’ to correspond to a reporting
committee’s regular campaign finance
reporting schedule under 11 CFR 104.5.
The Commission recognizes, however,
that some comments conveyed a
preference for allowing reporting
committees that file their campaign
finance reports on a monthly basis to
file their lobbyist bundling disclosure
reports quarterly, instead. As one
comment noted, requiring reporting
committees to make a monthly
determination as to who is a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC,
and whether or not the reporting
threshold for bundled contributions has
been exceeded, would impose a
substantial compliance burden.
Recognizing that concern, the
regulations adopted by the Commission
permit quarterly filing of the
information required by this regulation
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for reporting committees that file their
campaign finance reports under 2 U.S.C.
434 more frequently than on a quarterly
basis. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(A). Under
new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(iv), reporting
committees that file their campaign
finance reports on a monthly basis may
elect to file their lobbyist bundling
disclosure reports on a quarterly, rather
than monthly, basis. Any such reporting
committee that chooses to file its
lobbyist bundling disclosure reports on
a quarterly basis must follow the same
schedule as quarterly filers: semiannually; for each calendar quarter; and
pre- and post-election, as discussed
above. A reporting committee that
wishes to change its reporting schedule
under new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5) must
notify the Commission in writing, just
as non-authorized committees must do
for campaign finance reports. 11 CFR
104.22(a)(5)(iv); see also 11 CFR
104.5(c). Reporting committees may not
change their filing frequency more than
once per calendar year. 11 CFR
104.22(a)(5)(iv); see also 11 CFR
104.5(c).
Finally, new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(v)
establishes a covered period for
reporting committees with respect to
special elections and runoff elections.
Any such reporting committee that
receives two or more contributions
forwarded by or raised by and credited
to a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC that exceed the reporting
threshold during the covered period
must file FEC Form 3L (Report of
Contributions Bundled by Lobbyists/
Registrants and Lobbyist/Registrant
PACs) at the same time that the
reporting committee files its campaign
finance reports for the special or run-off
election. Special and run-off elections
are called under State law, and the
Commission sets deadlines for filing
campaign finance reports for the
elections under 2 U.S.C. 434(a)(9). See
also 11 CFR 104.5(h). The new
definition of ‘‘covered period’’ for
reporting committees active in special
and run-off elections thus is consistent
with HLOGA’s definition of ‘‘covered
period,’’ which includes ‘‘any reporting
period applicable to the committee
under [2 U.S.C. 434].’’ 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(2).
6. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)—Bundled
Contribution
HLOGA Section 204 defines the term
‘‘bundled contribution’’ as ‘‘with respect
to a [reporting committee] and a
[lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC], a contribution (subject to the
applicable threshold) which is (i)
forwarded from the contributor or any
contributors to the [reporting]
committee by the [lobbyist/registrant or
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lobbyist/registrant PAC]; or (ii) received
by the [reporting] committee from a
contributor or contributors, but credited
by the [reporting] committee or the
candidate involved (or, in the case of a
leadership PAC, by the [officeholder]
involved) to the [lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC] through
records, designations, or other means of
recognizing that a certain amount of
money has been raised by the [lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC].’’ 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(A).11
HLOGA thus recognizes two distinct
types of bundled contributions—(1)
contributions that are forwarded to the
reporting committee by a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC,
and (2) contributions received by the
reporting committee from the
contributors that are credited by the
reporting committee to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
through records, designations or other
means of recognizing that a certain
amount of money has been raised by
that lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC. Each type of bundled
contribution is discussed separately
below.
a. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(i)—Contributions
Forwarded to a Reporting Committee by
a Lobbyist/Registrant or Lobbyist/
Registrant PAC
The first type of ‘‘bundled
contribution’’ defined in 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6) is a contribution that is
forwarded to the reporting committee by
a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC. New 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(i) states that a forwarded
contribution is any contribution
delivered or transmitted, by physical or
electronic means, to the reporting
committee by the lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC, or by any
person that the reporting committee
knows to be forwarding such
contribution on behalf of a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
This type of bundled contribution
does not result from the reporting
committee’s crediting the lobbyist/
registrant or the lobbyist/registrant PAC
with having raised the contributions in
order for the contributions to be
included in the aggregate amount of
bundled contributions disclosed.
Rather, this type of bundled
contribution turns solely on the fact that
the contributions were forwarded by the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
11 As discussed in section III.H below, because
the term ‘‘contributions’’ in FECA includes in-kind
contributions, the rules for ‘‘bundled contributions’’
apply to both monetary and in-kind contributions.
See 2 U.S.C. 431(8)(A)(i) and 11 CFR 100.51(a),
100.54, 100.56, 109.21(b).
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PAC to the reporting committee.
Bundled contributions that are
forwarded to a reporting committee by
a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC must be reported
regardless of whether the committee
awards any ‘‘credit’’ to the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
The NPRM sought comment as to
whether it might be helpful and
facilitate compliance if the Commission
were to define the term ‘‘forwarded’’ in
the rule as, for instance, ‘‘arranging or
causing the physical or electronic
delivery or transmission of a
contribution.’’ NPRM, 72 FR at 62602.
Three comments addressed this
question. One comment stated that such
a definition would be useful to clarify,
for example, that if a lobbyist collects a
batch of checks for a candidate but
arranges for an employee or third party
to give them to the candidate, rather
than personally delivering them, those
checks have been ‘‘forwarded’’ and the
reporting committee must report the
information about the bundler if the
contributions exceed the reporting
threshold.
A second comment stated that the
definition of the term ‘‘forwarded’’
should simply restate the Commission’s
current ‘‘intermediary/conduit’’ concept
at 11 CFR 110.6. This comment
suggested that for simplicity, the
Commission should apply the existing
standards in 11 CFR 110.6, but exclude
the exception in 11 CFR 110.6(b)(2)(i)(E)
for any person who is expressly
authorized by the candidate or the
candidate’s political committee to
engage in fundraising, and who
occupies a significant position in the
candidate’s campaign organization.
The third comment stated that such a
definition would be helpful, but argued
that HLOGA Section 204 covers only
contributions that are physically
forwarded by a lobbyist to a reporting
committee, rather than contributions
forwarded electronically. In the absence
of statutory language to the contrary, the
comment argued, the Commission must
adopt the approach set forth in the
Section-by-Section Analysis, which
refers to ‘‘situation[s] where a lobbyist
physically forwards contributions to the
campaign.’’ 153 Cong. Rec. S10709
(daily ed. August 2, 2007).
The Commission concludes that a
new definition of ‘‘forwarded
contribution’’ would be helpful and that
the new definition should appropriately
encompass both the physical and the
electronic forwarding of contributions.
The Section-by-Section Analysis
explains that the first type of bundled
contribution ‘‘covers the situation where
a lobbyist physically forwards
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contributions to the campaign.’’ This
type of bundled contribution is
distinguished from situations in which
contributions are made directly by a
contributor to a reporting committee,
but are raised by and credited to a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC.
The Commission has long recognized
that contributions may be made
electronically. The Commission has also
recognized that earmarked contributions
may be forwarded electronically to the
recipient candidate committee. See
generally Advisory Opinion 1995–09
(NewtWatch). Accordingly, the
Commission has concluded that certain
contributions should not fall outside the
scope of HLOGA’s reporting
requirements simply because they were
forwarded electronically. New 11 CFR
104.22 thus requires disclosure of
information about lobbyists/registrants
and lobbyist/registrant PACs that
forward contributions either physically
or electronically to a reporting
committee if the amount of bundled
contributions exceeds the reporting
threshold in the covered period.
Examples of contributions forwarded
‘‘electronically’’ include contributions
received by a lobbyist/registrant in the
form of checks and then deposited by
the lobbyist/registrant in its account and
transmitted by the lobbyist/registrant
electronically to the reporting
committee, and contributions received
by a lobbyist/registrant PAC via credit
card, debit card, or electronic check,
including authorization to access credit
or debit card funds or banking funds,
and then transmitted by the lobbyist/
registrant PAC in the form of a check or
via credit card to the reporting
committee.12
Additionally, 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(i)
specifies that a bundled contribution
means a contribution that is forwarded
to the reporting committee by a person
that the reporting committee ‘‘knows to
be forwarding such contribution on
behalf of a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist
registrant PAC.’’ This provision covers
12 The Commission notes that, in these examples,
the lobbyist/registrant also might have to file a
conduit report pursuant to 11 CFR 110.6. Conduits,
intermediaries, and lobbyist/registrants and
lobbyist/registrant PACs that forward bundled
contributions are also subject to the rules in 11 CFR
102.8. Conduit or intermediary activities are
additionally subject to disclosure by reporting
committees under these final rules if the conduits
or intermediaries are lobbyist/registrants or
lobbyist/registrant PACs and provide bundled
contributions exceeding the reporting threshold
within the covered period. Furthermore, these final
rules do not make permissible any activity
otherwise prohibited by the FECA and Commission
regulations (e.g., making or facilitating
contributions by prohibited sources). See, e.g., 2
U.S.C. 441b(a) and 11 CFR 114.2(f).
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such situations as when an employee or
officer of a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC forwards a
contribution to a reporting committee,
and the reporting committee knows that
the employee or officer forwarded the
contributions on behalf of the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
As noted below, the Commission
believes that both the reporting
committee and the lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC have a
convergent interest in knowing and
having it made known that a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC has
raised certain contributions for the
committee. If the reporting committee
knows that the non-lobbyist
intermediary is forwarding the checks
on behalf of the lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC, the reporting
committee must report information
about the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC on whose behalf the
checks are forwarded, if the reporting
threshold is met. The reporting
requirement may not be avoided simply
because the intermediary who
forwarded the contribution was not a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC.
For example, a lobbyist may ask a
friend, colleague, employee, or courier
service to deliver checks collected by
the lobbyist to a reporting committee. If
the reporting committee knows of that
fact, for example, if told orally or by
means of a transmittal letter, disclosure
of the lobbyist-forwarded contributions
cannot be avoided in this case simply
because the lobbyist forwarded such
contributions through a non-lobbyist
intermediary.
b. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)—Crediting
Contributions to Lobbyists/Registrants
and Their PACs
The second type of ‘‘bundled
contribution’’ in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6) covers contributions
received by the reporting committee
from the contributors (rather than from
a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC, as discussed in section
III.A.6.a, above) that are credited by the
reporting committee to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
through records, designations or other
means of recognizing that a certain
amount of money has been raised by
that lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii).
i. Received and Credited
The NPRM requested comments on
whether the amount of contributions
received or the amount of contributions
credited should be included in the
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aggregation toward the reporting
threshold.
Two comments addressed this issue.
One comment indicated a preference
that the reporting committees be
required to disclose the amount
received, rather than the amount
credited, to eliminate any discrepancies
in the amounts that lobbyists/registrants
and their PACs report they have raised
for reporting committees and the
amounts that the reporting committees
know have or have not been raised. The
other comment stated that both the
amounts received and credited should
determine the amount disclosed. This
latter comment stated a belief that the
reporting committee is in the best
position to determine what credit to
give and to whom. The comment noted
that what matters under HLOGA is the
amount of contributions that the
reporting committee credits the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC for having raised.
The Commission agrees with the latter
comment. Bundled contributions that
are forwarded to a reporting committee
by a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC must be reported
regardless of whether the reporting
committee provides any ‘‘credit’’ for
them. In contrast, the focus of HLOGA’s
reporting requirement for contributions
received directly from contributors is
based upon the credit that a reporting
committee gives to a lobbyist/registrant
or lobbyist/registrant PAC for having
raised the contribution. The
Commission so concludes for the
following reasons:
(A) HLOGA defines ‘‘bundled
contribution’’ as a contribution
‘‘received by the committee from a
contributor or contributors, but credited
by the committee or candidate involved
* * * to the [lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC] through
records, designations, or other means of
recognizing that a certain amount of
money has been raised by the [lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC].’’ 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(A)(ii) (emphasis added).
Thus, the statutory definition has two
components: receipt from the
contributor and credit given to the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC.
(B) HLOGA’s disclosure requirement
is intended to make transparent the
influence that lobbyists/registrants and
lobbyist/registrant PACs might gain by
raising contributions for reporting
committees. Any such influence may be
affected by the reporting committee’s
perception of the value of the lobbyist/
registrant’s or lobbyist/registrant PAC’s
fundraising efforts. Accordingly, the
purpose behind HLOGA’s disclosure
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requirement is best served by requiring
reporting committees to disclose the
amount of credit that they give to
lobbyist/registrants or lobbyist/
registrant PACs for having raised
contributions.
(C) The Section-by-Section Analysis
supports this interpretation. It states
that the disclosure requirement would
apply only if the reporting committee
credits a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC with proceeds of a
fundraising event that the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
hosts. See 153 Cong. Rec. S10709 (daily
ed. August 2, 2007) (‘‘An event hosted
by a registered lobbyist may trigger the
disclosure requirement if the committee
credits the lobbyist with the proceeds of
the fundraiser. * * *’’) (emphasis
added). The Section-by-Section
Analysis also emphasizes that the
reporting requirement depends on
whether the committee gave credit to
the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC, as opposed to requiring
a committee to report automatically the
proceeds of any fundraising event held
on the premises of a lobbyist/registrant
or lobbyist/registrant PAC. Id. (‘‘The
disclosure requirement is not triggered
by general solicitation of contributions
where a registered lobbyist attends an
event or an event is held on the
premises of a registrant.’’) Therefore, the
Commission believes that the focus of
HLOGA Section 204 is the credit
provided by the reporting committee to
the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC for having raised
contributions.
(D) Further, the Commission notes
that Congress may have anticipated the
possible discrepancy between the
amount that a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC may claim to
have raised for a reporting committee,
and the amount that the reporting
committee reports as actually credited
to a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC. Earlier versions of the
Senate bill that eventually became
HLOGA Section 204 would have placed
the reporting obligation for
contributions ‘‘collected or arranged’’ by
a lobbyist or registrant solely on the
lobbyist or registrant. S.1, 110th Cong.
§ 212 (as passed by the Senate, Jan. 18,
2007). Because of concerns about the
accuracy of the information that would
be reported, however, a subsequent
House bill, H.R. 2317, also would have
required registered lobbyists to give
notice to the recipients of these
contributions before the lobbyists filed
their reports. H.R. 2317, 110th Cong.
§ 2(a) (as passed by the House, July 31,
2007). The Committee Report for this
bill explained the provision: ‘‘[t]his
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notice enables the covered recipient to
raise any questions with the lobbyist
about the information, and to take any
appropriate action, prior to the public
filing of the information.’’ H.R. Rep.
110–162, at 4 (May 21, 2007). As
enacted, HLOGA addressed this concern
by requiring the reporting committees
themselves to disclose contributions
forwarded by, or raised by and credited
to, lobbyists. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(1). In
short, this evolution reflects the reality
that simply because a lobbyist or
registrant claims to have raised a
specific amount for a reporting
committee does not make it so. Instead,
Congress anticipated that the reporting
committees themselves would be in the
best position to determine whether they
had received contributions and credited
the contributions to a lobbyist/registrant
or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
Accordingly, new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(ii) follows HLOGA, as
explained in the Section-by-Section
Analysis, in requiring that a
contribution be both received by the
reporting committee and credited to a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC to satisfy the definition of
‘‘bundled contribution.’’ See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(8)(A)(ii). Thus, for example, if a
lobbyist merely tells a candidate that the
lobbyist has raised $20,000 for the
candidate’s campaign, those
contributions are not considered
‘‘bundled contributions’’ under 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(ii) unless they have been
both received and credited by the
candidate or the reporting committee.
The Commission emphasizes that any
intentional misrepresentation or
misreporting of the reporting
committee’s actual crediting of bundled
contributions is a violation of this rule.
ii. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A)—Records,
Designations, or Other Means of
Recognizing
HLOGA Section 204 requires the
disclosure of information about
lobbyists/registrants and lobbyist/
registrant PACs that are credited by a
reporting committee, ‘‘through records,
designations or other means of
recognizing,’’ with having raised
contributions in excess of the threshold
amount for the reporting committee. 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(A)(ii).
A. Records
HLOGA states that reporting
committees may credit lobbyists/
registrants or lobbyist/registrant PACs
‘‘through records, designations, or other
means of recognizing.’’ 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(8)(A)(ii). The NPRM requested
commenters to submit examples of
‘‘records, designations or other means of
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recognizing’’ that a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC had raised
contributions for a reporting committee.
NPRM, 72 FR at 62603.
