by Ryan J. ReillyIn the 1940s and 50s, a number of states attorneys general attempted to force a particular 501(c)4 to disclose its donors, the purpose was to intimidate people into not giving to that organization,” Rove said on Fox News.“The group was the NAACP, which is a 501(c)4, has a 501(c)4 and does not disclose donors. That effort failed, in fact a Supreme Court in a 1954 case general held the right of organizations like that not to make their donors’ names public,” Rove said.
by Andrew GrossmanThree long-serving members of New York City’s congressional delegation have caught the attention of the Campaign for Primary Accountability, a new political-action committee trying to oust incumbents on both sides of the aisle during primaries.
by Shane GoldmacherA federal judge has struck down a Federal Election Commission ruling that allowed groups to pay for advertising in the run-up to elections while keeping their donors anonymous.
by Troy Hooper“This is good news for our democracy and for voters,” plaintiff U.S. Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Maryland, said in a prepared statement. Van Hollen filed the lawsuit in April 2011. “This victory will compel the FEC to require enhanced disclosures of the funders of campaign-related advertisements.”
Disclosure
EditorialA federal judge took an important step toward ending secret donations to big-spending political groups, striking down regulations that permitted some groups to hide their donors. Unfortunately, the ruling probably came too late to flush this corrupting practice from this year’s elections — though there is still time for Congress to do so.
Candidates and parties
by Jeremy W. PetersJust because you own a D.V.R. or watch television online does not mean political commercials are not coming soon to a screen near you.
by Carol D. LeonnigBut she is also trailed by some controversy, accused in court of defrauding a businessman out of $657,000, impersonating a bank official and dodging creditors.
by Alexander BurnsThe total cost of the campaign, according to a GOP media-tracking source, is about $1,000. That’s not missing a zero – it’s a thousand bucks across eight districts, with ads appearing in inexpensive traffic-and-weather radio segments.
by Amanda BeckerVictims of the California campaign treasurer who embezzled more than $7 million from dozens, if not hundreds, of clients’ accounts may have to hire private attorneys and scramble to replenish re-election funds even as the government’s case ended in a guilty plea Friday.
Lobbying and ethics
by Kate AckleyLook who’s coming to the Hill: beer distributors, medical professionals in white coats, restaurant owners, music makers and court reporters.
FEC
by Peter OverbyThe FEC is in a bind. It can’t appeal the decision or take steps to comply with it unless four of the six commissioners agree. But the six member commission has a partisan split right down the middle. Controversial votes often end in a 3-to-3 deadlock.
by Art LevineThe growing movement to undo the nefarious impact of the Citizens United decision allowing unlimited corporate campaign spending finds its counterpart in a citizens’ revolt against corporate control of local Washington, D.C. elections.