Bill Text: MI HB4446 | 2019-2020 | 100th Legislature | Introduced

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Campaign finance: contributions and expenditures; campaign fund deposits; clarify source of, limit certain payments of costs by connected organizations, and add certain reporting requirements. Amends secs. 4, 5, 6, 9, 12, 21, 24, 26, 34, 35, 41, 51, 54 & 55 of 1976 PA 388 (MCL 169.204 et seq.).

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Passed) 2019-10-10 - Assigned Pa 93'19 With Immediate Effect [HB4446 Detail]

Download: Michigan-2019-HB4446-Introduced.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOUSE BILL No. 4446

 

 

April 10, 2019, Introduced by Rep. Calley and referred to the Committee on Elections and Ethics.

 

     A bill to amend 1976 PA 388, entitled

 

"Michigan campaign finance act,"

 

by amending sections 5, 9, 12, 21, 24, 34, 41, 51, 54, and 55 (MCL

 

169.205, 169.209, 169.212, 169.221, 169.224, 169.234, 169.241,

 

169.251, 169.254, and 169.255), sections 5 and 41 as amended by

 

1999 PA 237, sections 9, 24, 51, 54, and 55 as amended by 2017 PA

 

119, section 12 as amended by 2001 PA 250, section 21 as amended by

 

2015 PA 269, and section 34 as amended by 2012 PA 277.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 5. (1) "Domestic dependent sovereign" means an Indian

 

tribe that has been acknowledged, recognized, restored, or

 

reaffirmed as an Indian tribe by the secretary of the interior

 

pursuant to chapter 576, 48 Stat. 984, 25 U.S.C. 461 to 463, 464 to


465, 466 to 470, 471 to 472, 473, 474 to 475, 476 to 478, and 479,

 

25 USC 5101 to 5144, commonly referred to as the Indian

 

reorganization act, or has otherwise been acknowledged by the

 

United States government as an Indian tribe.

 

     (2) "Election" means a primary, general, special, or millage

 

election held in this state or a convention or caucus of a

 

political party held in this state to nominate a candidate.

 

Election includes a recall vote.

 

     (3) "Election cycle" means 1 of the following:

 

     (a) For a general election, the period beginning the day

 

following the last general election in which the office appeared on

 

the ballot and ending on the day of the general election in which

 

the office next appears on the ballot.

 

     (b) For a special election, the period beginning the day a

 

special general election is called or the date the office becomes

 

vacant, whichever is earlier, and ending on the day of the special

 

general election.

 

     (4) "Elective office" means a public office filled by an

 

election. A person An individual who is appointed to fill a vacancy

 

in a public office that is ordinarily elective holds an elective

 

office. Elective office does not include the office of precinct

 

delegate. Except for the purposes of sections 47, 54, and 55,

 

elective office does not include a school board member in a school

 

district that has a pupil membership of 2,400 or less enrolled on

 

the most recent pupil membership count day. However, elective

 

office includes a school board member in a school district that has

 

a pupil membership of 2,400 or less, if a candidate committee of a


candidate for the office of school board member in that school

 

district receives an amount in excess of $1,000.00 or expends an

 

amount in excess of $1,000.00. Elective office does not include a

 

federal office except for the purposes of section 57.

 

     Sec. 9. (1) "Incidental expense" means an expenditure that is

 

an ordinary and necessary expense, paid or incurred in carrying out

 

the business of an elective office. Incidental expense includes,

 

but is not limited to, any of the following:

 

     (a) A disbursement necessary to assist, serve, or communicate

 

with a constituent.

 

     (b) A disbursement for equipment, furnishings, or supplies for

 

the office of the public official.

 

     (c) A disbursement for a district office if the district

 

office is not used for campaign-related activity.

 

     (d) A disbursement for the public official or his or her

 

staff, or both, to attend a conference, meeting, reception, or

 

other similar event.

 

     (e) A disbursement to maintain a publicly owned residence or a

 

temporary residence at the seat of government.

