Requiring Reporting of Exchanges of Email Lists, 72346-72348 [2024-19900]
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72346
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 172 / Thursday, September 5, 2024 / Proposed Rules
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BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Part 104
[Notice 2024–21]
Requiring Reporting of Exchanges of
Email Lists
Federal Election Commission.
Notification of disposition of
petition for rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Commission announces
its disposition of a Petition for
Rulemaking filed on June 28, 2019. The
Petition asks the Commission to revise
existing reporting rules to state that
mailing lists received or disbursed as
part of an equal-value exchange must be
reported. For the reasons described
below, the Commission is not initiating
a rulemaking at this time.
DATES: September 5, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the comments and
the Petition for Rulemaking are
available on the Commission’s website,
https://www.fec.gov/fosers/ (REG 2019–
03 Requiring Reporting of Exchanges of
Email Lists (2019)), and at the
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SUMMARY:
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Commission’s Public Records Office,
1050 First Street NE, Washington, DC,
Monday through Friday between the
hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Amy Rothstein, Assistant General
Counsel, or Ms. Sarah Herman Peck,
Attorney, 1050 First Street NE,
Washington, DC, (202) 694–1650 or
(800) 424–9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Federal Election Campaign Act, 52
U.S.C. 30101–45 (the ‘‘Act’’), and
Commission regulations require
political committees to report ‘‘all
receipts’’ 1 and ‘‘all disbursements.’’ 2
Specifically, 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2)
requires political committees to report
both the ‘‘total amount of all receipts’’
generally and the ‘‘total amount of all
receipts’’ in certain specified categories,
namely: contributions; loans; Federal
funds; rebates; refunds; offsets to
operating expenditures; transfers from
affiliated committees (and, for political
party committees, transfers from another
political party committee regardless of
whether it is affiliated); and dividends,
interest, and ‘‘other forms of receipts.’’ 3
Through a series of advisory opinions,
the Commission has concluded that an
equal-value exchange of mailing lists is
neither a contribution, donation, or
transfer of funds or any other thing of
value.4 Therefore, it is ‘‘a non-reportable
event.’’ 5
Then, in REG 2003–03 (Mailing Lists),
the Commission proposed, and
ultimately declined, to issue new
regulations on mailing list sales, rentals,
1 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2); see also 11 CFR
104.3(a)(2)(ix).
2 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(4); see also 11 CFR 104.3(b).
3 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2). The Act contains a
similar reporting provision for disbursements. See
id. section 30104(b)(4).
4 See Advisory Opinion 1981–46 (Dellums);
Advisory Opinion 1982–41 (Dellums); Advisory
Opinion 2002–14 (Libertarian National Committee).
5 Advisory Opinion 2002–14 (Libertarian National
Committee) at 5.
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ML20121A190.
ML23328A396 (Package).
and equal-value exchanges. In the notice
of proposed rulemaking, the
Commission proposed ‘‘to adopt
formally its historical approach . . . or
to modify those approaches . . . and to
provide candidates and political
committees with more comprehensive
guidance on commercial transactions
involving mailing lists.’’ 6 For equalvalue exchanges, the Commission
proposed to treat them neither as a
contribution nor a reportable receipt if
the exchange satisfies three elements.7
First, the parties must ascertain in
advance the ‘‘usual and normal charge’’
for the mailing list.8 Second, the mailing
lists must be of ‘‘equal value.’’ 9 And
third, the mailing list exchange must be
a ‘‘bona fide arm’s length transaction
with commercially reasonable terms.’’ 10
After reviewing the comments
received on the proposed rule and
holding a public hearing, the
Commission decided not to proceed to
final rules.11 In doing so, the
Commission relied on comments
asserting that the appropriate factors for
determining the usual and normal
charge and whether a transaction is
commercially reasonable will ‘‘vary
considerably depending upon the
circumstances.’’ 12 Because the
Commission could not conclude that
any particular test would be
‘‘sufficiently flexible and
comprehensive to address all
circumstances to which the proposed
rules would apply,’’ it terminated the
rulemaking through a Notice of
Disposition.13
6 Mailing Lists of Political Committees, 68 FR
52531, 52532 (Sept. 4, 2003).