The Commission received one
comment addressing the ‘‘records’’
aspect of crediting. The comment
observed that the proposed rule did not
define the type of ‘‘record’’ that would
trigger the reporting requirement and
asked that the final rule indicate the
level of specificity or certainty required
for a ‘‘record’’ to constitute credit.
The Commission has decided to draw
from the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure to define ‘‘records’’ in new 11
CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A). ‘‘Records’’
means written evidence, which includes
writings, charts, computer files, tables,
spreadsheets, databases, or other data or
data compilations stored in any medium
from which information can be
obtained. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A); see
also Fed. R. Civ. P. 34. In sum, a
‘‘record’’ is any method that the
reporting committee uses to retain
information pertaining to the
committee’s crediting, and includes not
just paper, but electronic, digital, audio,
video, or any other format. The
Commission notes that records include
informal items such as hand-written
notations on a business card.
B. Designations or Other Means of
Recognizing
The proposed rules in the NPRM
would have defined ‘‘designations or
other means of recognizing’’ to include
‘‘titles [bestowed upon lobbyists/
registrants or lobbyist/registrant PACs]
based on levels of fundraising, access to
events reserved exclusively for those
who generate a certain level of
contributions, or similar benefits
provided as a reward for successful
fundraising.’’ NPRM, 72 FR at 62603.
The NPRM asked whether ‘‘designations
or other means of recognizing’’ must be
written and sought other examples of
crediting through ‘‘designations or other
means of recognizing.’’
Several comments addressed this
issue. All of them asserted that the
‘‘designation or other means of
recognizing’’ bundled contributions
need not be written. Some comments
argued that the standard should be one
of knowledge by the candidate involved
or by the reporting committee that the
committee has received a certain
amount of bundled contributions raised
by a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC, but others disagreed.
One comment indicated that
additional examples of ‘‘designations
and other means of recognizing’’
bundled contributions could include (1)
being the host or co-host of a
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fundraising event; (2) using a lobbyist/
registrant’s or lobbyist/registrant PAC’s
office or residence for a fundraising
event; or (3) being on a steering
committee in exchange for raising a
certain amount of money. With respect
to the first two suggested examples, the
Commission notes that the Section-bySection Analysis specifically states,
‘‘[t]he disclosure requirement is not
triggered * * * where * * * an event is
held on the premises of a registrant. An
event hosted by a registered lobbyist
may trigger the disclosure requirement
if the reporting committee credits the
lobbyist with the proceeds of the
fundraiser through record, designation,
or other form of recognition. * * *’’ 153
Cong. Rec. S10709 (daily ed. August 2,
2007) (emphasis added). Thus, the
Section-by-Section Analysis indicated
that the simple fact that a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
hosts a fundraiser or holds a fundraiser
on its premises would not, by itself,
trigger the reporting requirement.
Two comments cited the Bush
‘‘Pioneer/Ranger model,’’ in which
bundlers were given titles
corresponding with the amounts of
money raised, as an example of
crediting. One comment also referred to
the earmarking standard of ‘‘implied or
expressed, oral or written’’ designation
as analogous to the standard that the
Commission should set for what type of
designation would constitute crediting.
See 11 CFR 110.6(b)(1). One comment
noted that crediting is not necessarily
the same thing as keeping records.
Consistent with the statutory
imperative to provide for the broadest
possible disclosure consistent with the
law (2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(D)), the
Commission has determined that the
phrase ‘‘designations, or other means of
recognizing that a certain amount of
money has been raised’’ is to be
construed broadly as encompassing
benefits given by the reporting
committee to a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC for raising a
certain amount of contributions.
The Section-by-Section Analysis
provides ‘‘honorary titles within the
committee’’ as an example of
‘‘designations.’’ 153 Cong. Rec. at
S10709 (daily ed. August 2, 2007). The
Commission has incorporated this
concept in its regulations. Thus,
designations include titles that the
reporting committee gives to persons
who have raised a certain amount of
contributions. 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A)(1). The titles that
various presidential campaigns have
given to their fundraisers are examples
of such designations. Titles, however,
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are only one example of a
‘‘designation.’’
Similarly, the Commission interprets
‘‘other means of recognizing that a
certain amount of money has been
raised’’ as benefits that reporting
committees use to credit lobbyist/
registrants or lobbyist/registrant PACs
for having raised a certain amount of
contributions, and not to include
benefits given to such individuals or
entities solely for any other reason. The
example in the Section-by-Section
Analysis is instructive: ‘‘examples of
such recognition include access to
certain events reserved exclusively for
those who generate a certain level of
contributions or similar benefits
provided by the committee as a reward
for successful fundraising.’’ 153 Cong.
Rec. at S10709 (daily ed. August 2,
2007). Thus, if a reporting committee
holds an event in recognition of its
fundraisers, to which it invites only
persons who raised at least $20,000,
invitations to the event would be a
means of recognizing that a ‘‘certain
amount of money has been raised’’ (i.e.,
at least $20,000). 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii).
Additionally, a candidate may credit
a lobbyist by inviting the lobbyist to an
event that is not exclusive to those who
generate a certain level of contributions,
so long as that particular invitation was
extended in recognition of the lobbyist
having raised a certain amount of
contributions. In contrast, if, for
example, an individual who happens to
be a lobbyist, but who has not actually
raised any money for the reporting
committee, is invited to the event, then
the invitation to that individual would
not constitute crediting with respect to
that individual (i.e., a means of
recognizing that a certain amount of
money has been raised by that
individual). On the other hand, if a
lobbyist who has raised contributions in
excess of the reporting threshold is
invited to an event in recognition of the
reporting committee’s fundraisers, the
committee cannot avoid disclosing that
lobbyist by claiming that the lobbyist
was invited for some other reason.
The Commission agrees with those
comments that urged that neither
designations nor ‘‘other means of
recognizing’’ need be in writing. 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(A)(ii). While the
inherent nature of ‘‘records’’ is that they
be in writing, or ‘‘recorded’’ in some
form, ‘‘designations or other means of
recognizing’’ need not be. The example
in the Section-by-Section Analysis of
‘‘access to certain events reserved
exclusively for those who generate a
certain level of contributions or similar
benefits provided by the committee as a
reward for successful fundraising,’’ is
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again instructive. 153 Cong. Rec. at
S10709 (daily ed. August 2, 2007).
Access to events may be memorialized
in records (such as guest lists) but they
will not necessarily be so.
New 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A)
expands on the examples suggested in
the Section-by-Section Analysis. Thus,
‘‘other means of recognizing’’ include
tracking identifiers that the reporting
committee assigns and that are included
on contributions or contribution-related
materials (for example, contributor
response devices, cover letters, or
Internet website solicitation pages) that
may be used to maintain information
about the amounts of contributions that
a person raises. 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A)(2). Other ‘‘means of
recognizing’’ also include access,
including offers of attendance
(invitations) and/or actual attendance, at
events given to a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC by the reporting
committee as a result of the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
having raised a certain amount of
contributions. 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A)(3). Another common
means of recognizing those who bundle
contributions are mementos, such as
photographs with the candidate or
autographed copies of books authored
by the candidate, given by the reporting
committee to persons who have raised
a certain amount of contributions. 11
CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)(A)(4).
The fact that a reporting committee
knows that a contribution was raised by
a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC and credits the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
through some means of recognition is
sufficient to satisfy this final type of
credit. The examples listed in the new
rule are illustrative, and are designed to
give guidance, but do not constitute an
exhaustive list. Committees may be
creative in how they recognize their
fundraisers, and the Commission has no
interest in limiting or discouraging
creative incentives that are consistent
with the law.
The Commission notes that some
comments suggested that mere
knowledge by a reporting committee
that a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC has raised funds of a
certain amount is enough to constitute
credit. Although Congress could have
enacted a provision in HLOGA to
require reporting if a reporting
committee simply ‘‘knows or has reason
to know’’ that a contribution was raised
by a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC, without requiring that
the reporting committee credit a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC for the contribution, neither
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HLOGA as enacted, nor the Section-bySection Analysis, suggested any intent
to require reporting in that situation. In
several instances similar to this,
Congress has used a ‘‘knows or has
reason to know’’ standard in sections of
FECA, but did not do so here. See, e.g.,
2 U.S.C. 434(f)(2)(D) (requiring the
reporting of names of candidates to be
identified in an electioneering
communication ‘‘if known’’); 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(1) (requiring the reporting of
information on each person ‘‘reasonably
known’’ to be a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC); 2 U.S.C.
441a(f) (prohibiting candidates or
political committees from ‘‘knowingly’’
accepting contributions in violation of
FECA); and 2 U.S.C. 441b(a)
(prohibiting candidates or political
committees from ‘‘knowingly’’ accepting
or receiving contributions from national
banks, corporations, or labor
organizations).
Instead, HLOGA as enacted, and as
confirmed by the Section-by-Section
Analysis, requires credit to be given by
the reporting committee to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
before a contribution received from a
contributor is considered a ‘‘bundled
contribution.’’ 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(A)(ii);
see also 153 Cong. Rec. S10709 (daily
ed. August 2, 2007). Therefore, mere
knowledge, in and of itself, is not
enough. Rather, it is necessary for a
reporting committee to credit through
‘‘records, designations, or other means
of recognizing that a certain amount of
money has been raised’’ before reporting
is required.
iii. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)(B)—The
Candidate Involved
HLOGA requires the disclosure of
information about lobbyists/registrants
or lobbyist/registrant PACs that are
credited by a reporting committee or the
‘‘candidate involved’’ with the reporting
committee as having raised a ‘‘certain
amount’’ of contributions for the
reporting committee. 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(8)(A)(ii). HLOGA does not define
‘‘candidate involved.’’
The Section-by-Section Analysis
defines the ‘‘candidate involved’’ for
each of the three types of reporting
committee (i.e., authorized committees
of Federal candidates, leadership PACs
and political party committees). First,
the Section-by-Section Analysis defines
the ‘‘candidate involved’’ in an
authorized committee as ‘‘the candidate
for whom the committee is the principal
campaign committee.’’ 153 Cong. Rec.
S10709 (daily ed. August 2, 2007). This
definition follows the definition of
‘‘authorized committee’’ in FECA,
which states that an authorized
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committee is a political committee
authorized by a candidate to receive
contributions or make expenditures on
behalf of the candidate. 2 U.S.C. 431(6);
see also 11 CFR 100.5(f)(1). Second, the
Section-by-Section Analysis indicates
that the ‘‘candidate involved’’ in a
leadership PAC is ‘‘the candidate who
directly or indirectly establishes,
finances, maintains or controls the
Leadership PAC,’’ which tracks the
definition of leadership PAC in HLOGA.
See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(B); 153 Cong. Rec.
S10709 (daily ed. August 2, 2007). Last,
the Section-by-Section Analysis also
indicates that the ‘‘candidate involved’’
in a party committee is the chairman of
the party committee. See 153 Cong. Rec.
S10709 (daily ed. August 2, 2007).
The proposed rules followed the
definitions in the Section-by-Section
Analysis for authorized committees and
leadership PACs, but did not include a
definition of ‘‘candidate involved’’ in
the context of a political party
committee.
The only comment that addressed this
topic referred to the Section-by-Section
Analysis and suggested that the final
rules include a definition of ‘‘candidate
involved’’ with party committees, in
addition to those proposed for
authorized committees of Federal
candidates and for leadership PACs.
The Commission agrees with the
comment that a definition of ‘‘candidate
involved’’ for all three types of reporting
committees would provide useful
additional guidance to the regulated
community. Accordingly, new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(ii)(B) defines ‘‘candidate
involved’’ in accordance with the
Section-by-Section Analysis.
iv. Co-Hosting Fundraisers
Another issue in the NPRM that
several comments addressed was how a
reporting committee should give credit
to multiple lobbyists/registrants or
lobbyist/registrant PACs that co-host
fundraisers or raise funds for a
candidate as a result of any coordinated
effort.
Although HLOGA Section 204 did not
explicitly address co-hosted fundraisers,
in a colloquy on the Senate floor, two
Senators stated that there was concern
that reporting committees would
attempt to avoid the reporting
requirements by dividing the total
receipts of a fundraising event among
many co-hosts on a prorated basis or
another allocation method potentially
designed to avoid disclosure. 153 Cong.
Rec. S10699 (daily ed. August 2, 2007).
To prevent this, one Senator stated that
where two or more lobbyists/registrants
or lobbyist/registrant PACs are co-hosts
of a fundraiser, then each lobbyist/
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registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
‘‘should be treated as providing the total
amount raised at the event’’ for the
purposes of reaching the reporting
threshold, and for the purposes of
reporting ‘‘bundled contributions’’
under HLOGA Section 204. Id.
The Commission has considered this
colloquy in light of the text of HLOGA
and the Section-by-Section Analysis,
which describes bundled contributions
as those where a ‘‘committee or
candidate credits a registered lobbyist
for generating the contributions and
where such credit is reflected in some
form of record, designation or
recognition.’’ 153 Cong. Rec. S10709
(daily ed. August 2, 2007) (emphasis
added). The Section-by-Section
Analysis states that ‘‘[a]n event hosted
by a registered lobbyist may trigger the
disclosure requirement if the committee
credits the lobbyist with the proceeds of
the fundraiser. * * *’’ Id. (emphasis
added).
Three comments urged the
Commission to promulgate regulations
requiring the reporting committee in all
instances to credit each of the hosts for
the entire amount raised for purposes of
bundling disclosure.
By contrast, a fourth comment argued
that crediting each host with the total
amount raised would result in
inaccurate and misleading reporting of
the actual amount raised. This comment
indicated a preference for an approach
under which credit for the amount
raised should be prorated among the
fundraiser’s co-hosting lobbyists/
registrants and lobbyist/registrant PACs.
Other comments, however, disagreed,
arguing that proration among a
fundraiser’s co-hosts would enable
reporting committees to avoid reporting
bundled contributions by increasing the
number of co-hosts, such that when the
total amount of contributions raised is
divided among them, none of the cohosts would be credited with raising
more than the reporting threshold.
Other comments supported the
Section-by-Section Analysis. They
asserted that the amount of funds a
reporting committee actually credits of
the funds raised at a fundraiser hosted
by multiple lobbyists/registrants and/or
lobbyist/registrant PACs is the amount
that should be disclosed. One comment
noted that the reporting committees
know best who they credited for raising
bundled contributions at a co-hosted
fundraiser, and how much, and that
there should not be a regulatory
mandate requiring committees to give
and report credit in a contrary manner.
Moreover, the comment pointed out that
an individual may be listed as a ‘‘cohost’’ of a fundraiser for many different
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reasons unrelated to actual amounts
raised from a particular event. Another
comment noted that in many cases, to
be on a hosting committee, a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC is
required to raise a certain amount of
contributions. The comment stated that
if a co-host fails to raise the requisite
amount, the reporting committee would
not credit that co-host with having
raised more than the co-host actually
raised. The comment also pointed out
that in other situations, where, for
example, 25 members of a host
committee each raise $3,000, the
reporting committee would not credit
each co-host with having raised the full
$75,000.
After considering the colloquy on the
Senate floor, the Section-by-Section
Analysis, and the comments received,
the Commission concludes that any
determination of whether the reporting
threshold is met, and how much must
be reported, is controlled by (a) whether
a reporting committee credits a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC for
having raised contributions, and (b) how
much the reporting committee credits
the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC with having raised. Both
the reporting committee and the
fundraiser have independent incentives
to ensure that credit for funds raised is
properly attributed—on the one hand,
the reporting committee is motivated to
provide appropriate credit in an effort to
encourage the fundraiser to continue
raising funds and, on the other hand,
the fundraiser is motivated to ensure
that the fundraiser is receiving the
proper credit for any funds raised. As
noted above, the Commission received
testimony that committees, in order to
have effective fundraising programs,
need to know and do know who is
raising funds for them and how much
those persons are raising. The
Commission believes that this dual
motivation will result in the accurate
reporting of actual credit given.
Requiring a reporting committee to
credit the entire amount raised at a
fundraiser to each lobbyist/registrant
and lobbyist/registrant PAC co-host
could be confusing and could lead to
the compelled disclosure of potentially
misleading information. The
requirement could be confusing,
because it would involve the creation of
two separate and potentially
inconsistent definitions of crediting:
One to apply in every situation other
than co-hosted fundraising events, and
the other to apply only in situations
involving co-hosted fundraising events.
Under the non-co-host definition, a
reporting committee would disclose
information about a lobbyist/registrant
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only if the reporting committee actually
credits the lobbyist/registrant with
having raised contributions exceeding
the threshold amount during the
covered period. Under the co-host
definition, by contrast, a reporting
committee would disclose information
about a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC co-host regardless of
whether or how much the reporting
committee actually credits the co-host
for having raised. Such a result could
lead to further confusion as to who is
raising contributions, and how much,
for reporting committees.
