Disclosure, in the campaign finance context, refers to laws and regulations requiring candidates and political groups to report information about their activities to the government, which then makes that information available publicly. The required information varies greatly, depending on the affected organization and the local, state, or federal government mandating the disclosure. Disclosure rules fall into two broad categories: disclosure…
Alison Frankel yesterday discussed shareholder activism in an interesting blog post on Thomson Reuters. She references my concerns about the relationship between materiality and ...
This Policy Paper analyzes H.B. 300, the Delaware Elections Disclosure Act of 2012, with a focus on two serious constitutional issues inherent in the ...
The US News & World Report Debate Club forum took on campaign finance disclosure last week. CCP President David Keating had this to say: ...
The American Constitution Society held a conference Friday on money in politics. The panel, “Citizens United Two Years Later: Money, Politics and Democracy at Stake,” featured CCP ...
CCP Legal Director Allen Dickerson was invited to offer testimony to the Maryland Commission to Study Campaign Finance Law, established by the the Maryland ...
CCP Legal Director Allen Dickerson was invited to offer testimony today to the Maryland Commission to Study Campaign Finance Law, established by the the ...
As a general rule, should citizens be required to report their political activity to the government? There are good arguments for it – John ...
On the left, a fun new tactic has arisen for trying to silence conservative speakers: “SWATting.” The idea is to call the police, give ...
Today, two Ivy League law professors touted the groundswell of support for an SEC petition that would require corporations to disclose otherwise-immaterial political spending ...
There have been a number of stories hitting the news cycle concerning an activist group called Change to Win — who most recently, according ...