7 Id. at 52535.
8 Id.
9 Id.
10 Id.
11 Mailing Lists of Political Committees, 68 FR
64571, 64571–72 (Nov. 14, 2003).
12 Id. at 64572.
13 Id.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 172 / Thursday, September 5, 2024 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
A decade and a half later, on June 28,
2019, the Commission received a
Petition for Rulemaking (‘‘Petition’’)
from Campaign Legal Center (‘‘CLC’’)
asking the Commission to ‘‘amend 11
CFR 104.3 to clarify that the receipt or
disbursement of a mailing list or other
valuable information is subject to the
reporting requirements in section
104.3.’’ 14 Specifically, CLC asked the
Commission to ‘‘clarify’’ that a list not
subject to disclosure as a ‘‘contribution’’
or ‘‘expenditure,’’ such as a list received
or provided as part of an equal-value
exchange, ‘‘must nevertheless be
reported as ‘other receipts’ under 11
CFR 104.3(a)(2)(viii), or ‘other
disbursements,’ under 11 CFR
104.3(b)(ix).’’ 15 The Petition argued that
Advisory Opinions 1981–46 (Dellums),
1982–41 (Dellums), and 2002–14
(Libertarian National Committee)—in
which the Commission concluded that
the equal-value exchange of mailing
lists consistent with industry practice is
neither a contribution nor otherwise
reportable under the Act—are ‘‘contrary
to the plain text of the law, which
requires disclosure of ‘all receipts’ and
‘all disbursements,’ not merely
contributions, expenditures, or
transfers.’’ 16
The Commission published a
notification of availability on August 28,
2019, asking for public comment on the
Petition.17 The Commission received
three timely comments from individuals
and three late comments from CLC. Of
the individual comments, two
supported and one opposed the
Petition.18 CLC’s comments urged the
Commission to prioritize this and other
pending regulatory matters.19
14 Campaign Legal Center, Petition for
Rulemaking at 1 (June 28, 2019), REG 2019–03,
https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?
docid=408334.
15 Id.
16 Id. at 3.
17 See Requiring Reporting of Exchanges of Email
Lists, 84 FR 45116 (Aug. 28, 2019).
18 One comment supporting the Petition
characterized the Commission’s treatment of
mailing list exchanges as a ‘‘loophole’’ that allows
‘‘independent expenditure-only committees (i.e.
super PACs) to provide direct, valuable aid to
candidate committees, in contravention of the law.’’
Samir Sheth & Professor Michael D. Gilbert,
Comment at 1 (Oct. 28, 2019), https://sers.fec.gov/
fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=410225. The comment
opposing the Petition asserted that the proposed
rulemaking would ‘‘place[ ] an undue onerous
burden upon citizen activists.’’ Christine Kramar,
Comment at 1 (Oct. 20, 2019), https://sers.fec.gov/
fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=410224.
19 Campaign Legal Center, Comment at 2–3 (June
5, 2023), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?
docid=423361; Campaign Legal Center, Comment at
12 (Jan. 13, 2021), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/
showpdf.htm?docid=413005; Campaign Legal
Center, Comment at 6–7 (June 16, 2020), https://
sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=411922.
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In deciding whether to initiate a
rulemaking in response to a petition, the
Commission generally considers five
factors. They are (1) the Commission’s
statutory authority; (2) policy
considerations; (3) the desirability of
proceeding on a case-by-case basis; (4)
the necessity or desirability of statutory
revision; and (5) available agency
resources.20
After considering these factors and
reviewing the comments received on the
Petition, the Commission has decided
not to initiate a rulemaking at this time.