As noted above, the Section-bySection Analysis provides that ‘‘[a]n
event hosted by a registered lobbyist
may trigger the disclosure requirement
if the [reporting] committee credits the
lobbyist with the proceeds of the
fundraiser * * * ’’ 153 Cong. Rec.
S10709 (daily ed. August 2, 2007)
(emphasis added). The Commission
reads this statement as an expression of
legislative intent to apply not only to
lobbyists hosting fundraising events or
functions, but also to lobbyists that cohosts the events or functions, regardless
of whether such events or functions are
formal or informal.
Finally, as discussed below, requiring
a reporting committee to credit the
entire amount raised at a fundraiser to
each lobbyist/registrant and lobbyist/
registrant PAC co-host could be
potentially misleading. It would require
reporting committees to report not only
that they credited lobbyist/registrant
and lobbyist/registrant PAC co-hosts for
raising more money than the co-hosts
might actually have raised, but also that
they gave the co-hosts credit when, in
fact, credit was not given. For example,
if a group of individuals consisting of
lobbyists and non-lobbyists co-host a
fundraiser for a candidate, the
candidate’s committee would have to
report that each of the lobbyists raised
the entire amount, without regard to
how much the reporting committee
credited them for having raised, without
regard to how much they might actually
have raised, and without regard to the
non-lobbyist co-hosts. This could result
in committees reporting information
that they know to be untrue. One
comment stated that treasurers would be
reluctant to sign such reports.
The Commission similarly rejected
the suggestion that it require credit for
the entire amount of contributions
raised at a co-hosted fundraising event
to be pro-rated among all of the cohosting lobbyists/registrants and
lobbyist/registrant PACs. Not only
would such a requirement enable
reporting committees to avoid the
reporting threshold by increasing the
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number of co-hosts, as noted by several
comments, but it would also raise the
same potential for confusion and
inaccuracy as would requiring the full
amount raised to be credited to each cohost.
Thus, the Commission has decided
not to adopt either the suggestion that
the total proceeds of a fundraising event
be required to be prorated among all the
co-hosts, or the suggestion that the total
proceeds of any event be required to be
credited to each of the co-hosts. Instead,
co-hosted events will be treated like any
other fundraising activity: Committees
must report the actual amounts raised
by and credited to lobbyist/registrants
and lobbyist/registrant PACs.
Accordingly, the Commission
concludes that reporting committees are
in the best position to determine the
amount of contributions raised by
lobbyists/registrants and their PACs
from co-hosted fundraisers, based on the
reporting committees’ recognition of the
amount each person actually raised.
This conclusion is consistent with both
the language of the statute and the
Section-by-Section Analysis.
Contributions raised as the result of a
fundraising event hosted by one or more
lobbyist/registrants or lobbyist/
registrant PACs will follow the general
rule in new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii),
which requires that a contribution be
both received by the reporting
committee and credited to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC to
satisfy the definition of ‘‘bundled
contribution.’’ The reporting committee
must disclose any and all bundled
contributions received as the result of a
fundraiser that are credited to a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC so long as the reporting threshold
has been exceeded for that lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
during the relevant covered period. The
following are examples that assume a
$16,000 reporting threshold: 13
Example 1. A fundraising event is cohosted by Lobbyists A, B and C. The event
generates $20,000 in contributions. The
reporting committee believes that Lobbyist A
raised the entire $20,000 and thus credits
Lobbyist A with the entire $20,000 raised at
the event, and does not credit Lobbyists B or
C. The reporting committee must disclose the
$20,000 that has been credited to Lobbyist A.
The reporting committee need not disclose
any information regarding Lobbyists B and C,
because neither Lobbyist B nor C has been
credited with any bundled contributions.
13 For 2009, the applicable reporting threshold is
$16,000. Although HLOGA Section 204 set the
initial reporting threshold at $15,000, 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(3)(A), this number will be indexed for
inflation annually. 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(3)(B); 11 CFR
104.22(g).
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Example 2. A fundraising event is cohosted by Lobbyist A and Lobbyist B, as well
as three non-lobbyist hosts. The event
generates $20,000 in contributions. The
reporting committee gives each host credit
for raising $20,000. The reporting committee
must disclose the $20,000 of bundled
contributions that has been credited to
Lobbyist A and also report the $20,000 of
bundled contributions that has been credited
to Lobbyist B because the reporting
committee has credited the full amount to
each lobbyist.14 The reporting committee
may, if it chooses, include a memo entry in
the space provided on FEC Form 3L to
indicate that, although only a total of $20,000
was raised at the event, that full $20,000 was
credited to each of the co-hosts, or any other
information that the reporting committee
wishes to include.
Example 3. A fundraising dinner is cohosted by Lobbyist A and Lobbyist B, as well
as three non-lobbyist hosts. Each host takes
responsibility for filling eight seats at $500 a
seat. The fundraiser generates $20,000 in
contributions from non-hosts, and the
reporting committee credits each host with
generating $4,000 in contributions. The
reporting committee must disclose the $4,000
of bundled contributions that has been
credited to Lobbyist A, if the reporting
committee also has credited Lobbyist A with
more than $12,000 of other bundled
contributions during the relevant covered
period, thereby causing Lobbyist A to surpass
the $16,000 reporting threshold. This same
analysis would apply for Lobbyist B.
Example 4. A fundraising event is cohosted by Lobbyist A and Lobbyist B, as well
as three non-lobbyist hosts. The fundraiser
generates $21,000 in contributions and the
reporting committee knows that Lobbyist A
raised $17,000 of the total. The committee
credits Lobbyist A with generating $17,000 of
the contributions and credits Lobbyist B, as
well as the three non-lobbyist hosts as having
generated $1,000 each. The reporting
committee must disclose the $17,000 of
bundled contributions that has been credited
to Lobbyist A because this amount is in
excess of the $16,000 reporting threshold.
The reporting committee must also disclose
the $1,000 in bundled contributions that has
been credited to Lobbyist B if the reporting
committee also has credited Lobbyist B with
more than $15,000 of other bundled
contributions during the relevant covered
period, thereby causing Lobbyist B to surpass
the $16,000 reporting threshold.
Example 5. A fundraising event is cohosted by Lobbyist A and Lobbyist B, as well
as three non-lobbyist hosts. The fundraiser
generates $20,000 in contributions and the
reporting committee knows that Lobbyist A
raised $17,000 of the total and that one of the
14 The reporting committee would report having
received only $20,000 on FEC Form 3 and would
provide itemized information on Schedule A
related to the $20,000 of received contributions. It
is only the credit that is reported twice on FEC
Form 3L (see section III–B below) and this would
be a direct result of the reporting committee having
given the full $20,000 credit to two different
lobbyists. A reporting committee may give credit to
all co-hosts for the full amount raised, but is not
required to do so.
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non-lobbyist hosts raised the remaining
$3,000. The Committee credits Lobbyist A
with generating $17,000 of the contributions.
The reporting committee must disclose the
$17,000 of bundled contributions that has
been credited to Lobbyist A because $17,000
is in excess of the $16,000 reporting
threshold. The reporting committee need not
disclose any information regarding Lobbyist
B because Lobbyist B is not responsible for
raising any of the $20,000 raised at the
fundraiser and Lobbyist B has not been
credited with any bundled contributions.
The Commission notes that the
examples and above discussion do not
apply to bundled contributions that are
forwarded by lobbyists/registrants or
lobbyist/registrant PACs at co-hosted
fundraisers. Credit is not a
consideration in the case of forwarded
contributions. Accordingly,
contributions forwarded by a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC at a
co-hosted fundraiser count as
contributions bundled by the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC that
forwarded the contributions, regardless
of whether the lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC is a co-host of
the fundraiser or an attendee.
For example, at a fundraiser co-hosted
by Lobbyist A and several non-lobbyist
hosts, Lobbyist B (who is not a co-host
of the fundraiser) approaches the
candidate for whom funds are being
raised and hands the candidate $20,000
in contributions from other individuals.
Because these are contributions that
have been ‘‘forwarded’’ by Lobbyist B,
the reporting committee must disclose
the $20,000 of bundled contributions
that were forwarded by Lobbyist B
irrespective of any amount of credit
given to Lobbyist B.
If the reporting committee also credits
Lobbyist A, a co-host of the fundraiser,
$20,000 for having raised the
contributions forwarded by Lobbyist B
(because the contributions were
received during the fundraising event),
the reporting committee must then also
disclose that $20,000 of bundled
contributions has been credited to
Lobbyist A. Similar to ‘‘Example 2’’
above, even though the reporting
committee must disclose the entire
$20,000 as having been forwarded by
Lobbyist B, the reporting committee
must also report that same $20,000 of
bundled contributions has been credited
to Lobbyist A (again, assuming it has
credited Lobbyist A for that amount).
v. Crediting a Prohibited Source
Finally, the NPRM requested
comments on whether a lobbyist/
registrant that is otherwise prohibited
from making or facilitating
contributions can be credited by a
reporting committee with having raised
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7297
contributions. Such prohibitions apply
to national banks, corporations, labor
organizations, foreign nationals, and
Federal government contractors. See 2
U.S.C. 441b, 441(c), 441(e); 11 CFR
110.6(b)(2)(ii), 110.20, 114.2, 115.2.
Three comments argued that
registrants that are prohibited sources of
contributions should not be allowed to
be credited with having raised
contributions. In contrast to these three
comments, other comments stated that,
while certain entities are prohibited
from making contributions, these
entities must be reported if, through
their agents, they forward contributions
to a reporting committee or are credited
with raising contributions for a
reporting committee above the reporting
threshold. This comment further stated
that Congress was well aware that many
entities that register under the LDA are,
in fact, prohibited sources of
contributions under FECA, and that
these entities may nonetheless be
credited with having raised
contributions.
The Commission recognizes that
under the LDA, registrants include
lobbying organizations that would be
prohibited sources of contributions
under FECA. Congress is presumed to
be aware of existing law when it passes
legislation. See Miles v. Apex Marine
Corp., 498 U.S. 19, 32 (1990). Thus,
Congress’s failure to exempt disclosure
about registrants who would be
prohibited sources under FECA if they
are credited with raising contributions
suggests that Congress intended
information about them to be reported.
Accordingly, these final rules operate
independently of the prohibitions in
FECA and Commission regulations on
certain entities making and facilitating
contributions and acting as conduits or
intermediaries. See, e.g., 2 U.S.C.
441b(a); 11 CFR 114.2(f); 11 CFR
110.6(b)(2)(ii). The concept of ‘‘credit’’
is distinct from making, facilitating, or
serving as a conduit or intermediary for,
contributions. A registrant that is a
corporation, for example, would be
prohibited from facilitating the making
of contributions by persons outside of
the corporation’s restricted class. But if
a reporting committee nonetheless
credits the corporation for having raised
contributions received by that reporting
committee, and the amount of
contributions exceeds the reporting
threshold in a covered period,
information about the corporate
registrant must be reported.
The Commission emphasizes that the
prohibitions in FECA and Commission
regulations are not affected by this
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rulemaking and continue to apply. The
Commission cautions reporting
committees against confusing the giving
of credit to a registrant that is a
prohibited source, which is permissible
and may be reportable, with actually
accepting contributions from, or that
have been forwarded by, a prohibited
source, which is not permissible.
c. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(iii)—Bundled
Contributions Do Not Include
Contributions From Personal Funds of
Lobbyists/Registrants or Their Spouses
New 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(iii) provides
that bundled contributions do not
include contributions made by a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC from three sources: (1) The
personal funds of the lobbyist/registrant
who forwards or is credited with raising
contributions; (2) the personal funds of
that person’s spouse; and (3)
contributions made by lobbyist/
registrant PACs. This provision is
consistent with HLOGA, which
excludes contributions made to the
reporting committee by the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant’s spouse
from counting towards the reporting
threshold. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(3)(A).
The final rule at new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(iii) is nearly identical to the
proposed rule, on which the
Commission received no comments. The
only change from the proposed rule is
the application of the rule to
contributions made by lobbyist/
registrant PACs. New 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(iii) extends this exclusion
to contributions made by lobbyist/
registrant PACs to reflect the fact that
lobbyist/registrant PACs, like
individuals, may make contributions
under FECA in their own right, and the
contributions count against the lobbyist/
registrant PACs’ contribution limits.
Contributions made by lobbyist/
registrant PACs from committee funds
are not bundled contributions, just as
contributions made by individual
lobbyists from their personal funds are
not bundled contributions. Therefore,
including contributions by lobbyist/
registrant PACs in the exception in new
11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(iii) is consistent
with HLOGA Section 204.
Unlike contributions made by a
lobbyist/registrant PAC, or from the
personal funds of a lobbyist/registrant or
spouse, bundled contributions
forwarded by a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC will not affect
the lobbyist/registrant’s or lobbyist/
registrant PAC’s contribution limits, so
long as the lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC does not
exercise any direction or control over
the bundled contributions. This result is
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consistent with the Commission’s rule
governing earmarked contributions to
candidate committees through conduits
and intermediaries. See 11 CFR
110.6(d).
B. 11 CFR 104.22(b)—Reporting
Requirement for Reporting Committees
New 11 CFR 104.22(b) implements
HLOGA’s reporting provisions by
requiring reporting committees to
disclose certain information on a new
form, FEC Form 3L.
1. 11 CFR 104.22(b)(1)—FEC Form 3L
HLOGA Section 204 requires
reporting committees to disclose certain
information about each person
reasonably known by the reporting
committee to be a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC that ‘‘provided 2
or more bundled contributions’’
aggregating in excess of the reporting
threshold to the reporting committee
during the covered period. See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(1). New 11 CFR 104.22(b)(1)
implements this requirement by
requiring reporting committees to file
FEC Form 3L, on which reporting
committees must disclose the name and
address of the lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC, the employer of
the lobbyist/registrant (for individual
lobbyists/registrants), and the aggregate
amount of bundled contributions
provided by the lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC during the
covered period. Cf. 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(1).
Accordingly, for each covered period,
a reporting committee must disclose
information about each lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC that
provided the committee with ‘‘[two] or
more bundled contributions’’
aggregating in excess of the reporting
threshold during the covered period,
regardless of whether those
contributions consist of (1) only
‘‘forwarded’’ contributions, (2) only
‘‘received and credited’’ contributions,
or (3) some combination of the two
types of bundled contributions, and
regardless of whether those
contributions were forwarded or
received either (1) one-by-one during
the covered period or (2) all at once.
The final rule requires the reporting
committee to disclose the aggregate
amount of bundled contributions
‘‘forwarded by or received and credited
to,’’ rather than the amount ‘‘provided
by,’’ each lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC as was proposed in the
NPRM. This change was made to
enhance precision and clarity and is not
a substantive change. Otherwise, the
provisions are the same as those in the
proposed rule. The Commission
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received no comments on the proposed
provision.
2. Bundled Contributions That are
Returned or Refunded
i. Returned Contributions
If a bundled contribution is not
deposited and is, instead, returned
pursuant to 11 CFR 103.3(a) and (b),
110.1(b)(3)(i), 110.2(b)(3)(i), or
110.4(c)(2), then it does not aggregate
toward the reporting threshold for
disclosure of bundled contributions and
it does not have to be reported on the
reporting committee’s Form 3L.
ii. Refunded Contributions
If a bundled contribution is received,
deposited, and later refunded pursuant
to 11 CFR 102.9(e), 103.3(b)(3),
110.1(b)(3)(i) or 110.2(b)(3)(i), or for any
other reason, then the bundled
contribution does aggregate toward the
reporting threshold for the covered
period in which it was received.
Accordingly, it must be reported on the
reporting committee’s Form 3L if the
reporting threshold is exceeded for that
covered period. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(1);
11 CFR 104.22(b)(1). If the receipt of the
bundled contribution is reported on
Form 3L, then the refund of the bundled
contribution should also be reported on
Form 3L for the covered period in
which the refund occurred.
3. 11 CFR104.22(b)(2)—Determining
Whether a Person is Reasonably Known
to be a Lobbyist/Registrant or Lobbyist/
Registrant PAC
HLOGA Section 204 requires the
disclosure of information about a person
who forwards, or who is credited with
having raised, two or more bundled
contributions aggregating in excess of
the reporting threshold during the
covered period if the person is
‘‘reasonably known by the [reporting]
committee to be’’ a lobbyist/registrant or
a lobbyist/registrant PAC. 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(1). HLOGA also requires the
Commission to ‘‘provide guidance to
[reporting] committees with respect to
whether a person is reasonably known
by a committee to be’’ a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC. 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(B). In so doing, the
Commission is to include a
‘‘requirement that [reporting]
committees consult the websites
maintained by the Secretary of the
Senate and the Clerk of the House of
Representatives containing information
filed pursuant to the Lobbying
Disclosure Act of 1995.’’ 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(5)(B).