 

     (f) An unreimbursed disbursement for travel, lodging, meals,

 

or other expenses incurred by the public official, a member of the

 

public official's immediate family, or a member of the public

 

official's staff in carrying out the business of the elective

 

office.

 

     (g) A donation to a tax-exempt charitable organization,

 

including, but not limited to, the purchase of tickets to

 

charitable or civic events, as long as the candidate is not an


officer or director of or does not receive compensation, either

 

directly or indirectly, from that organization.

 

     (h) A disbursement to a ballot question committee.

 

     (i) A purchase of tickets for use by that public official and

 

members of his or her immediate family and staff to a fund-raising

 

event sponsored by a candidate committee, independent committee,

 

political party committee, or a political committee that does not

 

exceed $100.00 per committee in any calendar year.

 

     (j) A disbursement for an educational course or seminar that

 

maintains or improves skills employed by the public official in

 

carrying out the business of the elective office.

 

     (k) A purchase of advertisements in testimonials, program

 

books, souvenir books, or other publications if the advertisement

 

does not support or oppose the nomination or election of a

 

candidate.

 

     (l) A disbursement for consultation, research, polling, and

 

photographic services not related to a campaign.

 

     (m) A fee paid to a fraternal, veteran, or other service

 

organization.

 

     (n) A payment of a tax liability incurred as a result of

 

authorized transactions by the candidate committee of the public

 

official.

 

     (o) A fee for accounting, professional, or administrative

 

services for the candidate committee of the public official.

 

     (p) A debt or obligation incurred by the candidate committee

 

of a public official for a disbursement authorized by subdivisions

 

(a) to (o), if the debt or obligation was reported in the candidate


committee report filed for the year in which the debt or obligation

 

arose.

 

     (2) "Independent expenditure" means an expenditure by a person

 

if the expenditure is not made in cooperation, consultation, or

 

concert with, or at the request or suggestion of, a ballot question

 

committee or a candidate, a candidate committee or its agents, or a

 

political party committee or its agents, and if the expenditure is

 

not a contribution to a committee.

 

     (3) "Independent expenditure committee" means a committee

 

formed under section 24b for the purpose of making independent

 

expenditures pursuant to under this act.

 

     (4) "In-kind contribution or expenditure" means a contribution

 

or expenditure other than money.

 

     (5) "Loan" means a transfer of money, property, or anything of

 

ascertainable monetary value in exchange for an obligation,

 

conditional or not, to repay in whole or in part.

 

     (6) "Local ballot question" means a ballot question of a local

 

unit of government to be voted upon in that local unit of

 

government.

 

     (7) "Local elective office" means an elective office at the

 

local unit of government level. Local elective office also includes

 

judge of the court of appeals, judge of the circuit court, judge of

 

the district court, judge of the probate court, and judge of a

 

municipal court.

 

     (8) "Local unit of government" means a district, authority,

 

county, city, village, township, board, school district,

 

intermediate school district, or community college district.


     Sec. 12. (1) "Qualifying contribution" means a contribution of

 

money made by a written instrument, credit card, or debit card by

 

an individual to the candidate committee of a candidate for the

 

office of governor that is $100.00 or less and made after April 1

 

of the year preceding a year in which a governor is to be elected.

 

Not more than $100.00 of an individual's total aggregate

 

contribution may be used as a qualifying contribution in a calendar

 

year. Qualifying contribution does not include a subscription,

 

loan, advance, deposit of money, in-kind contribution or

 

expenditure, or anything else of value except as prescribed in this

 

act. Qualifying contribution does not include a contribution by an

 

individual who resides outside of this state. For purposes of this

 

subsection, an individual is considered to reside in this state if

 

he or she is considered a resident of this state under the Michigan

 

election law, 1954 PA 116, MCL 168.1 to 168.992.

 

     (2) "Senate political party caucus committee" means an

 

independent committee established by a political party caucus of

 

the state senate under section 24a.

 

     (3) "State elective office" means a statewide elective office

 

or the office of state legislator.