The Commission previously expended
considerable resources on this issue
during its consideration of REG 2003–03
(Mailing Lists); indeed, construing the
Act to require the reporting of equalvalue exchanges of mailing lists, as the
Petition requests, would likely raise the
same thorny questions of valuation that
led the Commission to terminate the
2003 rulemaking.21 Commenters in that
rulemaking explained that the value of
a particular mailing list often depends
on factors outside of the content of the
list itself, such as the identities of the
buyers and sellers, the number of times
the recipient plans to use the list,
whether there are any restrictions
placed on using the names received, and
even media coverage of a particular
issue, event, or candidate.22 Absent
compelling evidence of a need to reopen
these issues in a new rulemaking, doing
so would not be a good use of agency
resources, particularly given the
Commission’s numerous other pending
rulemaking petitions and ongoing
rulemaking projects.
Nor is the Commission aware of any
widespread misuse of mailing list
exchanges to thwart the purposes of the
Act and warrant Commission
rulemaking action. The Petition
provided only a single example of
potential misuse, which the
20 11
CFR 200.5.
such issue is who would be responsible for
determining a list’s value and how. See, e.g.,
Transcript of Hearing on Candidate Travel, MultiCandidate Committee Status, Biennial Contribution
Limits at 182–85 (Oct. 1, 2003), REG 2003–03
(Mailing Lists) (‘‘Hearing Transcript’’), https://
sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=425177
(discussing use of list brokers and means of listprice negotiations). Several commenters questioned
the use of independent appraisers. See Lyn Utrecht,
Eric Kleinfeld, James Lamb, and Pat Fiori, Comment
at 1–2 (Sept. 25, 2003), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/
showpdf.htm?docid=13912. One cautioned that
deferring to the valuation by ‘‘the SDRS [sic] and
similar directories’’ would discount price
negotiations that are ‘‘ubiquitous’’ in these
transactions. Hearing Transcript at 184.
22 See Hearing Transcript, supra note 21, at 57–
58, 163, 202–03; Utrecht, Kleinfeld, Lamb, and
Fiori, supra note 21, at 1.
21 One
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72347
Commission appropriately addressed
through its enforcement process.23
Furthermore, the context in which the
terms ‘‘all receipts’’ and ‘‘all
disbursements’’ appear in the Act
validates the Commission’s
longstanding conclusion that equalvalue exchanges of mailing lists are
‘‘non-reportable events.’’ 24 Unlike the
exchange of one list for another list of
equal value, the forms of ‘‘receipts’’
enumerated in section 30104(b)(2) all
serve to improve the reporting
committee’s financial position.25 Thus,
under traditional canons of statutory
construction,26 the equal-value
exchange of mailing lists—which would
not itself change the reporting
committee’s financial position—does
not lend itself to being a ‘‘receipt’’
subject to the Act’s reporting
requirements.27 Moreover, reading the
statutory term ‘‘receipt’’ to require
reporting the value of a mailing list
received in an equal-value exchange
because it is ‘‘received’’ in the most
literal sense of the word (as the Petition
23 See Petition for Rulemaking, supra note 14, at
3–4 (pointing to MUR 6932 (Hillary Rodham
Clinton) (failing by vote of 2–2 to approve First
General Counsel’s Report recommendation that
Commission find reason to believe email-list
exchange was not bona fide). The Petition did not
identify other examples of mailing list exchanges
that were resolved through the Commission’s
enforcement process, such as MUR 6888
(Republican National Committee, et al.), in which
the Commission approved the First General
Counsel’s Report’s recommendation of no reason to
believe that a data exchange was not an arm’s
length, commercial arrangement for an exchange of
equal value, and MUR 5396 (Bauer for President
2000, Inc.), which resulted in a conciliation
agreement where the parties agreed that lists
exchanged were not of equal value.
24 See Advisory Opinion 2002–14 (Libertarian
National Committee) at 5.
25 See 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2) (requiring reporting
of contributions; loans; Federal funds; rebates;
refunds; offsets to operating expenditures; transfers
from affiliated committees (and, for party
committees, transfers from another party committee
regardless of whether it is affiliated); and dividends,
interest, and ‘‘other forms of receipts’’). The Act
contains a similar reporting provision for
‘‘disbursements.’’ See id. section 30104(b)(4).
