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…
How Valuable is Disclosure of Campaign Finance Contributions? The Senate is coming under attack for refusing to pass legislation requiring that Senators campaigns file ...
DO CAMPAIGN FINANCE REGULATIONS affect how citizens view their government? This question is both theoretically important and policy-relevant. A central argument for more restrictive campaign finance laws at ...
The $3 trillion annual federal budget contains $460 billion in grants and $340 million in contracts, but there is no simple way for the ...
One week after The Hill reports that 527 legislation is in trouble on the Hill, IRS reports show that the ...
Modern politicians and activists face a sea of complex and contradictory campaign finance regulations. Every step is governed by limits, prohibitions, reporting requirements -- all run ...
I n the 2000 race for the presidency, Arizona senator John McCain promoted campaign finance reform as a partial remedy for widespread citizen cynicism toward politics. On ...