The Commission proposed 11 CFR
104.22(b)(2) to provide guidance with
respect to how reporting committees
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would comply with these requirements.
Specifically, under the proposed rule,
reporting committees would have had to
consult the websites maintained by the
Clerk of the House of Representatives,
the Secretary of the Senate, and the
Federal Election Commission in order to
determine whether a person is
identified on a filing under the LDA or
FECA as a registrant, a lobbyist, or a
political committee established or
controlled by a registrant or lobbyist.
The NPRM requested suggestions as to
other sources that reporting committees
might be required to check to determine
whether a contributor is a lobbyist/
registrant or a lobbyist/registrant PAC.
The Commission received two
comments in response, both supporting
the proposed rule. One comment also
recommended amending the proposed
rule to provide a safe harbor, such that
a reporting committee will be deemed to
have complied with the regulation if it
relies on the websites for purposes of
determining whether a person is a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC. See discussion below of section
104.22(b)(2)(ii).
Consistent with the proposed rule, the
final rule at 11 CFR 104.22(b)(2)(i)
requires reporting committees to consult
the House, Senate and Commission
websites to determine if a person is a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC. If a person is listed on any of these
websites as a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC, then the person
is ‘‘reasonably known to be’’ a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC,
and information about the person is
subject to the reporting requirement of
11 CFR 104.22(b).
The House and Senate Web sites
identify registered lobbyists and
registrants. The websites also list
political committees disclosed as being
established or controlled by lobbyists/
registrants on their semi-annual reports
of contributions to candidates and
Federal officeholders and donations to
related entities. These political
committees are ‘‘lobbyist/registrant
PACs’’ under new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4)(i). To ensure that reporting
committees have the most up-to-date
information available about lobbyist/
registrant PACs, and to provide
information about lobbyist/registrant
PACs that are unable to ascertain from
the Secretary of the Senate or Clerk of
the House of Representatives whether
they are established or controlled by a
lobbyist/registrant, but which meet the
Commission’s additional ‘‘established or
controlled’’ criteria under 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4)(ii), these final rules require
reporting committees to check the
Commission’s Web site as well. Any
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political committee that is ‘‘established
or controlled’’ by a lobbyist/registrant
must identify itself as such on its
Statement of Organization (FEC Form 1),
which will be posted on the
Commission’s website. See 11 CFR
104.22(c), discussed below.
Each reporting committee must
consult the House, Senate, and
Commission websites ‘‘in a manner
reasonably calculated to find the name
of each person who is a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.’’
11 CFR 104.22(b)(2)(i). The Commission
recognizes that reporting committees
that have exercised due diligence in
searching House, Senate, and
Commission Web sites must be able to
rely on the results of their searches.
Under new 11 CFR 104.22(b)(2)(i), a
reporting committee will not be deemed
to have ‘‘reasonably known’’ about the
status of a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC whose name the
committee did not find in searching the
House, Senate, and Commission Web
sites, so long as the reporting committee
performs its searches in a manner
reasonably calculated to find the name
of each lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC listed on the Web sites.
New 11 CFR 104.22(b)(2)(ii) provides
that a computer printout or screen
capture showing the absence of the
person’s name on the House, Senate, or
Commission Web sites on the date in
question, may be used to demonstrate
that the reporting committee consulted
the required Web sites in a manner
reasonably calculated to find the name
of each person who is a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC,
and did not find the name of the person
in question. This provision allows
reporting committees to rely on the
results of website searches, provided
that the printout shows that the search
history utilized by the reporting
committee to verify that the search was
performed in a manner reasonably
calculated to find the name of the
person in question, as discussed above.
Such a computer printout or screen
capture constitutes conclusive evidence
that the reporting committee has
consulted the websites and not found
the name of the person sought.
Accordingly, except as described below,
such evidence demonstrates that a
person was not reasonably known by
the reporting committee to be a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC for
the purposes of 11 CFR 104.22(b)(1). A
reporting committee also may provide
other credible evidence to show that it
has consulted the websites in
compliance with 11 CFR 104.22(b)(2)(i).
Notwithstanding new 11 CFR
104.22(b)(2)(ii), a reporting committee is
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not entitled to rely on the results of a
website search if the reporting
committee knows that the person who
forwarded or is credited with raising
contributions is a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC. New 11 CFR
104.22(b)(iii) provides that a reporting
committee is required to report bundled
contributions forwarded by or received
and credited to a person that the
reporting committee actually knows is a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC as defined in 11 CFR 104.22(a)(2)
or (a)(3), even if the reporting committee
consulted the Web sites in accordance
with 11 CFR 104.22(b)(2)(i) and (2)(ii),
and did not find the person’s name on
any of the Web sites. A reporting
committee is deemed to have actual
knowledge if the candidate involved,
the treasurer of the reporting committee,
or any members of the reporting
committee’s staff who are responsible
for verifying the accuracy of Form 3L
have actual knowledge that the person
who forwarded or is credited with
raising contributions is required to be
listed as a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC.
C. 11 CFR 104.22(c)—Lobbyist/
Registrant PAC Reporting Requirements
Prior to HLOGA, the Commission
required political committees to identify
themselves as only one type of political
committee on their Statements of
Organization. See FEC Form 1
Statement of Organization, Question 5
(‘‘Type of Committee’’).
The NPRM sought comments on how,
going forward, an organization that is
both an SSF and a ‘‘lobbyist/registrant
PAC’’ should identify itself on its
Statement of Organization, and whether
one type of registration should control
or whether political committees should
identify themselves as both types. The
Commission received no comments on
this issue.
To promote the greatest disclosure
and to accommodate entities that
qualify as more than one type of
political committee, the Commission is
revising FEC Form 1 to make it possible
for committees to identify themselves as
more than one type of political
committee. Under new 11 CFR
104.22(c), all new leadership PACs and
lobbyist/registrant PACs that register
with the Commission after the effective
date of this rule (30 days after
publication in the Federal Register)
must check all appropriate boxes on
FEC Form 1, in accordance with 11 CFR
102.2(a)(1). See 11 CFR 100.5(e)(6)
(definition of leadership PAC) and 11
CFR 104.22(a)(3) (definition of lobbyist/
registrant PAC). Leadership PACs and
lobbyist/registrant PACs already
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D. 11 CFR 104.22(d)—Where to File
New section 104.22(d) requires
reporting committees to file FEC Form
3L in accordance with 11 CFR Part 105.
Under 11 CFR Part 105, authorized
committees of candidates for the House
of Representatives, the principal
campaign committees of presidential
candidates, and any other political
committees that support such
candidates must file reports with the
Commission. See 11 CFR 105.1, 105.3
and 105.4. Authorized committees of
candidates for the Senate and any other
political committees that support only
Senate candidates must file their reports
with the Secretary of the Senate. See 11
CFR 105.2. The Commission requested
but received no comments on this
provision in the NPRM.
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC that forwards, or is credited by the
reporting committee for having raised,
bundled contributions that aggregate in
excess of the reporting threshold semiannually and at the end of each
reporting period under 2 U.S.C. 434 and
11 CFR 104.5.
When a reporting committee is
required to file pre- and post-election
reports under 2 U.S.C. 434 and 11 CFR
104.5, each of those reporting periods
constitutes a new covered period.
Accordingly, the reporting committee
must also file FEC Form 3L for those
periods if it receives bundled
contributions in excess of the reporting
threshold during those periods.
Similarly, when a reporting committee
is required to file reports in connection
with special elections, under 11 CFR
104.5(h), or runoff elections, each of
those reporting periods constitutes a
new covered period, and the reporting
committee must file FEC Form 3L if it
receives bundled contributions in
excess of the reporting threshold during
those periods.
E. 11 CFR 104.22(e)—When to File
Under HLOGA Section 204, the first
report required to be filed by a reporting
committee under 2 U.S.C. 434 and 11
CFR Part 104.5 after each covered
period must set forth the name, address,
and employer of each person reasonably
known by the committee to be a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC who provided two or more
bundled contributions to the reporting
committee in an aggregate amount
greater than the threshold amount
during the reporting period. See 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(1).
New 11 CFR 104.22(e) implements
this provision of HLOGA. It provides
that reporting committees must file
Form 3L with the first campaign finance
report that they file under 11 CFR 104.5
following the end of each covered
period.
New 11 CFR 104.22(e) mirrors the
proposed rule, on which the
Commission requested comments in the
NPRM. No comments addressed this
section of the proposed rule specifically,
although many did comment on the
related ‘‘covered period’’ definition.
As discussed above, new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(5) defines the term ‘‘covered
period’’ as the semi-annual periods of
January 1 through June 30 and July 1
through December 31, and as the
periods that coincide with a reporting
committee’s monthly or quarterly
campaign finance reporting periods
under 11 CFR 104.5. Accordingly,
reporting committees must file Form 3L
to disclose information about any
F. 11 CFR 104.22(f)—Recordkeeping
Commission regulations implement
certain statutory recordkeeping
requirements that also apply to certain
bundled contributions. For example,
political committees must keep a record
and account of each contribution
exceeding $50 for three years after filing
the report to which the record or
account relates. See 2 U.S.C. 432(c)(2)
and (d); 11 CFR 102.9(a) and (c). In
addition, any person who receives and
forwards contributions to any political
committee must also forward certain
information about the original
contributor. See 2 U.S.C. 432(c) and
441a(a)(8); 11 CFR 102.8(c). Any
authorized committee that receives
contributions forwarded by a ‘‘conduit’’
or ‘‘intermediary’’ must also maintain
records regarding the information
forwarded with the contributions by the
conduit or intermediary. See 11 CFR
110.6(c) and 102.9(c).
New 11 CFR 104.22(f) refers to the
existing recordkeeping requirements in
Commission regulations at 11 CFR
102.8, 102.9 and 110.6. The new
provisions also require reporting
committees to maintain for three years
after filing a report, records of any
bundled contributions forwarded by or
received and credited to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC that
aggregate in excess of the reporting
threshold for any covered period. The
rule requires reporting committees to
maintain records that document the
name and address of the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, the
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registered with the Commission must
amend their FEC Form 1 in accordance
with 11 CFR 102.2(a)(2) no later than
ten days after the effective date of this
rule (ten days after the thirty-day period
from the date of publication of these
rules in the Federal Register).
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employer of the lobbyist/registrant (if an
individual), and the aggregate amount of
bundled contributions forwarded by or
received and credited to each lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC by
the reporting committee during the
covered period.
The rule requires only the
maintenance of documentation with
respect to the matters required to be
reported, which shall provide in
sufficient detail the necessary
information and data from which the
filed reports may be verified, explained,
clarified, and checked for accuracy and
completeness. If a committee is not
required to file such a report because it
has not received any contributions
meeting the definition of ‘‘bundled
contributions’’ under this section, then
the new recordkeeping provision does
not apply. Additionally, the new
recordkeeping provision does not
require reporting committees to create
records the committee would not
otherwise have created under its usual
fundraising and accounting practices.
These provisions are similar to the
provisions in proposed 11 CFR
104.22(e), on which the Commission
received no comments.
G. 11 CFR 104.22(g) and 110.17(e)(2)
and (f)—Price Index Increase
New 11 CFR 104.22(g) requires that
the disclosure threshold for reporting
bundled contributions be indexed by
applying a price index increase similar
to the price index increase applied to
contribution limitations in FECA and
Commission regulations. These final
rules also add a cross-reference to 11
CFR 104.22(g) in 11 CFR 110.17(e)(2)
and (f), which governs the price index
increases for certain contribution and
expenditure limitations under FECA.
1. 11 CFR 104.22(g)—Price Index
Increase
HLOGA Section 204 requires that the
reporting threshold be indexed for
inflation annually, using the Consumer
Price Index as verified by the Secretary
of Labor, with 2006 as the ‘‘base
period.’’ See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(3)(B). New
11 CFR 104.22(g) implements this
provision by requiring that the initial
$15,000 disclosure threshold be indexed
in the same manner as certain
contribution limits under FECA and
Commission regulations. See 2 U.S.C.
441a(c) and 11 CFR 110.17. The
Commission has placed this provision
in new 11 CFR 104.22 rather than in 11
CFR 110.17, which contains similar
indexing provisions, because the dollar
amount here is a threshold for
disclosure, rather than the contribution
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and expenditure limits covered under
11 CFR Part 110.
New 11 CFR 104.22(g) is the same as
the one proposed by the Commission in
the NPRM. The Commission requested
but received no comments on it.
The NPRM also requested but
received no comments on the timing of
the application of the indexing for
inflation requirement. HLOGA Section
204 provides that the indexing
requirement ‘‘shall apply’’ to the
reporting threshold ‘‘[i]n any calendar
year after 2007.’’ 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(3)(B).
HLOGA also provides, however, that 2
U.S.C. 434(i) will go into effect ‘‘with
respect to reports filed * * * after the
expiration of the 3-month period which
begins on the date that the regulations
required to be promulgated by the
Commission [under new 2 U.S.C. 434(i)]
become final.’’ Pub. L. No. 110–81, sec.
204(b), 121 Stat. 735 at 746 (2007).
Given that these rules are expected to go
into effect in March 2009, the initial
$15,000 reporting threshold provided
for in HLOGA Section 204 will be
indexed for 2009. The Commission will
publish a notice of the 2009 reporting
threshold in the Federal Register and on
the Commission’s Web site in
accordance with new 11 CFR
110.17(e)(2), discussed below.
2. 11 CFR 110.17(e)(2) and 110.17(f)—
Price Index Increase
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Current 11 CFR 110.17 governs the
price index increases for certain
contribution and expenditure
limitations, as well as the publication of
those limitations on a biennial basis.
While the bundling disclosure dollar
threshold is not a contribution or
expenditure limit, it is indexed for
inflation on an annual basis, in the same
manner as the limitations in 11 CFR
110.17 are indexed biennially. The
Commission concluded that it would be
helpful to the regulated community to
place a cross-reference in 11 CFR 110.17
to the indexing provision in new 11 CFR
104.22(f). Accordingly, the Commission
is adding a cross-reference in new 11
CFR 110.17(f) to new 11 CFR 104.22(g).
Additionally, as an aid to providing the
new annual threshold to the regulated
community, the Commission has added
new 110.17(e)(2), requiring the lobbyist/
registrant bundling threshold to be
published in the Federal Register
annually and posted on the
Commission’s Web site.
H. Application of Rule to In-Kind
Contributions
The NPRM requested comments on
whether the new rules should apply to
in-kind contributions as well as
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16:58 Feb 13, 2009
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monetary contributions. No comments
addressed this issue.
HLOGA uses the term
‘‘contributions.’’ See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(1).
FECA and Commission regulations
define ‘‘contributions’’ as including inkind contributions. See 2 U.S.C.
431(8)(A)(i) and 11 CFR 100.51(a),
100.52, 100.54, 100.56, 109.21. Nothing
in HLOGA or its legislative history
suggests that ‘‘contributions’’ is
intended to have a different meaning
from that already established in FECA
and Commission regulations. Thus, the
Commission determined that these rules
apply to both in-kind and monetary
contributions. For example, if a
lobbyist/registrant asked several
contributors to send monetary
contributions to a reporting committee
and asked others to send computers,
furniture, and office supplies to the
reporting committee, with a total
aggregate value of monetary and in-kind
contributions exceeding the reporting
threshold during the covered period,
and the reporting committee credited
the lobbyist/registrant with having
raised the contributions, then the
reporting committee would have to file
Form 3L disclosing information about
the lobbyist/registrant for the covered
period.
Certification of No Effect Pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 605(b) (Regulatory Flexibility
Act)
The Commission certifies that the
attached final rules do not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The basis for this certification is that
few, if any, small entities will be
affected by these rules, which apply
only to Federal candidates and their
campaign committees, political
committees established, financed,
maintained or controlled by Federal
candidates or individuals holding
Federal office, political committees of
political parties, and political
committees established or controlled by
lobbyist/registrants. Authorized
committees of Federal candidates are
not considered small entities under the
definition at 5 U.S.C. 601(6). Leadership
PACs established, financed, maintained
or controlled by Federal candidates or
individuals holding Federal office also
do not qualify as small entities. Such
committees, while established by an
individual, are not independently
owned and operated because they are
not financed and controlled by a small
identifiable group of individuals; rather,
they rely on contributions from a variety
of persons to fund the committees’
activities. Political committees
representing the Democratic and
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Republican parties have a major
controlling influence within the
political arena and are thus dominant in
their field. However, to the extent that
any party committees representing
major or minor political parties or any
other political committees might be
considered ‘‘small organizations,’’ the
number that would be affected by this
rule is not substantial.