26 ‘‘Under the ‘ejusdem generis’ principle (that’s
Latin for ‘of the same kind’), a more general phrase
that comes at the end of a specific list takes on the
qualities of the list.’’ Revitalizing Auto
Communities Env’t Response Tr. v. Nat’l Grid USA,
92 F.4th 415, 445 (2d Cir. 2024). ‘‘[T]he scope-ofsubparts canon of statutory interpretation . . .
holds that ‘[m]aterial contained in unindented text
relates to all the following . . . indented
subparts.’ ’’ United States v. Lowell, 2 F.4th 1291,
1296 (10th Cir. 2021) (quoting A. Scalia & B. Garner,
Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 156
(2012)).
27 See Advisory Opinion 1981–46 (Dellums) at 2
(concluding that if there is ‘‘an exchange of names
of equal ‘value’ according to accepted industry
practice, the exchange would be considered full
consideration for services rendered,’’ and, ‘‘[t]hus,
no contribution or expenditure would result and
the transaction would not be reportable under the
Act’’).
E:\FR\FM\05SEP1.SGM
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72348
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 172 / Thursday, September 5, 2024 / Proposed Rules
appears to suggest) would lead to absurd
results, such as requiring political
committees to assign a value to and
report everything they have ‘‘received,’’
including uncompensated volunteer
services 28 and other goods and services
that are not ‘‘contributions’’ under the
Act.
Additionally, the equal-value
exchange of mailing lists is better suited
to disposition on a case-by-case basis
through advisory opinions and the
enforcement process, as the Commission
has been doing for the past 40 years.
The Commission has issued several
advisory opinions over the course of
four decades on the treatment of mailing
lists, several of which are referred to
above. The Commission also previously
conducted the 2003 rulemaking to
consider whether to change its historical
case-by-case practice to valuing mailing
list exchanges and ultimately concluded
that a case-by-case approach is the right
way to go. Further, a case-by-case
approach is more appropriate if, as
several commenters in the prior
rulemaking indicated, the proper
valuation of a mailing list often depends
on case-by-case facts.
Finally, there does not appear to be
great public interest in the proposed
rulemaking. The Commission received
only six public comments in response to
its Notice of Availability, half of which
came from the petitioner here.
Accordingly, after considering the
comments received regarding the
Petition and in consideration of each of
the factors discussed, the Commission
declines to initiate a rulemaking in
response to the Petition.
Dated: August 29, 2024.
On behalf of the Commission,
Sean J. Cooksey,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. 2024–19900 Filed 9–4–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 301
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[REG–120137–19]
RIN 1545–BP66
Update of Regulations Regarding
Payment of Tax by Commercially
Acceptable Means
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
AGENCY:
28 11
CFR 100.74.
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ACTION:
Notice of proposed rulemaking;
reopening of comment period.
has been reopened through Tuesday,
September 24, 2024.
This document reopens the
period to submit comments or to request
a public hearing for a notice of proposed
rulemaking (REG–120137–19) that was
published in the Federal Register on
Tuesday, July 2, 2024. The proposed
regulations relate to the payment of tax
by commercially acceptable means and
reflect changes to the law made by the
Taxpayer First Act that would allow the
IRS to directly accept payments of tax
by credit or debit card, without having
to connect taxpayers to third-party
payment processors.