 

     (4) "Statewide elective office" means the office of governor,

 

lieutenant governor, secretary of state, or attorney general,

 

justice of the supreme court, member of the state board of

 

education, regent of the university University of Michigan, member

 

of the board of trustees of Michigan state university, State

 

University, or member of the board of governors of Wayne state

 

university.State University.


     Sec. 21. (1) A candidate, within 10 days after becoming a

 

candidate, shall form a candidate committee. A person An individual

 

who is a candidate for more than 1 office shall form a candidate

 

committee for each office for which the person individual is a

 

candidate, if at least 1 of the offices is a state elective office.

 

A candidate shall not form more than 1 candidate committee for each

 

office for which the person individual is a candidate.

 

     (2) A candidate committee shall must have a treasurer who is a

 

qualified elector of this state. A candidate may appoint himself or

 

herself as the candidate committee treasurer.

 

     (3) A committee other than a candidate committee shall must

 

have a treasurer who is a qualified elector of this state if the

 

committee conducts business through an office or other facility

 

located in this state.

 

     (4) If a committee is not required to have as its treasurer an

 

individual who is a qualified elector of this state, the committee

 

may have as its treasurer an individual who is a resident of

 

another state. A committee with a nonresident treasurer shall file,

 

with its statement of organization, an irrevocable written

 

stipulation, signed by the treasurer, agreeing that legal process

 

affecting the committee, served on the secretary of state or an

 

agent designated by the secretary of state, has the same effect as

 

if personally served on the committee. This appointment remains in

 

force as long as any liability of the committee remains outstanding

 

within this state.

 

     (5) If the secretary of state or designated agent of the

 

secretary of state is served with legal process pursuant to under


subsection (4), the secretary of state shall promptly notify the

 

committee's treasurer by certified mail at the last known address

 

of the committee shown on the committee's statement of

 

organization.

 

     (6) Except as provided by law, a candidate committee or a

 

committee described in subsection (3) shall have 1 account in a

 

financial institution in this state as an official depository for

 

the purpose of depositing to deposit all contributions received by

 

the committee in the form of or which are converted to money,

 

checks, or other negotiable instruments and for the purpose of

 

making to make all expenditures. The committee shall designate that

 

financial institution as its official depository. The establishment

 

of an account in a financial institution is not required until the

 

committee receives a contribution or makes an expenditure.

 

Secondary Candidate committees shall only use secondary

 

depositories shall be used for the sole purpose of depositing to

 

deposit contributions and promptly transferring transfer the

 

deposits to the committee's official depository, or to deposit the

 

proceeds of a joint fund-raiser under section 44(4) and transfer

 

each committee's share of any receipts from the joint fund-raiser.

 

A committee described in subsection (3) shall only use secondary

 

depositories for any of the following:

 

     (a) To deposit contributions and promptly transfer the

 

deposits to the committee's official depository.

 

     (b) To deposit the proceeds of a joint fund-raiser under

 

section 44(4) and transfer each committee's share of any receipts

 

from the joint fund-raiser.


     (c) To deposit, divide, and transfer contributions that are

 

aggregated with dues or other payments.

 

     (7) Except as provided by law, a committee described in

 

subsection (4) shall have 1 account in a financial institution as

 

its official depository for the purpose of depositing to deposit

 

all contributions received by the committee in the form of or which

 

are converted to money, checks, or other negotiable instruments and

 

for the purpose of making to make all expenditures. The committee

 

shall designate that financial institution as its official

 

depository. The establishment of an account in a financial

 

institution is not required until the committee receives a

 

contribution or makes an expenditure. Secondary A committee

 

described in subsection (4) shall only use secondary depositories

 

shall be used only for the purposes of depositing for any of the

 

following:

 

     (a) To deposit contributions and promptly transferring

 

transfer the deposits to the committee's official depository. , or

 

depositing, dividing, and transferring

 

     (b) To deposit the proceeds of a joint fund-raiser under

 

section 44(4) and transfer each committee's share of any receipts

 

from the joint fund-raiser.

 

     (c) To deposit, divide, and transfer contributions that are

 

aggregated with dues or other payments.