Additionally, any separate segregated
funds that are affected by these 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 operation. Most of the other
political committees that are affected by
these 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.
Furthermore, any small entities
affected should not feel a significant
economic impact from the final rule.
The activity being regulated (receiving
bundled contributions that have been
forwarded by, or that have been raised
by and credited to, lobbyists/registrants
or lobbyist/registrant PACs) is entirely
voluntary. Any reporting obligations for
reporting committees are triggered only
if entities choose to engage in this
activity above the reporting threshold
for any given covered period. The
reporting obligations for reporting
committees are also limited to
contributions either forwarded by or
raised by and credited to lobbyists/
registrants or lobbyist/registrant PACs.
The reporting requirement for lobbyist/
registrant PACs is limited to the
political committee disclosing itself as a
lobbyist/registrant PAC on the political
committee’s initial Form 1 (Statement of
Organization) filed with the
Commission, or to filing a single
amendment to the political committee’s
Form 1. Therefore, the final rules do not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects
11 CFR Part 100
Elections.
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11 CFR Part 104
Campaign funds, political committees
and parties, reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
11 CFR Part 110
Campaign funds, political committees
and parties.
■ For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Federal Election
Commission is amending Subchapter A
of Chapter 1 of Title 11 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 100—SCOPE AND DEFINITIONS
(2 U.S.C. 431)
1. The authority citation for part 100
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 2 U.S.C. 431, 434, and 438(a)(8).
2. Section 100.5 is amended by adding
new paragraphs (e)(6) and (7) to read as
follows:
■
§ 100.5 Political committee (2 U.S.C.
431(4), (5), (6)).
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(6) Leadership PAC. Leadership PAC
means a political committee that is
directly or indirectly established,
financed, maintained or controlled by a
candidate for Federal office or an
individual holding Federal office but
which is not an authorized committee of
the candidate or individual and which
is not affiliated with an authorized
committee of the candidate or
individual, except that leadership PAC
does not include a political committee
of a political party.
(7) Lobbyist/Registrant PAC. See 11
CFR 104.22(a)(3).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 104—REPORTS BY POLITICAL
COMMITEES AND OTHER PERSONS (2
U.S.C. 434)
3. The authority citation for part 104
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 2 U.S.C. 431(1), 431(8), 431(9),
432(i), 434, 438(a)(8) and (b), 439a, 441a, and
36 U.S.C. 510.
4. Section 104.22 is added to read as
follows:
■
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§ 104.22 Disclosure of bundling by
Lobbyists/Registrants and Lobbyist/
Registrant PACs (2 U.S.C. 434(i)).
(a) Definitions.
(1) Reporting Committee. Reporting
committee means:
(i) An authorized committee of a
Federal candidate as defined at 11 CFR
100.5(f)(1);
(ii) A leadership PAC as defined at 11
CFR 100.5(e)(6); or
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(iii) A party committee as defined at
11 CFR 100.5(e)(4).
(2) Lobbyist/Registrant. Lobbyist/
registrant means a person who, at the
time a contribution is forwarded to, or
is received by, a reporting committee, is:
(i) A current registrant under Section
4(a) of the Lobbying Disclosure Act of
1995 (2 U.S.C. 1603(a)); or
(ii) An individual who is named on a
current registration or current report
filed under Section 4(b)(6) or 5(b)(2)(C)
of the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995
(2 U.S.C. 1603(b)(6) or 1604(b)(2)(C)).
(3) Lobbyist/Registrant PAC. Lobbyist/
registrant PAC means any political
committee that a lobbyist/registrant
‘‘established or controls,’’ as defined in
paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
(4) Established or Controls.
(i) For purposes of this section only,
a lobbyist/registrant established or
controls any political committee that the
lobbyist/registrant is required to
disclose to the Secretary of the U. S.
Senate or Clerk of the U.S. House of
Representatives as being established or
controlled by that lobbyist/registrant
under Section 203 of the Honest
Leadership and Open Government Act
of 2007, amending the Lobbying
Disclosure Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C.
1604(d)(1)(C)).
(ii) If, after consulting guidance from
the offices of the Secretary of the Senate
or Clerk of the U.S House of
Representatives, or communicating with
such offices, a political committee is
unable to ascertain whether it is
established or controlled by a lobbyist/
registrant, a lobbyist/registrant will be
deemed to have established or to control
a political committee if:
(A) The political committee is a
separate segregated fund with a current
registrant under Section 4(a) of the
Lobbying Disclosure Act (2 U.S.C.
1603(a)) as its connected organization;
or
(B) The political committee meets
either of the following criteria:
(1) A lobbyist/registrant had a primary
role in the establishment of the political
committee, excluding the provision of
legal or compliance services or advice;
or
(2) A lobbyist/registrant directs the
governance or operations of the political
committee, excluding the provision of
legal or compliance services or advice.
(5) Covered Period. Covered period
means:
(i) Semi-annually. The semi-annual
periods of January 1 through June 30,
and July 1 through December 31; and
the period described in paragraph
(a)(5)(ii), (iii) or (iv), below, that applies
to the reporting committee.
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(ii) Quarterly. For reporting
committees that file campaign finance
reports under 11 CFR 104.5 on a
quarterly basis, the covered period also
includes the quarters beginning on
January 1, April 1, July 1, and October
1 of each calendar year and the
applicable pre- and post-election
reporting periods in election years; in a
nonelection year, reporting committees
not authorized by a candidate need only
observe the semi-annual period
described in paragraph (a)(5)(i) above; or
(iii) Monthly. For reporting
committees that file monthly campaign
finance reports under 11 CFR 104.5, the
covered period also includes each
month in the calendar year, except that
in election years the pre- and postgeneral election reporting periods shall
constitute the covered period in lieu of
the monthly November and December
reporting periods.
(iv) Alternative for monthly filers.
Any reporting committee that files
monthly campaign finance reports
under 11 CFR 104.5 may choose to file
reports pursuant to the quarterly
covered period in paragraph (a)(5)(ii) of
this section instead of the monthly
covered period in paragraph (a)(5)(iii) of
this section. It shall do so by notifying
the Commission in writing of its
intention to do so at the time the
reporting committee files a monthly
report under paragraph (a)(5)(iii) of this
section. The reporting committee will be
required to file its next report under the
new filing frequency. The reporting
committee may change its filing
frequency no more than once per
calendar year.
(v) Runoffs and Special Elections. For
special elections and runoff elections set
by State law, the covered period shall be
the same as the reporting periods set
under 11 CFR 104.5(h).
(6) Bundled Contribution. Bundled
contribution means any contribution
that meets the definition set forth in
either paragraph (i) or (ii) below:
(i) Forwarded contribution means a
contribution delivered or transmitted,
by physical or electronic means, to the
reporting committee by a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, or
by any person that the reporting
committee knows to be forwarding such
contribution on behalf of a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
(ii) Received and credited
contribution means a contribution
received by the reporting committee
from the contributor or contributors,
and credited by the reporting committee
or candidate involved to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
through records, designations, or other
means of recognizing that a certain
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amount of money has been raised by the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC.
(A) Records, designations, or other
means of recognizing. Records means
written evidence (including writings,
charts, computer files, tables,
spreadsheets, databases, or other data or
data compilations stored in any medium
from which information can be
obtained) that the reporting committee
or candidate involved attributes to a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC contributions raised by that person
or entity and received by the reporting
committee.
Designations or other means of
recognizing bundled contributions
means benefits given by the reporting
committee to persons for raising a
certain amount of contributions,
including but not limited to:
(1) Titles that the reporting committee
assigns to persons who have raised a
certain amount of contributions;
(2) Tracking identifiers that the
reporting committee assigns and that are
included on contributions or
contributions-related materials (for
example, contributor response devices,
cover letters, or Internet Web site
solicitation pages) for the purpose of
maintaining information about the
amounts of contributions that a person
raises;
(3) Access (including offers or
attendance) to events or activities given
to the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC by the reporting
committee as a result of raising a certain
amount of contributions; and
(4) Mementos, such as photographs
with the candidate or autographed
copies of books authored by the
candidate, given by the reporting
committee to persons who have raised
a certain amount of contributions.
(B) The candidate involved. The
candidate involved means the candidate
by whom the authorized committee is
authorized; the candidate or individual
holding Federal office who directly or
indirectly established, finances,
maintains or controls the leadership
PAC; or the chairman of the committee
in the case of a political party
committee.
(iii) Bundled contributions do not
include contributions made by the
lobbyist/registrant PAC or from the
personal funds of the lobbyist/registrant
that forwards or is credited with raising
the contributions or the personal funds
of that person’s spouse.
(b) Reporting requirement for
reporting committees.
(1) FEC Form 3L. Each reporting
committee must file FEC Form 3L
(Report of Contributions Bundled by
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Lobbyist/Registrants and Lobbyist/
Registrant PACs) if it has received two
or more bundled contributions (see
paragraph (a)(6)) forwarded by or
received and credited to a person
reasonably known by the reporting
committee to be a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC aggregating in
excess of $15,000 during the covered
period. The form shall set forth:
(i) The name of each lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC;
(ii) The address of each lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC;
(iii) The employer of each lobbyist/
registrant; and
(iv) The aggregate amount of bundled
contributions forwarded by or received
and credited to each lobbyist/registrant
or lobbyist/registrant PAC by the
reporting committee during the covered
period.
(2) Determining whether a person is
reasonably known to be a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
(i) In order to comply with paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, a reporting
committee must consult, in a manner
reasonably calculated to find the name
of each person who is a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, the
Web sites maintained by the Clerk of the
House of Representatives, the Secretary
of the Senate, and the Federal Election
Commission to determine whether, at
the time a contribution was forwarded
to, or received by, the reporting
committee:
(A) The person was listed as a current
registrant under Section 4(a) of the
Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 (2
U.S.C. 1603(a));
(B) The person was an individual
listed on a current registration filed
under Section 4(b)(6) or a current report
filed under Section 5(b)(2)(C) of the
Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 (2
U.S.C. 1603 or 1604);
(C) The person identified itself as a
lobbyist/registrant PAC on its Statement
of Organization, FEC Form 1, filed with
the Commission; or
(D) The person was listed as a
political committee established or
controlled by a lobbyist or registrant on
a report filed under Sec. 203(a) of the
Honest Leadership and Open
Government Act of 2007, amending the
Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 (2
U.S.C. 1604).
(ii) A manner reasonably calculated to
find the name of each person who is a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC may be demonstrated by the
reporting committee producing a
computer printout or screen capture
from a Web browser indicating that the
name of the person sought was not
listed in the results of the Web site
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
7303
consultations performed in accordance
with paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
Such a computer printout or screen
capture shall constitute conclusive
evidence that the reporting committee
has consulted such Web sites and not
found the name of the person sought,
but shall not be the exclusive means by
which the reporting committee may
provide evidence that it has consulted
such Web sites and not found the name
of the person sought.
(iii) A reporting committee shall be
subject to the reporting requirement
under paragraph (b)(1) of this section if
it had actual knowledge that, at the time
a contribution was forwarded or
received, the person whose name is
sought was required to be listed on any
registration or report described in
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
(c) Lobbyist/Registrant PAC reporting
requirements. Any political committee
that is a lobbyist/registrant PAC as
defined in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section must identify itself as such on
FEC Form 1 either upon registration
with the Commission if it is a new
political committee, or by amendment
in accordance with 11 CFR 102.2(a)(2) if
it is a political committee registered
with the Commission.
(d) Where to file. Reporting
committees shall file either with the
Secretary of the Senate or with the
Federal Election Commission in
accordance with 11 CFR Part 105.
(e) When to file. Reporting committees
must file the forms required under this
section with the first report that they file
under 11 CFR 104.5 following the end
of each covered period.
(f) Recordkeeping. In addition to any
requirements to maintain records and
accounts under 11 CFR 102.8, 102.9 and
110.6, each reporting committee must
maintain for three years after the filing
of the report to which the information
relates a record of any bundled
contributions (see 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6))
provided by a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC that aggregate in
excess of $15,000 for any covered
period. The information required to be
maintained is:
(1) The name and address of the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant
PAC;
(2) The employer of the lobbyist/
registrant; and
(3) The aggregate amount of bundled
contributions forwarded by or received
and credited to each lobbyist/registrant
or lobbyist/registrant PAC by the
reporting committee during the covered
period.
(g) Price index increase.
(1) The threshold for reporting
bundled contributions established in
E:\FR\FM\17FER1.SGM
17FER1
7304
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 17, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall be
increased by the percent difference
between the price index as defined at 11
CFR 110.17(d), as certified to the
Commission by the Secretary of Labor,
for the 12 months preceding the
beginning of the calendar year and the
price index for the base period.
(2) Each contribution bundling
threshold so increased shall be the
threshold in effect for that calendar
year.
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (g),
the term base period means calendar
year 2006.
(4) If any amount after the increases
under this paragraph (g) is not a
multiple of $100, such amount shall be
rounded to the nearest multiple of $100.
Authority: 2 U.S.C. 431(8), 431(9),
432(c)(2), 434(i)(3), 438(a)(8), 441a, 441b,
441d, 441e, 441f, 441g, 441h and 36 U.S.C.
510.
4. In section 110.17, paragraph (e) is
revised and paragraph (f) is added to
read as follows:
■
Price index increase.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES
*
*
*
*
(e) Publication of price index
increases.
(1) Expenditure and Contribution
Limitations. In every odd-numbered
year, the Commission will publish in
the Federal Register the amount of the
expenditure and contribution
limitations in effect and place such
information on the Commission’s Web
site.
(2) Lobbyist/registrant and lobbyist/
registrant PAC contribution bundling
disclosure threshold. In every calendar
year, the Commission will publish in
the Federal Register the amount of the
lobbyist/registrant and lobbyist/
registrant PAC contribution bundling
disclosure threshold in effect and place
such information on the Commission’s
Web site.
(f) Price index increases for lobbyist/
registrant and lobbyist/registrant PAC
contribution bundling threshold. The
threshold for disclosure of lobbyists/
registrants and lobbyist/registrant PACs
that bundle contributions shall be
indexed for each calendar year in
accordance with 11 CFR 104.22(g).
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:58 Feb 13, 2009
Jkt 217001
12 CFR Part 1250
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Dated: February 10, 2009.
James B. Lockhart III,
Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. E9–3243 Filed 2–13–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070–01–P
Office of Federal Housing Enterprise
Oversight
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
12 CFR Part 1773
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2007–29110; Directorate
Identifier 2007–NE–35–AD; Amendment 39–
15808; AD 2009–04–02]
AGENCIES: Federal Housing Finance
Agency; Office of Federal Housing
Enterprise Oversight.
ACTION: Final Regulation; correction.
3. The authority citation for part 110
is revised to read as follows:
Dated: February 5, 2009.
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
1. On page 2350, in the first column,
in CHAPTER XII—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE AGENCY, in amendment 1,
the instruction ‘‘Add Subchapter C,
consisting of part 1250 to read as
follows:’’ is corrected to read ‘‘Add part
1250 to read as follows:’’.
■
Flood Insurance
■
*
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
CHAPTER XII—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE AGENCY [Corrected]
RIN 2590–AA09
PART 110—CONTRIBUTION AND
EXPENDITURE LIMITATIONS AND
PROHIBITIONS
§ 110.17
On behalf of the Commission,
Steven T. Walther,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. E9–2838 Filed 2–13–09; 8:45 am]
SUMMARY: The Federal Housing Finance
Agency (FHFA) is correcting the final
Flood Insurance Regulation, published
in the Federal Register on January 15,
2009 (74 FR 2347), by deleting the
addition of a subchapter.
DATES: Effective February 17, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andra Grossman, Counsel, telephone
(202) 343–1313 (not a toll-free number);
Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552. The telephone
number for the Telecommunications
Device for the Deaf is (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The FHFA
is correcting the final Flood Insurance
Regulation that was published in the
Federal Register on January 15, 2009
(74 FR 2347). The final Flood Insurance
Regulation (effective on February 17,
2009) amends Chapter XII of Title 12, of
the Code of Federal Regulations and
when effective would establish a new
‘‘Subchapter C—Enterprises’’. On
January 30, 2009, before the effective
date of the final Flood Insurance
Regulation, FHFA issued another
regulation which established
Subchapter C (74 FR 5609). This
correction to the final Flood Insurance
Regulation deletes the addition of
Subchapter C because it has already
been added.