DATES: The comment period to submit
written or electronic comments for the
notice of proposed rulemaking
published on July 2, 2024 (89 FR
54746), or to request a public hearing,
is reopened through September 24,
2024.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly
encouraged to submit public comments
electronically. Submit electronic
submissions via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
REG–120137–19) by following the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Requests for a public hearing
must be submitted as prescribed in the
‘‘Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing’’ section. Once submitted to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments
cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) and the IRS will publish
any comments submitted electronically
or on paper to the public docket. Send
paper submissions to: CC:PA:01:PR
(REG–120137–19), Room 5203, Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben
Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
Crystal Jackson-Kaloz of the Office of
the Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure
and Administration), (202) 317–5191
(not a toll-free number); concerning the
submission of comments and requests
for a public hearing, Publications and
Regulations Section at (202) 317–6901
(not a toll-free number), or by sending
an email at publichearings@irs.gov
(preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A notice
of proposed rulemaking and request for
comments that appeared in the Federal
Register on Tuesday, July 2, 2024 (89 FR
54746), announced that written or
electronic comments must be received
by September 3, 2024. Due to public
interest, the due date to receive
comments or request a public hearing
Regina L. Johnson,
Federal Register Liaison, Publications and
Regulations Section, Associate Chief Counsel,
(Procedure and Administration).
SUMMARY:
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[FR Doc. 2024–19854 Filed 9–4–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 100
[Docket Number USCG–2024–0528]
RIN 1625–AA08
Special Local Regulation; Seddon
Channel, Tampa, FL
Coast Guard, Department of
Homeland Security (DHS).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Coast Guard is proposing
to establish a temporary special local
regulation for certain waters of the
Seddon Channel. This action is
necessary to provide for the safety of life
on these navigable waters near the
Tampa Convention Center, Tampa, FL,
during a marine event on November 9,
2024. This proposed rulemaking would
establish a special local regulation with
the following regulated areas: an event
area where all non-participant persons
and vessels are prohibited from
entering, transiting through, anchoring
in, or remaining within unless
authorized by the Captain of the Port St.
Petersburg (COTP) or a designated
representative; a spectator area where
vessels will be directed to anchor while
the event is taking place; and an
enforcement area where designated
representatives may control vessel
traffic as determined by the prevailing
conditions. We invite your comments
on this proposed rulemaking.
DATES: Comments and related material
must be received by the Coast Guard on
or before October 7, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by docket number USCG–
2024–0528 using the Federal DecisionMaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. See the ‘‘Public
Participation and Request for
Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
further instructions on submitting
comments. This notice of proposed
rulemaking with its plain-language, 100word-or-less proposed rule summary
will be available in this same docket.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\05SEP1.SGM
05SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 172 (Thursday, September 5, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 72346-72348]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-19900]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Part 104
[Notice 2024-21]
Requiring Reporting of Exchanges of Email Lists
AGENCY: Federal Election Commission.
ACTION: Notification of disposition of petition for rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commission announces its disposition of a Petition for
Rulemaking filed on June 28, 2019. The Petition asks the Commission to
revise existing reporting rules to state that mailing lists received or
disbursed as part of an equal-value exchange must be reported. For the
reasons described below, the Commission is not initiating a rulemaking
at this time.
DATES: September 5, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the comments and the Petition for Rulemaking are
available on the Commission's website, https://www.fec.gov/fosers/ (REG
2019-03 Requiring Reporting of Exchanges of Email Lists (2019)), and at
the Commission's Public Records Office, 1050 First Street NE,
Washington, DC, Monday through Friday between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5
p.m.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Amy Rothstein, Assistant General
Counsel, or Ms. Sarah Herman Peck, Attorney, 1050 First Street NE,
Washington, DC, (202) 694-1650 or (800) 424-9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Federal Election Campaign Act, 52 U.S.C.
30101-45 (the ``Act''), and Commission regulations require political
committees to report ``all receipts'' \1\ and ``all disbursements.''
\2\ Specifically, 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2) requires political committees
to report both the ``total amount of all receipts'' generally and the
``total amount of all receipts'' in certain specified categories,
namely: contributions; loans; Federal funds; rebates; refunds; offsets
to operating expenditures; transfers from affiliated committees (and,
for political party committees, transfers from another political party
committee regardless of whether it is affiliated); and dividends,
interest, and ``other forms of receipts.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2); see also 11 CFR 104.3(a)(2)(ix).