 

     (8) A committee shall not accept a contribution shall not be

 

accepted and or make an expenditure shall not be made by a if that

 

committee that does not have a treasurer. When the office of

 

treasurer in a candidate committee is vacant, the candidate shall


be is the treasurer until the candidate appoints a new treasurer.

 

     (9) An A committee shall not make an expenditure shall not be

 

made by a committee without the authorization of the treasurer or

 

the treasurer's designee. The contributions received or

 

expenditures made by a candidate or an agent of a candidate are

 

considered received or made by the candidate committee.

 

     (10) Contributions received by an individual acting in behalf

 

of a committee shall must be reported promptly to the committee's

 

treasurer not later than 5 days before the closing date of any

 

campaign statement required to be filed by the committee, and shall

 

must be reported to the committee treasurer immediately if the

 

contribution is received less than 5 days before the closing date.

 

     (11) A contribution is considered received by a committee when

 

it is received by the committee treasurer or a designated agent of

 

the committee treasurer although the contribution may not be

 

deposited in the official depository by the reporting deadline.

 

     (12) Contributions received by a committee shall must not be

 

commingled with other funds of an agent of the committee or of any

 

other person. Contributions are not considered to be commingled if

 

that contribution is either of the following:

 

     (a) A contribution received by a person for transmission to a

 

separate segregated fund as described in section 55(7).

 

     (b) A contribution made by 1 or more persons through a person

 

if all of the following are met:

 

     (i) The individual contribution or aggregated contribution is

 

accompanied by or logically associated with all information

 

required under section 26 for each individual contributor.


     (ii) The person making the contribution is the original source

 

of the contribution.

 

     (iii) The contribution is not obtained through use of coercion

 

or physical force, as a condition of employment or membership, or

 

by using or threatening to use job discrimination or financial

 

reprisals.

 

     (iv) Only the person making the contribution exercises any

 

control over the making of, or the amount or recipient of, the

 

contribution.

 

     (v) The contribution is not otherwise prohibited by this act.

 

     (13) A person that violates this section is subject to a civil

 

fine of not more than $1,000.00.

 

     Sec. 24. (1) A committee shall file a statement of

 

organization with the filing officials designated in section 36 to

 

receive the committee's campaign statements. A committee shall file

 

a statement of organization within 10 days after the committee is

 

formed. A filing official shall maintain a statement of

 

organization filed by a committee until 5 years after the official

 

date of the committee's dissolution. A person who fails to file a

 

statement of organization required by this subsection shall pay a

 

late filing fee of $10.00 for each business day the statement

 

remains not filed in violation of this subsection. The late filing

 

fee must not exceed $300.00. A person who violates this subsection

 

by failing to file for more than 30 days after a statement of

 

organization is required to be filed is guilty of a misdemeanor

 

punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000.00.

 

     (2) The statement of organization required to be filed under


subsection (1) must include the following information:

 

     (a) The name, street address, and if available, the electronic

 

mail address and telephone number of the committee, and the

 

electronic mail address of the candidate. If a committee is a

 

candidate committee, the committee name must include the first and

 

last name of the candidate. A committee address may be the home

 

address of the candidate or treasurer of the committee.

 

     (b) The name, street address, and if available, the electronic

 

mail address and telephone number of the treasurer or other

 

individual designated as responsible for the committee's record

 

keeping, report preparation, or report filing.

 

     (c) The name and address of the financial institution in which

 

the official committee depository is or is intended to be located,

 

and the name and address of each financial institution in which a

 

secondary depository is or is intended to be located.

 

     (d) The full name of the office being sought by, including

 

district number or jurisdiction, and the county residence of each

 

candidate supported or opposed by the committee.

 

     (e) A brief statement identifying the substance of each ballot

 

question supported or opposed by the committee. If the ballot

 

question supported or opposed by the committee is a local ballot

 

question, the committee shall identify the county in which the

 

greatest number of registered voters eligible to vote on the ballot

 

question reside.