In FR Doc. E9–809, appearing on page
2350 in the Federal Register of
Thursday, January 15, 2009, the
following correction is made:
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Pratt &
Whitney PW4090 and PW4090–3
Turbofan Engines
AGENCY: Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The FAA is adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for Pratt &
Whitney (PW) PW4090 and PW4090–3
turbofan engines with front turbine hub,
part number (P/N) 53L601, installed.
This AD reduces the published life limit
of those front turbine hubs, from 12,000
cycles-since-new (CSN) to 9,370 CSN.
This AD also removes from service
those front turbine hubs using a
drawdown schedule. This AD results
from PW updating the low-cycle-fatigue
(LCF) life analysis for front turbine
hubs, P/N 53L601. We are issuing this
AD to prevent an uncontained failure of
the front turbine hub, resulting in an inflight engine shutdown and possible
damage to the airplane.
DATES: This AD becomes effective
March 24, 2009.
ADDRESSES: The Docket Operations
office is located at Docket Management
Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, Washington, DC
20590–0001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Riley, Aerospace Engineer, Engine
Certification Office, FAA, Engine &
Propeller Directorate, 12 New England
Executive Park, Burlington, MA 01803;
E:\FR\FM\17FER1.SGM
17FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 30 (Tuesday, February 17, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 7285-7304]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-2838]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 17, 2009 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 7285]]
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FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Parts 100, 104 and 110
[Notice 2009-03]
Reporting Contributions Bundled by Lobbyists, Registrants and the
PACs of Lobbyists and Registrants
AGENCY: Federal Election Commission.
ACTION: Final Rules and Transmittal of Regulations to Congress.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Election Commission is promulgating regulations
implementing new statutory provisions regarding the disclosure of
information about bundled contributions provided by certain lobbyists,
registrants, and political committees established or controlled by
lobbyists and registrants. The final rules require authorized
committees, leadership PACs, and political committees of political
parties to disclose certain information about lobbyists, registrants,
and lobbyists' and registrants' political committees that provide
bundled contributions. Further information is provided in the
supplementary information that follows.
DATES: These rules are effective on March 19, 2009. However, compliance
with paragraphs (b) and (e) of 11 CFR 104.22 is not required until May
18, 2009. Political committees that are ``lobbyist/registrant PACs''
must amend their FEC Form 1 (Statement of Organization) by March 30,
2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Amy L. Rothstein, Assistant
General Counsel, Ms. Cheryl A.F. Hemsley, or Ms. Esther Heiden,
Attorneys, 999 E Street, NW., Washington, DC 20463, (202) 694-1650 or
(800) 424-9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is promulgating final rules
to implement Section 204 of Public Law 110-81, 121 Stat. 735, the
``Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007,'' signed September
14, 2007 (``HLOGA''). See 2 U.S.C. 434(i). HLOGA amended the Federal
Election Campaign Act of 1971, as amended (2 U.S.C. 431 et seq.)
(``FECA'') by requiring certain political committees to disclose
information about each registered lobbyist \1\ and registrant \2\
(``lobbyist/registrant''), and each political committee established or
controlled by a lobbyist or registrant (``lobbyist/registrant PAC''
\3\), that forwards, or is credited with raising, two or more bundled
contributions aggregating in excess of the reporting threshold during a
specific period of time. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i). These new disclosure
requirements apply only to authorized committees of Federal candidates,
political committees directly or indirectly established, financed,
maintained or controlled by a candidate or an individual holding
Federal office (``leadership PACs''), and party committees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The term ``lobbyist'' is defined as any individual ``who is
employed or retained by a client for financial or other compensation
for services that include more than one lobbying contact, other than
an individual whose lobbying activities constitute less than 20
percent of the time engaged in the services provided by such
individual to that client over a 3-month period.'' 2 U.S.C.
1602(10). Any lobbyist who makes more than one lobbying contact or
who is employed or retained to make lobbying contacts, and exceeds
the work activity threshold, must register with the Secretary of the
Senate and the Clerk of the House of Representatives (``Clerk of the
House'') if certain income or expense levels are exceeded. See 2
U.S.C. 1603(a).
\2\ Any organization that has one or more employees who are
lobbyists must register on behalf of its lobbyist employees. See 2
U.S.C. 1603(a); see also https://www.senate.gov/legislative/common/
briefing/lobby_disc_briefing.htm#3; https://
lobbyingdisclosure.house.gov/lda_guide.html.
\3\ ``PAC'' is an acronym often used to refer to a political
action committee other than an authorized committee or a political
committee of a political party.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
HLOGA Section 204 requires that the reporting threshold be indexed
for inflation annually. HLOGA Section 204 states that the indexing
requirement ``shall apply'' to the reporting threshold beginning ``[i]n
any calendar year after 2007.'' See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(3)(B); 2 U.S.C.
441a(c)(1)(B). Thus, although HLOGA set the initial reporting threshold
at $15,000 in 2007, the reporting threshold as indexed for inflation is
$16,000 for 2009. The Commission is publishing elsewhere in this
Federal Register a notice of the reporting threshold for 2009.
The Commission is implementing these provisions by adding two new
paragraphs to 11 CFR 100.5(e), which sets forth examples of ``political
committees.'' In addition, the Commission is adding new section 104.22
to 11 CFR Part 104, which governs reports by political committees and
other persons. Finally, in addition to addressing, in new 11 CFR
104.22(g), the price indexing of the new bundling reporting threshold,
the Commission is revising one paragraph and adding another in 11 CFR
110.17, which provides for the price indexing and publication of
certain contribution and expenditure limits.
The Commission published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in the
Federal Register on November 6, 2007. See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
on Reporting Contributions Bundled by Lobbyists, Registrants and the
PACs of Lobbyists and Registrants, 72 FR 62600 (November 6, 2007) (the
``NPRM''). The comment period closed on November 30, 2007. The
Commission received eight comments from twelve commenters.\4\ The
comments are available at https://www.fec.gov/law/law_
rulemakings.shtml#bundling. Six of the commenters testified at a
hearing held on September 17, 2008. For the purposes of this document,
the term ``comment'' applies to both written comments and oral
testimony at the public hearing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ One of these comments was from the Internal Revenue Service,
stating that the Internal Revenue Service did not find any conflict
between its regulations and the Commission's proposed rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 thirty calendar days before they take
effect. The final rules that follow were transmitted to Congress on
February 4, 2009.
These regulations are effective thirty days after publication in
the Federal Register. Reporting committees, however, must comply with
the disclosure requirements of Section 204 of HLOGA and with the
corresponding provisions of new 11 CFR 104.22--that is, with paragraph
(b) (Reporting Requirement for Reporting Committees) and paragraph (e)
(When to File)--only with respect to reports filed more than
[[Page 7286]]
three months after these final rules are published in the Federal
Register.
This delayed compliance date is required by Section 204(b) of
HLOGA, which provides that ``the amendment made by [Section 204(a)]
shall apply with respect to reports filed under [2 U.S.C. 434] after
the expiration of the 3-month period which begins on the date that the
regulations required to be promulgated by the [Commission] under [2
U.S.C. 434(i)(5)] become final.'' Regulations are final upon their
publication in the Federal Register. See Natural Resources Defense
Council, Inc. v. EPA, 683 F.2d 752 (3d Cir. 1982).
Reports required to be filed after these final rules are published
(and any records corresponding to such reports, as discussed below)
need not include activity before the effective date of these
regulations, and activity before the effective date does not count
toward any aggregate amount for the purposes of the reporting
threshold. Thus, monthly filers must begin reporting under new 11 CFR
104.22(b) in May 2009, for bundled contributions that are received in
April. Quarterly filers must begin reporting under new 11 CFR 104.22(b)
in July 2009, for bundled contributions that are received in April
through June 30. Finally, semi-annual filers must begin reporting under
new 11 CFR 104.22(b) in July 2009, for bundled contributions that are
received beginning on the effective date of these rules (i.e., thirty
days after publication in the Federal Register) through June 30. The
Commission is not requiring the reporting of contributions bundled by
lobbyists/registrants received as of January 1, 2009 through the
effective date of these regulations (i.e., 30 days after publication in
the Federal Register), because such a requirement would be a
retroactive application of the regulation. Contributions bundled by
entities that may be lobbyist/registrant PACs and received through 30
days after the effective date of these regulations (i.e., 60 days after
publication in the Federal Register) also need not be reported.
Because the Commission is requiring reporting committees to report
bundled contributions received as of the effective date of these
regulations, but is providing an additional ten days for lobbyist/
registrant PACs to amend their FEC Form 1, there will be at least a
ten-day period during which reporting committees may be unable to
determine definitively whether an entity is a lobbyist/registrant PAC.
Moreover, because the Commission is unable to update its Web site
instantaneously to provide real-time information regarding amended FEC
Form 1 or to provide a list that is reasonably searchable with respect
to whether an entity is a lobbyist/registrant PAC, the Commission
anticipates an additional delay between the deadline by which lobbyist/
registrant PACs are required to amend their FEC Form 1 and when such
information becomes available to reporting committees. Accordingly, the
Commission is delaying the implementation of these rules with respect
to contributions bundled by entities that may be lobbyist/registrant
PACs for an additional 30 days after the effective date of these
regulations (i.e., 60 days after publication in the Federal Register),
during which time reporting committees are not required to report
contributions bundled by such entities.
Explanation and Justification
I. Background
Prior to HLOGA, FECA and Commission regulations imposed certain
reporting and recordkeeping requirements for contributions received and
forwarded by any person to a political committee. Each person who
received and forwarded contributions to a political committee was also
required to forward certain information identifying the original
contributor. See 2 U.S.C. 432(b); 11 CFR 102.8. Additionally, 2 U.S.C.
441a(a)(8) and 11 CFR 110.6 imposed certain reporting and recordkeeping
requirements for contributions received and forwarded by persons known
as ``conduits'' or ``intermediaries'' to the authorized committees of
Federal candidates. The Commission did not propose and is not
implementing any changes to these rules.
Section 204 of HLOGA requires each authorized committee of a
Federal candidate, leadership PAC and political committee of a
political party to disclose certain information about any person
reasonably known by the committee to be a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC that forwards to the reporting committee, or is
credited with raising for the reporting committee, two or more bundled
contributions aggregating in excess of the reporting threshold within a
``covered period'' of time. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(1), (2), (3) and (8).
Accordingly, Section 204 of HLOGA requires reporting committees to
disclose information about two distinct types of bundled contributions:
(1) Contributions that are forwarded to a reporting committee by a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, and (2) contributions
that, although received by the reporting committee directly from a
contributor, are credited by the reporting committee to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC through records, designations or
other means of recognizing that a certain amount of money has been
raised by that lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC. Id.
Under Section 204 of HLOGA, a reporting committee must disclose the
name and address of the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC,
the lobbyist/registrant's employer (for individuals), and the aggregate
amount of bundled contributions within the covered period. See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(1).
II. 11 CFR 100.5--Political Committee (2 U.S.C. 431(4), (5), (6))
Section 100.5(e) of 11 CFR provides examples of types of political
committees. The Commission is adding two new paragraphs, (e)(6) and
(e)(7), to section 100.5 regarding ``leadership PAC'' and ``lobbyist/
registrant PAC,'' respectively, as examples of political committees.
A. 11 CFR 100.5(e)(6)--Leadership PAC
The term ``leadership PAC'' is defined in Section 204(a) of HLOGA
as ``a political committee that is directly or indirectly established,
financed, maintained or controlled by [a] candidate [for Federal
office] or [an] individual [holding Federal office] but which is not an
authorized committee of the candidate or individual and which is not
affiliated with an authorized committee of the candidate or individual,
except that such term does not include a political committee of a
political party.'' \5\ 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ This definition is consistent with the Commission's rules
that treat such committees as unaffiliated with a candidate's
authorized committee. See 11 CFR 100.5(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The new definition of ``leadership PAC'' is relevant to two areas
of HLOGA that fall within the Commission's purview: (1) The disclosure
requirements in Section 204 of HLOGA for contributions bundled by
lobbyists/registrants and lobbyist/registrant PACs; and (2)
restrictions on candidate travel in section 601 of HLOGA. See Public
Law No. 110-81, section 601(a) (codified at 2 U.S.C. 439a(c)(2)).
The Commission announced its plans to initiate rulemakings for
these two provisions on September 24, 2007.\6\ The candidate travel
NPRM responsive to section 601 of HLOGA initially proposed a definition
of ``leadership PAC'' as that term applies to both provisions. See
Notice of Proposed
[[Page 7287]]
Rulemaking on Candidate Travel, 72 FR 59953 (October 23, 2007)
(``Candidate Travel NPRM''). The NPRM for this bundling disclosure
rulemaking cited to the proposed definition in the Candidate Travel
NPRM as the definition to be used. See NPRM, 72 FR at 62600, fn. 3; see
also Candidate Travel NPRM, 72 FR at 59954. Because these bundling
disclosure rules are becoming final before the candidate travel rules,
the Commission is including the definition of ``leadership PAC'' in
these final rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See News Release, Federal Election Commission Announces
Plans to Issue New Regulations to Implement the Honest Leadership
and Open Government Act of 2007, available at https://www.fec.gov/
press/press2007/20070924travel.shtml.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is defining ``leadership PAC'' at 11 CFR 100.5(e)(6)
as proposed in the Candidate Travel NPRM. The definition follows the
definition of ``leadership PAC'' in Section 204 of HLOGA.\7\ The
Commission received one comment on the proposed definition in response
to the Candidate Travel NPRM that supported the substance and location
of the new definition, and did not receive any comments opposing it.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The term ``political committee'' applies only to those
organizations that are for the purpose of influencing Federal
elections. The definition of ``leadership PAC'' does not cover
committees that are not included in the definition of ``political
committee'' (such as State leadership PACs that are established,
financed, maintained, or controlled by a State official who runs for
Federal office).
\8\ Comments filed in the candidate travel rulemaking are
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/law_rulemakings.shtml#travel07.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. 11 CFR 100.5(e)(7)--Lobbyist/Registrant PAC
New paragraph (e)(7) refers the reader to the definition in new 11
CFR 104.22(a)(3) of the term ``lobbyist/registrant PAC,'' which is
discussed below.
III. New 11 CFR 104.22--Disclosure of Bundling by Lobbyists/Registrants
and Lobbyist/Registrant PACs (2 U.S.C. 434(i))
To implement the requirements of HLOGA Section 204, the Commission
is adopting new 11 CFR 104.22. New paragraph (a) defines key terms;
paragraphs (b) and (c) set forth the reporting requirements under these
new rules; paragraphs (d) and (e) govern where to file and when to
file, respectively; paragraph (f) establishes recordkeeping
requirements; and paragraph (g) addresses the annual indexing for
inflation of the threshold amount of bundled contributions that trigger
the reporting requirement for a covered period.
A. 11 CFR 104.22(a)--Definitions
The Commission is adding several new definitions in new 11 CFR
104.22(a).
1. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(1)--Reporting Committee
HLOGA adds reporting requirements that apply to three types of
political committees: authorized committees of a candidate, leadership
PACs, and party committees. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(6). New 11 CFR
104.22(a)(1) defines ``reporting committee'' to encompass these three
types of political committees, as they are defined in 11 CFR
100.5(e)(4), new (e)(6), and (f)(1). The Commission requested but
received no comments on the proposed definition, which is the same as
the final rule.
2. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(2)--Lobbyist/Registrant
HLOGA Section 204 applies to contributions bundled by ``a current
registrant under section 4(a) of the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995
[the `LDA'] (2 U.S.C. 1603(a)); an individual who is listed on a
current registration filed under section 4(b)(6) of [the LDA] (2 U.S.C.
1603(b)(6)) or a current report under section 5(b)(2)(C) of [the LDA]
(2 U.S.C. 1604(b)(2)(C)); \9\ or a political committee established or
controlled by such a registrant or individual.'' 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(7).
The NPRM proposed creating a new term, ``lobbyist/registrant,'' to
encompass both current registrants and individuals listed on a current
registration or report filed under the LDA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Under Section (4)(b)(6) of the LDA, each registration filed
with the Secretary of the Senate or Clerk of the House must include
the name of each employee of the registrant who has acted or whom
the registrant expects to act as a lobbyist on behalf of the
registrant or a client; under Section 5(b)(2)(C), each registrant
must file quarterly reports with the Secretary of the Senate and the
Clerk of the House that include a list of the registrant's employees
who acted as lobbyists on behalf of a client of the registrant
during the quarter. See 2 U.S.C. 1603(b)(6); 2 U.S.C. 1604(b)(2)(C).