\2\ 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(4); see also 11 CFR 104.3(b).
\3\ 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2). The Act contains a similar reporting
provision for disbursements. See id. section 30104(b)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Through a series of advisory opinions, the Commission has concluded
that an equal-value exchange of mailing lists is neither a
contribution, donation, or transfer of funds or any other thing of
value.\4\ Therefore, it is ``a non-reportable event.'' \5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Advisory Opinion 1981-46 (Dellums); Advisory Opinion
1982-41 (Dellums); Advisory Opinion 2002-14 (Libertarian National
Committee).
\5\ Advisory Opinion 2002-14 (Libertarian National Committee) at
5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Then, in REG 2003-03 (Mailing Lists), the Commission proposed, and
ultimately declined, to issue new regulations on mailing list sales,
rentals, and equal-value exchanges. In the notice of proposed
rulemaking, the Commission proposed ``to adopt formally its historical
approach . . . or to modify those approaches . . . and to provide
candidates and political committees with more comprehensive guidance on
commercial transactions involving mailing lists.'' \6\ For equal-value
exchanges, the Commission proposed to treat them neither as a
contribution nor a reportable receipt if the exchange satisfies three
elements.\7\ First, the parties must ascertain in advance the ``usual
and normal charge'' for the mailing list.\8\ Second, the mailing lists
must be of ``equal value.'' \9\ And third, the mailing list exchange
must be a ``bona fide arm's length transaction with commercially
reasonable terms.'' \10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Mailing Lists of Political Committees, 68 FR 52531, 52532
(Sept. 4, 2003).
\7\ Id. at 52535.
\8\ Id.
\9\ Id.
\10\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After reviewing the comments received on the proposed rule and
holding a public hearing, the Commission decided not to proceed to
final rules.\11\ In doing so, the Commission relied on comments
asserting that the appropriate factors for determining the usual and
normal charge and whether a transaction is commercially reasonable will
``vary considerably depending upon the circumstances.'' \12\ Because
the Commission could not conclude that any particular test would be
``sufficiently flexible and comprehensive to address all circumstances
to which the proposed rules would apply,'' it terminated the rulemaking
through a Notice of Disposition.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Mailing Lists of Political Committees, 68 FR 64571, 64571-
72 (Nov. 14, 2003).
\12\ Id. at 64572.
\13\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 72347]]
A decade and a half later, on June 28, 2019, the Commission
received a Petition for Rulemaking (``Petition'') from Campaign Legal
Center (``CLC'') asking the Commission to ``amend 11 CFR 104.3 to
clarify that the receipt or disbursement of a mailing list or other
valuable information is subject to the reporting requirements in
section 104.3.'' \14\ Specifically, CLC asked the Commission to
``clarify'' that a list not subject to disclosure as a ``contribution''
or ``expenditure,'' such as a list received or provided as part of an
equal-value exchange, ``must nevertheless be reported as `other
receipts' under 11 CFR 104.3(a)(2)(viii), or `other disbursements,'
under 11 CFR 104.3(b)(ix).'' \15\ The Petition argued that Advisory
Opinions 1981-46 (Dellums), 1982-41 (Dellums), and 2002-14 (Libertarian
National Committee)--in which the Commission concluded that the equal-
value exchange of mailing lists consistent with industry practice is
neither a contribution nor otherwise reportable under the Act--are
``contrary to the plain text of the law, which requires disclosure of
`all receipts' and `all disbursements,' not merely contributions,
expenditures, or transfers.'' \16\
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\14\ Campaign Legal Center, Petition for Rulemaking at 1 (June
28, 2019), REG 2019-03, https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=408334.
\15\ Id.
\16\ Id. at 3.
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The Commission published a notification of availability on August
28, 2019, asking for public comment on the Petition.\17\ The Commission
received three timely comments from individuals and three late comments
from CLC. Of the individual comments, two supported and one opposed the
Petition.\18\ CLC's comments urged the Commission to prioritize this
and other pending regulatory matters.\19\
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\17\ See Requiring Reporting of Exchanges of Email Lists, 84 FR
45116 (Aug. 28, 2019).