 

     (f) Identification of the committee as a candidate committee,

 

political party committee, independent committee, independent

 

expenditure committee, political committee, or ballot question


committee if it is identifiable as such a committee.

 

     (3) An independent committee or political committee shall

 

include in the name of the committee the name of the person or

 

persons that sponsor the committee, if any, or with whom the

 

committee is affiliated. A person, other than an individual or a

 

committee, sponsors or is affiliated with an independent committee

 

or political committee if that person establishes, directs,

 

controls, or financially supports the administration of the

 

committee. For the purposes of this subsection, a person does not

 

financially support the administration of a committee by merely

 

making a contribution to the committee.

 

     (4) If any of the information required in a statement of

 

organization is changed, the committee shall file an amendment when

 

the next campaign statement is required to be filed.

 

     (5) When filing a statement of organization, a committee,

 

other than an independent committee, a political committee, or a

 

political party committee, may indicate in a written statement

 

signed by the treasurer of the committee that the committee does

 

not expect for each election to receive an amount in excess of

 

$1,000.00 or expend an amount in excess of $1,000.00. The treasurer

 

of a committee of an incumbent judge or supreme court justice is

 

considered to have made the statement required under this

 

subsection following appointment or election of that judge or

 

justice and is not required to file a written statement under this

 

subsection indicating that the committee does not expect for each

 

election to receive or expend an amount in excess of $1,000.00.

 

     (6) When filing a statement of organization, an independent


committee, an independent expenditure committee, a political

 

committee, or a political party committee may indicate in a written

 

statement signed by the treasurer of the committee that the

 

committee does not expect in a calendar year to receive or expend

 

an amount in excess of $1,000.00.

 

     (7) Upon the dissolution of a committee, the committee shall

 

file a statement indicating dissolution with the filing officials

 

with whom the committee's statement of organization was filed.

 

Dissolution of a committee must be accomplished pursuant to rules

 

promulgated by the secretary of state under the administrative

 

procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328.

 

     (8) A candidate committee that files a written statement under

 

subsection (5) or that is considered to have made a statement under

 

subsection (5) is not required to file a dissolution statement

 

under subsection (7) if the committee failed to receive or expend

 

an amount in excess of $1,000.00 and 1 of the following applies:

 

     (a) The candidate was defeated in an election and has no

 

outstanding campaign debts or assets.

 

     (b) The candidate vacates an elective office and has no

 

outstanding campaign debts or assets.

 

     (9) A political committee organized for the purpose of making

 

independent expenditures formed before the effective date of the

 

amendatory act that added this subsection December 31, 2019 is

 

considered an independent expenditure committee. The secretary of

 

state may amend the statement of organization for any committee

 

affected by this subsection.

 

     Sec. 34. (1) A ballot question committee shall file a campaign


statement as required by this act according to the following

 

schedule:

 

     (a) A preelection campaign statement, the closing date of

 

which shall be is the sixteenth day before the election, shall must

 

not be filed later than the eleventh day before the election.

 

     (b) A postelection campaign statement, the closing date of

 

which shall be is the twentieth day following the election, shall

 

must not be filed later than the thirtieth day following an

 

election. If all liabilities of the committee are paid before the

 

closing date and additional contributions are not expected, the

 

campaign statement may be filed at any time after the election, but

 

not later than the thirtieth day following the election.

 

     (c) Campaign statements not later than the following dates

 

every year:

 

     (i) February 15 with a closing date of February 10 of that

 

year.

 

     (i) (ii) April 25 with a closing date of April 20 of that

 

year.

 

     (ii) (iii) July 25 with a closing date of July 20 of that

 

year.

 

     (d) In every odd numbered year, a campaign statement not later

 

than October 25 with a closing date of October 20 of that year.

 

     (2) A ballot question committee supporting or opposing a

 

statewide ballot question shall file a campaign statement, of which

 

the closing date shall be is the twenty-eighth day after the filing

 

of the petition form, not later than 35 days after the petition

 

form is filed under section 483a of the Michigan election law, 1954


PA 116, MCL 168.483a.