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The NPRM requested comments on whether the reporting requirements
of HLOGA Section 204 should also apply to contributions forwarded by or
received and credited to a registrant's employee, where that employee
is not listed by the registrant as an in-house lobbyist. Six comments
addressed this issue. Four comments said that the crux of the matter
would depend on whether the employee was raising funds on behalf of the
employee's registrant employer or was acting on the employee's own
behalf. Three of these comments suggested various standards that the
Commission might employ to determine on whose behalf the non-lobbyist
employee is acting. One comment suggested using a standard based on the
law of agency. A second comment suggested using a standard analogous to
that used in determining whether corporate facilitation has taken
place, that is, examining whether the employee was ordered or directed
by the employee's superior to undertake the activity. See 11 CFR
114.2(f)(2)(i)(A). A third comment suggested creating a rebuttable
presumption that certain employees, such as senior officers and
government relations employees of a registrant, are acting on behalf of
their registrant employer.
By contrast, two comments stated that HLOGA covers only activity by
lobbyists/registrants and lobbyist/registrant PACs. One of these
comments stated that the Commission has no authority to go beyond the
plain statutory language by requiring the disclosure of information
about individuals who are employed by registrants but are not
themselves lobbyists.
The Commission agrees with the latter two comments. By its express
terms, HLOGA requires the disclosure of information only about
lobbyists and registrants. 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(7). This interpretation is
further supported by a section-by-section analysis of HLOGA that was
made a part of the record in the Senate debate on HLOGA by Senator
Feinstein. In her remarks, Senator Feinstein stated ``I ask unanimous
consent to have printed in the [Congressional] Record a section-by-
section analysis of the bill [HLOGA] we are about to vote on, including
legislative history endorsed by the three principal Senate authors of
the legislation: myself, Chairman [of the Senate Committee on Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs] Lieberman and Majority Leader
Reid.'' 153 Cong. Rec. S10708 (daily ed. August 2, 2007) (``Section-by-
Section Analysis'').
The Section-by-Section Analysis specifically states that the
disclosure requirements apply only to lobbyists and registrants:
This provision covers only contributions credited to registered
lobbyists, as defined in subsection 204(a)(7). Contributions
credited to others, including others who may share a common employer
with, or work for a lobbyist, are not covered by this section so
long as any credit is genuinely received by the non-lobbyist and not
the lobbyist.
153 Cong. Rec. S10709 (daily ed. August 2, 2007).
Thus, the Commission has determined that non-lobbyist employees of
lobbyists/registrants or lobbyist/registrant PACs who forward bundled
contributions or receive credit from a reporting committee for bundling
contributions are outside of the scope of HLOGA Section 204. However,
if the reporting committee knows that the
[[Page 7288]]
person is forwarding the contributions on behalf of a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, such forwarded contributions are
within the scope of HLOGA Section 204. The final rule defines ``bundled
contribution'' accordingly. See 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(i); see also
discussion below at III.6.a.
3. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(3)--Lobbyist/Registrant PAC
New 11 CFR 104.22(a)(3) defines ``lobbyist/registrant PAC'' as
``any political committee that a `lobbyist/registrant' `established or
controls' '' as that term is defined in 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4). This
definition tracks the language of HLOGA, which defines ``persons'' who
raise bundled contributions to include a ``political committee
established or controlled'' by a lobbyist or registrant. 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(7)(C). As discussed below, any political committee that meets
the definition of ``lobbyist/registrant PAC'' under 11 CFR 104.22(a)(3)
must identify itself as such on any FEC Form 1 (Statement of
Organization) that it files with the Commission after the effective
date of this rule. See 11 CFR 104.22(c). Committees that have already
filed FEC Form 1 with the Commission and that meet the definition of
``lobbyist/registrant PAC'' under 11 CFR 104.22(a)(3) are required to
amend their FEC Form 1 to reflect this change in status within ten days
after the effective date of this rule. Id.; 11 CFR 102.2(a)(2). Thus,
Form 1 must be amended within forty days after the date this rule is
published in the Federal Register. Statements of Organization are filed
pursuant to 2 U.S.C. 433, and therefore are not subject to the
mandatory three-month waiting period under HLOGA Section 204, which
applies to reports filed under 2 U.S.C. 434(i).
4. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)--Established or Controls
HLOGA Section 204 requires reporting committees to disclose bundled
contributions that exceed the reporting threshold within a covered
period, if those bundled contributions were forwarded by, or received
and credited to, any political committee reasonably known by the
recipient reporting committee to be ``established or controlled'' by a
lobbyist or registrant. 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(7)(C). The NPRM asked several
questions as to when a lobbyist/registrant should be considered to have
``established or [to] control[ ]'' a political committee. In the NPRM,
the Commission requested but received no comments on including the
separate segregated fund (``SSF'') of any corporation, labor
organization or other connected organization (see 11 CFR 100.6) that is
a registrant under the LDA, within the ambit of ``lobbyist/registrant
PACs.''
The NPRM also requested comments on when a nonconnected committee
would be considered to be ``controlled'' by a lobbyist/registrant, and
whether a lobbyist/registrant that is the treasurer of the political
committee controls the committee per se. One comment on this issue
suggested that ``controlled'' is a recognized term of art under FECA:
for example, political committees ``established, financed, maintained
or controlled'' by the same person or group of persons are
``affiliated'' and are treated as a single committee for contribution
purposes. Several comments suggested using factors similar to those
used by the Commission to determine case-by-case affiliation of
political committees under 11 CFR 100.5(g). These comments suggested
using such factors as (1) whether the lobbyist/registrant has the
authority to direct or participate in the governance of the political
committee; (2) whether the lobbyist/registrant has the authority to
hire, appoint, demote or otherwise control the officers of the
political committee; and (3) whether the lobbyist/registrant provides
significant funding for the political committee on an ongoing basis.
One comment stated that having a lobbyist on the board of directors of
a nonconnected committee or serving as an officer would be an example
of per se control by the lobbyist. Another comment agreed that having a
lobbyist acting as treasurer of a nonconnected committee would
constitute per se control, but cautioned against creating a rule that
would make any board membership per se control.
The concept of ``established or controlled'' in Section 204 of
HLOGA, which is implemented by the Commission in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4), relates to the same entities as does Section 203 of
HLOGA, which is implemented by the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of
the House under the LDA. See 2 U.S.C. 1604(d). Therefore, in addition
to the comments' proposals, the Commission also considered following
the description of ``established or controlled'' set out by the
Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House of Representatives
in their guidance on reports filed with them under the LDA, which
includes the following example:
Lobbyists ``C'' and ``D'' serve on the board of a non-connected
PAC as member and treasurer respectively. As board members, they are
in positions that control direction of the PAC's contributions.
Since both are controlling to whom the PAC's contributions are
given, they must d
See Secretary of the Senate Guidance (January 16, 2009), available at
https://www.senate.gov/legislative/resources/pdf/S1guidance.pdf at page
24; Clerk of the House Guidance (January 16, 2009), available at http:/
/lobbyingdisclosure.house.gov/amended--lda--guide.html#125update at
section 7.
The Commission decided to use a combination of the House and Senate
guidance and the Commission's own factors to determine whether a
lobbyist/registrant established or controls a political committee.
Because of the overlap between Sections 203 and 204 of HLOGA with
respect to the use of the term ``established or controlled,'' the
Commission concluded that it was preferable, to the extent practicable,
to harmonize its rule in new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4) with the Secretary of
the Senate and the Clerk of the House's implementation of Section 203
of HLOGA under the LDA.
Accordingly, a lobbyist/registrant established or controls any
political committee for the purposes of new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4) if the
lobbyist/registrant is required to disclose such political committee to
the Secretary of the Senate or the Clerk of the House as being
established or controlled by that lobbyist/registrant under Section 203
of HLOGA. If a political committee is able to obtain definitive
guidance from the Secretary of the Senate or Clerk of the House that it
is, or is not, required to be disclosed as being established or
controlled by a lobbyist/registrant, then such determination is
conclusive for the purposes of new 11 CFR 104.22, and the political
committee need not consider the Commission's additional criteria
described below.
The Commission is aware, however, that there may be times when a
political committee will not be able to determine definitively from
guidance issued by the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the
House, or after communicating with those offices, whether a political
committee is established or controlled by a lobbyist/registrant. For
this reason, the Commission is issuing additional criteria on whether a
political committee is established or controlled by a lobbyist/
registrant for the purposes of HLOGA Section 204. If, after consulting
guidance issued by the offices of the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk
of the House or after communicating with those offices, a political
committee is unable to ascertain whether it is established or
controlled by a lobbyist/registrant, the
[[Page 7289]]
political committee must consult the additional criteria set forth in
new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii).
Under these additional criteria, a political committee must first
consult new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(A), which states that a separate
segregated fund whose connected organization is a registrant is a
lobbyist/registrant PAC. If the political committee does not meet the
criterion under 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(A), then the political
committee must next look to new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B), which sets
out two additional independent criteria for determining whether a
political committee is ``established or controlled'' by a lobbyist/
registrant. The Commission has decided not to incorporate the broad
affiliation analysis at 11 CFR 100.5(g). That analysis would have
required the weighing of several factors in order to determine whether
a lobbyist/registrant established or controls a political committee.
Instead, to give firm guidance to political committees, the
``established or controls'' analysis in new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B)
states that a political committee is established or controlled by a
lobbyist/registrant if it meets either of the criteria in paragraph (1)
or (2). The Commission notes that HLOGA Section 204 uses the words
``established or controlled.'' The use of the disjunctive ``or''
(rather than the conjunctive ``and'') means that only one of those
criteria need be present to trigger application of the law.
Webster's Dictionary defines ``establish'' as ``to found,
institute, build, or bring into being on a firm or stable basis.''
Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 2nd ed. 663 (Random House
2001). The Commission recognizes that several individuals may
participate in the establishment of a political committee. Therefore,
the first criterion, as set out in new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B)(1),
provides that a political committee is ``established'' by a lobbyist/
registrant if a lobbyist/registrant had a primary role in the
establishment of the political committee, excluding the provision of
legal or compliance services or advice.
The second criterion, set forth in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(4)(ii)(B)(2), provides that a political committee is
``controlled'' by a lobbyist/registrant if the lobbyist/registrant
directs the governance or operations of the political committee,
excluding the provision of legal or compliance services or advice. This
standard derives from the dictionary definition of ``control:'' ``to
exercise restraint or direction over; dominate; command.'' Id. at 442.
The lobbyist/registrant's authority to direct, which need not be
exclusive to any one person, may derive from the political committee's
controlling documents, such as the articles of incorporation or bylaws.
However, a political committee's informal procedures or actual
practices may also demonstrate that a lobbyist/registrant directs the
governance or operations of the committee. For example, even a
lobbyist/registrant who is a non-voting member of a political
committee's board of directors may control the political committee as
long as that lobbyist/registrant in fact directs the governance or
operations of the political committee.
Both criteria, as discussed above, exclude the provision of legal
or compliance services or advice from the criteria for determining when
a political committee is established or controlled by a lobbyist/
registrant. This exclusion reflects the Commission's recognition that,
during and after formation, political committees often consult experts
who may be lobbyists/registrants or whose firms are registrants. The
new rule is designed to reach those situations in which the lobbyist/
registrant is more actively involved in the formation or operation of a
political committee than merely providing legal or compliance services
or advice. Thus, a political committee's use for compliance purposes of
an attorney or other expert from a firm that itself is a registrant (or
even if the attorney or expert is a lobbyist/registrant) will not by
itself result in the political committee being established or
controlled by a lobbyist/registrant.
5. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)--Covered Period
Section 204 of HLOGA requires that reporting committees disclose
information about any lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC
that forwards, or is credited with raising for the reporting committee,
two or more bundled contributions aggregating in excess of the
reporting threshold during any ``covered period.'' See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(1), (2), (3) and (8). HLOGA defines ``covered period'' as
January 1 through June 30, July 1 through December 31 ``and * * * any
reporting period applicable to the committee under [2 U.S.C. 434]
during which any [lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC]
provided two or more bundled contributions to the committee in an
aggregate amount greater than [the reporting threshold].'' 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(2). HLOGA grants the Commission the discretion to provide for
quarterly reporting by political committees that file their campaign
finance reports more frequently than on a quarterly basis.\10\ See 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Under FECA, political committees are subject to the
following campaign finance reporting requirements: national
committees of political parties (including the national
congressional campaign committees) must report monthly in all
calendar years, see 2 U.S.C. 434(a)(4)(B); 11 CFR 104.5(c)(4);
state, district and local committees of political parties are
required to file monthly if they exceed certain levels of Federal
election activity, see 2 U.S.C. 434(e)(4); 11 CFR 300.36(c); most
authorized committees of presidential candidates are required to
file monthly during presidential election years, see 2 U.S.C.
434(a)(3); 11 CFR 104.5(b); authorized committees of House and
Senate candidates are required to file quarterly, see 2 U.S.C.
434(a)(2); 11 CFR 104.5(a); other political committees may choose to
file on either a monthly or a quarterly basis, see 2 U.S.C.
434(a)(4); 11 CFR 104.5(c)(1)-(3).
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a. The Proposed Definition
The NPRM presented both a proposed and an alternative definition of
``covered period.'' Under the proposed definition, a ``covered period''
would be the semi-annual periods of January 1 through June 30 and July
1 through December 31. Additionally, in any calendar year in which a
reporting committee is required to file or files monthly or quarterly
campaign finance reports, ``covered period'' would also include the
quarterly periods of January 1 through March 31 and July 1 through
September 30, if during those periods, a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC provided two or more bundled contributions to
the reporting committee that aggregate in excess of the reporting
threshold.
The Commission received four comments favoring the proposed
definition. All four comments stated that the proposed definition was
consistent with HLOGA's requirement that the Commission's regulations
provide for the broadest possible disclosure of lobbyist/registrant
bundling activity.
The NPRM also asked whether the statute would support the
elimination of duplicative reporting that would result from the
proposed definition of ``covered period.'' The NPRM asked, for example,
whether there is a statutory basis for the Commission to consider
exempting reporting committees from having to disclose semi-annually
information about lobbyists/registrants or lobbyist/registrant PACs
providing bundled contributions if the information was already fully
disclosed in a prior report filed with the Commission. All four
comments were in favor of the elimination of duplicative reporting. As
such, they suggested that the Commission design the new reporting
schedule to allow for both quarterly and semi-annual reporting once the
[[Page 7290]]
reporting threshold has been exceeded. One comment stated that such a
reporting form would assist the public's understanding of the data.
b. The Alternative Definition
The alternative definition in the NPRM would provide that, in any
calendar year in which a reporting committee is required to file or
files reports on a quarterly or monthly basis under 11 CFR 104.5, the
covered period would be defined as the quarterly periods of January 1
through March 31, April 1 through June 30, July 1 through September 30,
and October 1 through December 31. Additionally, in any calendar year
in which a reporting committee files semi-annual reports, the covered
period would also include the semi-annual periods of January 1 through
June 30 and July 1 through December 30. The Commission received one
comment in favor of this alternative definition, noting that the
alternative definition would result in more persons meeting the
reporting threshold, and thus lead to greater disclosure.
c. Quarterly Covered Periods for Reporting Committees Which File More
Frequently Than on a Quarterly Basis
Under both the proposed and the alternative definition of ``covered
period'' in the NPRM, the Commission would have exercised its authority
under HLOGA to require reporting committees that file monthly campaign
finance reports to file their bundling disclosure reports quarterly,
rather than monthly. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(A).
The Commission asked whether it should, instead, require monthly
filers to disclose information about bundled contributions on a monthly
and semi-annual basis. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(A) (``[T]he Commission
may * * * provide for quarterly filing * * * by a committee which files
reports * * * more frequently than on a quarterly basis.'').
The Commission received five comments on this question. All
supported quarterly filing schedules for political committees that file
their campaign finance reports on a monthly basis. One comment noted
that quarterly filing will result in more persons meeting the reporting
threshold, and thus provide greater disclosure by reporting committees.