\18\ One comment supporting the Petition characterized the
Commission's treatment of mailing list exchanges as a ``loophole''
that allows ``independent expenditure-only committees (i.e. super
PACs) to provide direct, valuable aid to candidate committees, in
contravention of the law.'' Samir Sheth & Professor Michael D.
Gilbert, Comment at 1 (Oct. 28, 2019), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=410225. The comment opposing the Petition asserted
that the proposed rulemaking would ``place[ ] an undue onerous
burden upon citizen activists.'' Christine Kramar, Comment at 1
(Oct. 20, 2019), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=410224.
\19\ Campaign Legal Center, Comment at 2-3 (June 5, 2023),
https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=423361; Campaign Legal
Center, Comment at 12 (Jan. 13, 2021), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=413005; Campaign Legal Center, Comment at 6-7
(June 16, 2020), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=411922.
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In deciding whether to initiate a rulemaking in response to a
petition, the Commission generally considers five factors. They are (1)
the Commission's statutory authority; (2) policy considerations; (3)
the desirability of proceeding on a case-by-case basis; (4) the
necessity or desirability of statutory revision; and (5) available
agency resources.\20\
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\20\ 11 CFR 200.5.
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After considering these factors and reviewing the comments received
on the Petition, the Commission has decided not to initiate a
rulemaking at this time. The Commission previously expended
considerable resources on this issue during its consideration of REG
2003-03 (Mailing Lists); indeed, construing the Act to require the
reporting of equal-value exchanges of mailing lists, as the Petition
requests, would likely raise the same thorny questions of valuation
that led the Commission to terminate the 2003 rulemaking.\21\
Commenters in that rulemaking explained that the value of a particular
mailing list often depends on factors outside of the content of the
list itself, such as the identities of the buyers and sellers, the
number of times the recipient plans to use the list, whether there are
any restrictions placed on using the names received, and even media
coverage of a particular issue, event, or candidate.\22\ Absent
compelling evidence of a need to reopen these issues in a new
rulemaking, doing so would not be a good use of agency resources,
particularly given the Commission's numerous other pending rulemaking
petitions and ongoing rulemaking projects.
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\21\ One such issue is who would be responsible for determining
a list's value and how. See, e.g., Transcript of Hearing on
Candidate Travel, Multi-Candidate Committee Status, Biennial
Contribution Limits at 182-85 (Oct. 1, 2003), REG 2003-03 (Mailing
Lists) (``Hearing Transcript''), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=425177 (discussing use of list brokers and means
of list-price negotiations). Several commenters questioned the use
of independent appraisers. See Lyn Utrecht, Eric Kleinfeld, James
Lamb, and Pat Fiori, Comment at 1-2 (Sept. 25, 2003), https://sers.fec.gov/fosers/showpdf.htm?docid=13912. One cautioned that
deferring to the valuation by ``the SDRS [sic] and similar
directories'' would discount price negotiations that are
``ubiquitous'' in these transactions. Hearing Transcript at 184.
\22\ See Hearing Transcript, supra note 21, at 57-58, 163, 202-
03; Utrecht, Kleinfeld, Lamb, and Fiori, supra note 21, at 1.
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Nor is the Commission aware of any widespread misuse of mailing
list exchanges to thwart the purposes of the Act and warrant Commission
rulemaking action. The Petition provided only a single example of
potential misuse, which the Commission appropriately addressed through
its enforcement process.\23\
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\23\ See Petition for Rulemaking, supra note 14, at 3-4
(pointing to MUR 6932 (Hillary Rodham Clinton) (failing by vote of
2-2 to approve First General Counsel's Report recommendation that
Commission find reason to believe email-list exchange was not bona
fide). The Petition did not identify other examples of mailing list
exchanges that were resolved through the Commission's enforcement
process, such as MUR 6888 (Republican National Committee, et al.),
in which the Commission approved the First General Counsel's
Report's recommendation of no reason to believe that a data exchange
was not an arm's length, commercial arrangement for an exchange of
equal value, and MUR 5396 (Bauer for President 2000, Inc.), which
resulted in a conciliation agreement where the parties agreed that
lists exchanged were not of equal value.