 

     (3) If a ballot question committee supporting or opposing a

 

statewide ballot question fails to file a preelection statement

 

under this section, that committee or its treasurer shall pay a

 

late filing fee for each business day the statement remains not

 

filed in violation of this section, not to exceed $1,000.00,

 

pursuant to the following schedule:

 

     (a) First day--$25.00.

 

     (b) Second day--$50.00.

 

     (c) Third day--$75.00.

 

     (d) Fourth day and for each subsequent day that the statement

 

remains unfiled--$100.00.

 

     (4) If a treasurer or other individual designated as

 

responsible for the record keeping, report preparation, or report

 

filing of a ballot question committee supporting or opposing a

 

statewide ballot question fails to file a statement, other than a

 

preelection statement, under this section, that committee,

 

treasurer, or other designated individual shall pay a late filing

 

fee. If the committee has raised $10,000.00 or less during the

 

previous 2 years, the late filing fee shall be is $25.00 for each

 

business day the campaign statement remains unfiled, but not to

 

exceed $1,000.00. If the committee has raised more than $10,000.00

 

during the previous 2 years, the late filing fee shall be is $50.00

 

for each business day the campaign statement remains unfiled, but

 

not to exceed $2,000.00.

 

     (5) If a treasurer or other individual designated as

 

responsible for the record keeping, report preparation, or report


filing of a ballot question committee supporting or opposing other

 

than a statewide ballot question fails to file a statement under

 

this section, that committee, treasurer, or other designated

 

individual shall pay a late filing fee. If the committee has raised

 

$10,000.00 or less during the previous 2 years, the late filing fee

 

shall be is $25.00 for each business day the campaign statement

 

remains unfiled, but not to exceed $1,000.00. If the committee has

 

raised more than $10,000.00 during the previous 2 years, the late

 

filing fee shall be is $50.00 for each business day the campaign

 

statement remains unfiled, but not to exceed $2,000.00.

 

     (6) If a treasurer or other individual designated as

 

responsible for the record keeping, report preparation, or report

 

filing of a ballot question committee fails to file a statement as

 

required by subsection (1) or (2) for more than 7 days, that

 

treasurer or other designated individual is guilty of a

 

misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000.00, or

 

imprisonment for not more than 90 days, or both.

 

     (7) If a treasurer or other individual designated as

 

responsible for the record keeping, report preparation, or report

 

filing of a ballot question committee knowingly files an incomplete

 

or inaccurate statement or report required by this section, that

 

treasurer or other designated individual is subject to a civil fine

 

of not more than $1,000.00 or the amount of the undisclosed

 

contribution, whichever is greater.

 

     Sec. 41. (1) A person shall not make or accept a single

 

contribution of more than $20.00 in cash or make or accept a single

 

expenditure of more than $50.00 in cash. Contributions of more than


$20.00 and expenditures of more than $50.00, other than an in-kind

 

contribution or expenditure, shall must be made by written

 

instrument, containing the names of the payor and the payee.credit

 

card, or debit card.

 

     (2) A person shall not accept or expend an anonymous

 

contribution. An anonymous contribution received by a person shall

 

must not be deposited but shall must be given to a tax exempt

 

charitable organization. The charitable organization receiving the

 

contribution shall provide the person with a receipt. The receipt

 

shall must be retained by an appropriate committee pursuant to

 

section 22.

 

     (3) A contribution shall must not be made, directly or

 

indirectly, by any person in a name other than the name by which

 

that person is identified for legal purposes.

 

     (4) A person who knowingly violates this section is guilty of

 

a misdemeanor punishable, if the person is an individual, by a fine

 

of not more than $1,000.00 or imprisonment for not more than 90

 

days, or both, or, if the person is other than an individual, by a

 

fine of not more than $10,000.00.