The comment further noted that requiring reporting committees to
determine on a monthly basis which entities have forwarded or been
credited with raising contributions in excess of the reporting
threshold, and then to determine for that same period which of those
entities are lobbyists/registrants or their PACs, would impose an undue
compliance burden on many reporting committees.
d. Definition of ``Covered Period'' in Final Rule
The Commission's final rule follows HLOGA Section 204. The final
rule provides for different ``covered periods'' as follows:
Semi-Annual Covered Periods--``Covered period'' for each reporting
committee is the semi-annual periods of January 1 through June 30, and
July 1 through December 31. See 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(i).
Quarterly Covered Periods--For reporting committees that file
campaign finance reports under 11 CFR 104.5 on a quarterly basis, the
covered periods also include the quarters beginning on January 1, April
1, July 1, and October 1, and the applicable pre- and post-election
reporting periods in election years. See 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(ii). In
non-election years, reporting committees other than those authorized by
a candidate may file lobbyist bundling disclosure reports only for the
semi-annual covered periods. Id.
Monthly Covered Periods--For reporting committees that file
campaign finance reports under 11 CFR 104.5 on a monthly basis, the
covered periods also include each month in the calendar year, except
that in election years, the pre- and post-general election reporting
periods are covered periods in lieu of the monthly November and
December reporting periods. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(iii); see also 11 CFR
104.5(c)(3)(ii). This reporting schedule follows the campaign finance
reporting schedule for political committees other than authorized
committees in 2 U.S.C. 434(a)(4)(B).
HLOGA requires reporting committees to file lobbyist bundling
disclosure reports both semi-annually and for ``any reporting period
applicable'' to the reporting committee under 2 U.S.C. 434 during which
any lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC provided two or more
bundled contributions to the committee in an aggregate amount exceeding
the reporting threshold. 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(2)(C). Conforming the
definition of ``covered period'' in 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5) with the
reporting committee's campaign finance reporting periods under 2 U.S.C.
434 thus more closely tracks the language of HLOGA than did either the
proposed rule or its alternative in the NPRM.
Furthermore, requiring reporting committees to file lobbyist
bundling disclosure reports according to their usual campaign finance
reporting schedule, including pre- and post-election reports, means
that quarterly filers will disclose information about lobbyist bundling
activity during the crucial period immediately before an election, as
will monthly filers in the period immediately before a general
election. The proposed rule and the alternative in the NPRM would have
resulted in the disclosure of lobbyist/registrant and lobbyist/
registrant PAC bundling information by quarterly and monthly filers
only after the close of each calendar quarter which, in some cases,
would have been after the relevant election. The Commission's decision
to require pre-election disclosure is consistent with the requirement
in HLOGA that the Commission promulgate rules that ``provide for the
broadest possible disclosure.'' 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(D).
The Commission's decision to conform the definition of ``covered
period'' to a reporting committee's campaign finance reporting schedule
alleviates the concern expressed in several comments that reporting
committees might find it difficult to try to implement two different
reporting schedules--one for campaign finance reports under 11 CFR
104.5 and one for lobbyist bundling disclosure reports under 11 CFR
104.22. Requiring the filing of bundling disclosure reports and
campaign finance reports on the same timeline reduces or alleviates any
possible confusion, while at the same time reducing the burden of the
reporting requirement. In addition, placing both types of reports on
the same timeline will facilitate the public's ability to compare the
two types of reports accurately, thereby further helping to achieve the
public disclosure objectives of HLOGA. See 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(5)(D).
Accordingly, 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(ii) and (iii) define ``covered
period'' to correspond to a reporting committee's regular campaign
finance reporting schedule under 11 CFR 104.5.
The Commission recognizes, however, that some comments conveyed a
preference for allowing reporting committees that file their campaign
finance reports on a monthly basis to file their lobbyist bundling
disclosure reports quarterly, instead. As one comment noted, requiring
reporting committees to make a monthly determination as to who is a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, and whether or not the
reporting threshold for bundled contributions has been exceeded, would
impose a substantial compliance burden. Recognizing that concern, the
regulations adopted by the Commission permit quarterly filing of the
information required by this regulation
[[Page 7291]]
for reporting committees that file their campaign finance reports under
2 U.S.C. 434 more frequently than on a quarterly basis. See 2 U.S.C.
434(i)(5)(A). Under new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(iv), reporting committees
that file their campaign finance reports on a monthly basis may elect
to file their lobbyist bundling disclosure reports on a quarterly,
rather than monthly, basis. Any such reporting committee that chooses
to file its lobbyist bundling disclosure reports on a quarterly basis
must follow the same schedule as quarterly filers: semi-annually; for
each calendar quarter; and pre- and post-election, as discussed above.
A reporting committee that wishes to change its reporting schedule
under new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5) must notify the Commission in writing,
just as non-authorized committees must do for campaign finance reports.
11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(iv); see also 11 CFR 104.5(c). Reporting committees
may not change their filing frequency more than once per calendar year.
11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(iv); see also 11 CFR 104.5(c).
Finally, new 11 CFR 104.22(a)(5)(v) establishes a covered period
for reporting committees with respect to special elections and runoff
elections. Any such reporting committee that receives two or more
contributions forwarded by or raised by and credited to a lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC that exceed the reporting
threshold during the covered period must file FEC Form 3L (Report of
Contributions Bundled by Lobbyists/Registrants and Lobbyist/Registrant
PACs) at the same time that the reporting committee files its campaign
finance reports for the special or run-off election. Special and run-
off elections are called under State law, and the Commission sets
deadlines for filing campaign finance reports for the elections under 2
U.S.C. 434(a)(9). See also 11 CFR 104.5(h). The new definition of
``covered period'' for reporting committees active in special and run-
off elections thus is consistent with HLOGA's definition of ``covered
period,'' which includes ``any reporting period applicable to the
committee under [2 U.S.C. 434].'' 2 U.S.C. 434(i)(2).
6. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)--Bundled Contribution
HLOGA Section 204 defines the term ``bundled contribution'' as
``with respect to a [reporting committee] and a [lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC], a contribution (subject to the applicable
threshold) which is (i) forwarded from the contributor or any
contributors to the [reporting] committee by the [lobbyist/registrant
or lobbyist/registrant PAC]; or (ii) received by the [reporting]
committee from a contributor or contributors, but credited by the
[reporting] committee or the candidate involved (or, in the case of a
leadership PAC, by the [officeholder] involved) to the [lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC] through records, designations,
or other means of recognizing that a certain amount of money has been
raised by the [lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC].'' 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(A).\11\
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\11\ As discussed in section III.H below, because the term
``contributions'' in FECA includes in-kind contributions, the rules
for ``bundled contributions'' apply to both monetary and in-kind
contributions. See 2 U.S.C. 431(8)(A)(i) and 11 CFR 100.51(a),
100.54, 100.56, 109.21(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
HLOGA thus recognizes two distinct types of bundled contributions--
(1) contributions that are forwarded to the reporting committee by a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, and (2) contributions
received by the reporting committee from the contributors that are
credited by the reporting committee to a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC through records, designations or other means of
recognizing that a certain amount of money has been raised by that
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC. Each type of bundled
contribution is discussed separately below.
a. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(i)--Contributions Forwarded to a Reporting
Committee by a Lobbyist/Registrant or Lobbyist/Registrant PAC
The first type of ``bundled contribution'' defined in 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6) is a contribution that is forwarded to the reporting
committee by a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC. New 11
CFR 104.22(a)(6)(i) states that a forwarded contribution is any
contribution delivered or transmitted, by physical or electronic means,
to the reporting committee by the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC, or by any person that the reporting committee knows to
be forwarding such contribution on behalf of a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC.
This type of bundled contribution does not result from the
reporting committee's crediting the lobbyist/registrant or the
lobbyist/registrant PAC with having raised the contributions in order
for the contributions to be included in the aggregate amount of bundled
contributions disclosed. Rather, this type of bundled contribution
turns solely on the fact that the contributions were forwarded by the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC to the reporting
committee. Bundled contributions that are forwarded to a reporting
committee by a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC must be
reported regardless of whether the committee awards any ``credit'' to
the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
The NPRM sought comment as to whether it might be helpful and
facilitate compliance if the Commission were to define the term
``forwarded'' in the rule as, for instance, ``arranging or causing the
physical or electronic delivery or transmission of a contribution.''
NPRM, 72 FR at 62602.
Three comments addressed this question. One comment stated that
such a definition would be useful to clarify, for example, that if a
lobbyist collects a batch of checks for a candidate but arranges for an
employee or third party to give them to the candidate, rather than
personally delivering them, those checks have been ``forwarded'' and
the reporting committee must report the information about the bundler
if the contributions exceed the reporting threshold.
A second comment stated that the definition of the term
``forwarded'' should simply restate the Commission's current
``intermediary/conduit'' concept at 11 CFR 110.6. This comment
suggested that for simplicity, the Commission should apply the existing
standards in 11 CFR 110.6, but exclude the exception in 11 CFR
110.6(b)(2)(i)(E) for any person who is expressly authorized by the
candidate or the candidate's political committee to engage in
fundraising, and who occupies a significant position in the candidate's
campaign organization.
The third comment stated that such a definition would be helpful,
but argued that HLOGA Section 204 covers only contributions that are
physically forwarded by a lobbyist to a reporting committee, rather
than contributions forwarded electronically. In the absence of
statutory language to the contrary, the comment argued, the Commission
must adopt the approach set forth in the Section-by-Section Analysis,
which refers to ``situation[s] where a lobbyist physically forwards
contributions to the campaign.'' 153 Cong. Rec. S10709 (daily ed.
August 2, 2007).
The Commission concludes that a new definition of ``forwarded
contribution'' would be helpful and that the new definition should
appropriately encompass both the physical and the electronic forwarding
of contributions.
The Section-by-Section Analysis explains that the first type of
bundled contribution ``covers the situation where a lobbyist physically
forwards
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contributions to the campaign.'' This type of bundled contribution is
distinguished from situations in which contributions are made directly
by a contributor to a reporting committee, but are raised by and
credited to a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
The Commission has long recognized that contributions may be made
electronically. The Commission has also recognized that earmarked
contributions may be forwarded electronically to the recipient
candidate committee. See generally Advisory Opinion 1995-09
(NewtWatch). Accordingly, the Commission has concluded that certain
contributions should not fall outside the scope of HLOGA's reporting
requirements simply because they were forwarded electronically. New 11
CFR 104.22 thus requires disclosure of information about lobbyists/
registrants and lobbyist/registrant PACs that forward contributions
either physically or electronically to a reporting committee if the
amount of bundled contributions exceeds the reporting threshold in the
covered period.
Examples of contributions forwarded ``electronically'' include
contributions received by a lobbyist/registrant in the form of checks
and then deposited by the lobbyist/registrant in its account and
transmitted by the lobbyist/registrant electronically to the reporting
committee, and contributions received by a lobbyist/registrant PAC via
credit card, debit card, or electronic check, including authorization
to access credit or debit card funds or banking funds, and then
transmitted by the lobbyist/registrant PAC in the form of a check or
via credit card to the reporting committee.\12\
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\12\ The Commission notes that, in these examples, the lobbyist/
registrant also might have to file a conduit report pursuant to 11
CFR 110.6. Conduits, intermediaries, and lobbyist/registrants and
lobbyist/registrant PACs that forward bundled contributions are also
subject to the rules in 11 CFR 102.8. Conduit or intermediary
activities are additionally subject to disclosure by reporting
committees under these final rules if the conduits or intermediaries
are lobbyist/registrants or lobbyist/registrant PACs and provide
bundled contributions exceeding the reporting threshold within the
covered period. Furthermore, these final rules do not make
permissible any activity otherwise prohibited by the FECA and
Commission regulations (e.g., making or facilitating contributions
by prohibited sources). See, e.g., 2 U.S.C. 441b(a) and 11 CFR
114.2(f).
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Additionally, 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(i) specifies that a bundled
contribution means a contribution that is forwarded to the reporting
committee by a person that the reporting committee ``knows to be
forwarding such contribution on behalf of a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist registrant PAC.'' This provision covers such situations as
when an employee or officer of a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC forwards a contribution to a reporting committee, and
the reporting committee knows that the employee or officer forwarded
the contributions on behalf of the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC.
As noted below, the Commission believes that both the reporting
committee and the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC have a
convergent interest in knowing and having it made known that a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC has raised certain
contributions for the committee. If the reporting committee knows that
the non-lobbyist intermediary is forwarding the checks on behalf of the
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, the reporting committee
must report information about the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC on whose behalf the checks are forwarded, if the
reporting threshold is met. The reporting requirement may not be
avoided simply because the intermediary who forwarded the contribution
was not a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
For example, a lobbyist may ask a friend, colleague, employee, or
courier service to deliver checks collected by the lobbyist to a
reporting committee. If the reporting committee knows of that fact, for
example, if told orally or by means of a transmittal letter, disclosure
of the lobbyist-forwarded contributions cannot be avoided in this case
simply because the lobbyist forwarded such contributions through a non-
lobbyist intermediary.
b. 11 CFR 104.22(a)(6)(ii)--Crediting Contributions to Lobbyists/
Registrants and Their PACs
The second type of ``bundled contribution'' in new 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6) covers contributions received by the reporting committee
from the contributors (rather than from a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC, as discussed in section III.A.6.a, above) that
are credited by the reporting committee to a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC through records, designations or other means of
recognizing that a certain amount of money has been raised by that
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC. 11 CFR
104.22(a)(6)(ii).
i. Received and Credited
The NPRM requested comments on whether the amount of contributions
received or the amount of contributions credited should be included in
the aggregation toward the reporting threshold.
Two comments addressed this issue. One comment indicated a
preference that the reporting committees be required to disclose the
amount received, rather than the amount credited, to eliminate any
discrepancies in the amounts that lobbyists/registrants and their PACs
report they have raised for reporting committees and the amounts that
the reporting committees know have or have not been raised. The other
comment stated that both the amounts received and credited should
determine the amount disclosed. This latter comment stated a belief
that the reporting committee is in the best position to determine what
credit to give and to whom. The comment noted that what matters under
HLOGA is the amount of contributions that the reporting committee
credits the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC for having
raised.
The Commission agrees with the latter comment. Bundled
contributions that are forwarded to a reporting committee by a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC must be reported
regardless of whether the reporting committee provides any ``credit''
for them. In contrast, the focus of HLOGA's reporting requirement for
contributions received directly from contributors is based upon the
credit that a reporting committee gives to a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC for having raised the contribution. The
Commission so concludes for the following reasons:
(A) HLOGA defines ``bundled contribution'' as a contribution
``received by the committee from a contributor or contributors, but
credited by the committee or candidate involved * * * to the [lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC] through records, designations,
or other means of recognizing that a certain amount of money has been
raised by the [lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC].'' 2
U.S.C. 434(i)(8)(A)(ii) (emphasis added). Thus, the statutory
definition has two components: receipt from the contributor and credit
given to the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC.
(B) HLOGA's disclosure requirement is intended to make transparent
the influence that lobbyists/registrants and lobbyist/registrant PACs
might gain by raising contributions for reporting committees. Any such
influence may be affected by the reporting committee's perception of
the value of the lobbyist/registrant's or lobbyist/registrant PAC's
fundraising efforts. Accordingly, the purpose behind HLOGA's disclosure
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requirement is best served by requiring reporting committees to
disclose the amount of credit that they give to lobbyist/registrants or
lobbyist/registrant PACs for having raised contributions.
(C) The Section-by-Section Analysis supports this interpretation.
It states that the disclosure requirement would apply only if the
reporting committee credits a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC with proceeds of a fundraising event that the lobbyist/
registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC hosts. See 153 Cong. Rec. S10709
(daily ed. August 2, 2007) (``An event hosted by a registered lobbyist
may trigger the disclosure requirement if the committee credits the
lobbyist with the proceeds of the fundraiser. * * *'') (emphasis
added). The Section-by-Section Analysis also emphasizes that the
reporting requirement depends on whether the committee gave credit to
the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC, as opposed to
requiring a committee to report automatically the proceeds of any
fundraising event held on the premises of a lobbyist/registrant or
lobbyist/registrant PAC. Id. (``The disclosure requirement is not
triggered by general solicitation of contributions where a registered
lobbyist attends an event or an event is held on the premises of a
registrant.'') Therefore, the Commission believes that the focus of
HLOGA Section 204 is the credit provided by the reporting committee to
the lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC for having raised
contributions.
(D) Further, the Commission notes that Congress may have
anticipated the possible discrepancy between the amount that a
lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/registrant PAC may claim to have raised
for a reporting committee, and the amount that the reporting committee
reports as actually credited to a lobbyist/registrant or lobbyist/
registrant PAC. Earlier versions of the Senate bill that eventually
became HLOGA Section 204 would have placed the reporting obligation for
contributions ``collected or