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Furthermore, the context in which the terms ``all receipts'' and
``all disbursements'' appear in the Act validates the Commission's
longstanding conclusion that equal-value exchanges of mailing lists are
``non-reportable events.'' \24\ Unlike the exchange of one list for
another list of equal value, the forms of ``receipts'' enumerated in
section 30104(b)(2) all serve to improve the reporting committee's
financial position.\25\ Thus, under traditional canons of statutory
construction,\26\ the equal-value exchange of mailing lists--which
would not itself change the reporting committee's financial position--
does not lend itself to being a ``receipt'' subject to the Act's
reporting requirements.\27\ Moreover, reading the statutory term
``receipt'' to require reporting the value of a mailing list received
in an equal-value exchange because it is ``received'' in the most
literal sense of the word (as the Petition
[[Page 72348]]
appears to suggest) would lead to absurd results, such as requiring
political committees to assign a value to and report everything they
have ``received,'' including uncompensated volunteer services \28\ and
other goods and services that are not ``contributions'' under the Act.
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\24\ See Advisory Opinion 2002-14 (Libertarian National
Committee) at 5.
\25\ See 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(2) (requiring reporting of
contributions; loans; Federal funds; rebates; refunds; offsets to
operating expenditures; transfers from affiliated committees (and,
for party committees, transfers from another party committee
regardless of whether it is affiliated); and dividends, interest,
and ``other forms of receipts''). The Act contains a similar
reporting provision for ``disbursements.'' See id. section
30104(b)(4).
\26\ ``Under the `ejusdem generis' principle (that's Latin for
`of the same kind'), a more general phrase that comes at the end of
a specific list takes on the qualities of the list.'' Revitalizing
Auto Communities Env't Response Tr. v. Nat'l Grid USA, 92 F.4th 415,
445 (2d Cir. 2024). ``[T]he scope-of-subparts canon of statutory
interpretation . . . holds that `[m]aterial contained in unindented
text relates to all the following . . . indented subparts.' ''
United States v. Lowell, 2 F.4th 1291, 1296 (10th Cir. 2021)
(quoting A. Scalia & B. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of
Legal Texts 156 (2012)).
\27\ See Advisory Opinion 1981-46 (Dellums) at 2 (concluding
that if there is ``an exchange of names of equal `value' according
to accepted industry practice, the exchange would be considered full
consideration for services rendered,'' and, ``[t]hus, no
contribution or expenditure would result and the transaction would
not be reportable under the Act'').
\28\ 11 CFR 100.74.
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Additionally, the equal-value exchange of mailing lists is better
suited to disposition on a case-by-case basis through advisory opinions
and the enforcement process, as the Commission has been doing for the
past 40 years. The Commission has issued several advisory opinions over
the course of four decades on the treatment of mailing lists, several
of which are referred to above. The Commission also previously
conducted the 2003 rulemaking to consider whether to change its
historical case-by-case practice to valuing mailing list exchanges and
ultimately concluded that a case-by-case approach is the right way to
go. Further, a case-by-case approach is more appropriate if, as several
commenters in the prior rulemaking indicated, the proper valuation of a
mailing list often depends on case-by-case facts.
Finally, there does not appear to be great public interest in the
proposed rulemaking. The Commission received only six public comments
in response to its Notice of Availability, half of which came from the
petitioner here.
Accordingly, after considering the comments received regarding the
Petition and in consideration of each of the factors discussed, the
Commission declines to initiate a rulemaking in response to the
Petition.
Dated: August 29, 2024.
On behalf of the Commission,
Sean J. Cooksey,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. 2024-19900 Filed 9-4-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715-01-P