 

     Sec. 51. (1) A person, other than a committee, that makes an

 

independent expenditure, advocating the election or defeat of a

 

candidate or the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot

 

question, in an amount of $100.01 or more in a calendar year shall

 

file a report of the independent expenditure, within 10 days after

 

making that independent expenditure, with the clerk of the county

 

of residence of that person. If the independent expenditure

 

advocates the election or defeat of a candidate for state elective


office or for judicial office, or for the qualification, passage,

 

or defeat of a statewide ballot question, or if the person making

 

the independent expenditure is not a resident of this state, the

 

person shall file the report with the secretary of state in lieu of

 

filing with a clerk of a county. The report required under this

 

section must be made on an independent expenditure report form

 

provided by the secretary of state, include the date of the

 

expenditure, a brief description of the nature of the expenditure,

 

the amount, the name and address of the person to whom it was paid,

 

the name and address of the person filing the report, together with

 

the name, address, occupation, employer, and principal place of

 

business of each person that contributed $100.01 or more to the

 

expenditure, and identify the candidate or ballot question for or

 

against which the independent expenditure was made. The filing

 

official receiving the report shall forward copies, as required, to

 

the appropriate filing officers as described in section 36.

 

     (2) If a person fails to file a report as required under this

 

section, that person shall pay a late filing fee. If the person has

 

made independent expenditures totaling less than $10,000.00, the

 

late filing fee is $25.00 for each business day the report remains

 

unfiled, but not to exceed $1,000.00. If the person has made

 

independent expenditures totaling $10,000.00 or more, the late

 

filing fee is $50.00 for each business day the report remains

 

unfiled, but not to exceed $5,000.00. A person that violates this

 

subsection by failing to file a report required under this section

 

for more than 30 days after the report is required to be filed is

 

guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more


than 90 days or a fine of not more than $1,000.00, or both.

 

     Sec. 54. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section and

 

section 55, and except with respect to loans made in the ordinary

 

course of business, a corporation, joint stock company, domestic

 

dependent sovereign, or labor organization shall not make a

 

contribution or expenditure or provide volunteer personal services

 

that are excluded from the definition of a contribution under

 

section 4(3)(a).

 

     (2) An officer, director, stockholder, attorney, agent, or any

 

other person acting for a labor organization, a domestic dependent

 

sovereign, or a corporation or joint stock company, whether

 

incorporated under the laws of this or any other state or foreign

 

country, except corporations formed for political purposes, shall

 

not make a contribution or expenditure or provide volunteer

 

personal services that are excluded from the definition of a

 

contribution under section 4(3)(a).

 

     (3) Except for expenditures made by a corporation in the

 

ordinary course of its business, an expenditure made by a

 

corporation to provide for the collection and transfer of

 

contributions to another a separate segregated fund not established

 

by that corporation, or to a separate segregated fund not connected

 

to a nonprofit corporation of which the corporation is a member,

 

for which it is not a connected organization as provided in section

 

55 constitutes an in-kind contribution by the corporation and is

 

prohibited under this section. Advanced payment or reimbursement to

 

a corporation by a non-connected separate segregated fund not

 

established by that corporation, or by a separate segregated fund


not connected to a nonprofit corporation of which the corporation

 

is a member, does not cure a use of corporate resources otherwise

 

prohibited by this section.

 

     (4) A corporation, joint stock company, domestic dependent

 

sovereign, or labor organization may make a contribution to a

 

ballot question committee or independent expenditure committee

 

subject to this act. A corporation, joint stock company, domestic

 

dependent sovereign, or labor organization may make an independent

 

expenditure in any amount advocating for the election or defeat of

 

a candidate, or the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot

 

question and does not for this reason become a committee, unless it

 

solicits or receives contributions in excess of $500.00 for the

 

purpose of making the independent expenditure, but is subject to

 

the independent expenditure reporting requirements of section 51.

 

     (5) A person who knowingly violates this section is guilty of

 

a felony punishable, if the person is an individual, by a fine of

 

not more than $5,000.00 or imprisonment for not more than 3 years,

 

or both, or, if the person is not an individual, by a fine of not

 

more than $10,000.00.

 

     Sec. 55. (1) A connected organization may make an expenditure

 

for the establishment or administration of, and solicitation,

 

collection, or transfer of contributions to, a separate segregated

 

fund to be used for political purposes. A separate segregated fund

 

established by a connected organization under this section shall

 

must be organized as a political committee or an independent

 

committee, and, in addition to any other disbursements not

 

restricted or prohibited by law, shall only make contributions to,


and expenditures on behalf of, candidate committees, ballot

 

question committees, political party committees, political

 

committees, independent expenditure committees, independent

 

committees, and other separate segregated funds.

 

     (2) Contributions for a separate segregated fund established

 

by a corporation, organized on a for profit basis, or a joint stock

 

company under this section may be solicited from any of the

 

following persons or their spouses:

 

     (a) Stockholders of the corporation or company.

 

     (b) Officers and directors of the corporation or company.

 

     (c) Employees of the corporation or company who have policy

 

making, managerial, professional, supervisory, or administrative

 

nonclerical responsibilities.

 

     (3) Contributions for a separate segregated fund established

 

under this section by a corporation organized on a nonprofit basis

 

may be solicited from any of the following persons or their

 

spouses:

 

     (a) Members of the corporation who are individuals.

 

     (b) Stockholders or members of members of the corporation.

 

     (c) Officers or directors of members of the corporation.

 

     (d) Employees of the members of the corporation who have

 

policy making, managerial, professional, supervisory, or

 

administrative nonclerical responsibilities.

 

     (e) Employees of the corporation who have policy making,

 

managerial, professional, supervisory, or administrative

 

nonclerical responsibilities.

 

     (4) Contributions for a separate segregated fund established


under this section by a labor organization may be solicited from

 

any of the following persons or their spouses:

 

     (a) Members of the labor organization who are individuals.

 

     (b) Officers or directors of the labor organization.

 

     (c) Employees of the labor organization who have policy

 

making, managerial, professional, supervisory, or administrative

 

nonclerical responsibilities.

 

     (5) Contributions for a separate segregated fund established

 

under this section by a domestic dependent sovereign may be

 

solicited from an individual who is a member of any domestic

 

dependent sovereign.

 

     (6) Contributions must not be obtained for a separate

 

segregated fund established under this section by use of coercion

 

or physical force, by making a contribution a condition of

 

employment or membership, or by using or threatening to use job

 

discrimination or financial reprisals. A connected organization

 

shall not solicit or obtain contributions for a separate segregated

 

fund established under this section from an individual described in

 

subsection (2), (3), (4), or (5) on an automatic or passive basis

 

including but not limited to a payroll deduction plan or reverse

 

checkoff method. A connected organization may solicit or obtain

 

contributions for a separate segregated fund established under this

 

section from an individual described in subsection (2), (3), (4),

 

or (5) on an automatic basis, including but not limited to a

 

payroll deduction plan, only if the individual who is contributing

 

to the fund affirmatively consents to the contribution. Affirmative

 

consent expires upon revocation by the individual who provided the


affirmative consent.

 

     (7) A contribution by an individual to a separate segregated

 

fund that is aggregated with a dues or other payment to the

 

connected organization may be collected by or made payable first to

 

the a connected organization of the separate segregated fund, for

 

subsequent transfer to the separate segregated fund if all of the

 

following occur:

 

     (a) The For contributions that are aggregated with dues or

 

other payments, the individual making the contribution does either

 

of the following:

 

     (i) Specifically indicates in a record or electronic record

 

that the amount collected, or a specified portion of the total

 

amount if remitted as part of a dues or other payment to the

 

connected organization, is a contribution to the separate

 

segregated fund.

 

     (ii) Fails to return a record or electronic record described

 

in subparagraph (i), but remits payment to the connected

 

organization in response to a specifically requested amount that

 

includes a solicited contribution, the solicitation for a

 

contribution was clearly distinguishable from any dues or other

 

fees requested as part of the total, and the connected organization

 

maintains a record or electronic record of the solicitation that

 

includes the amount of the solicited contribution and the amount of

 

any dues or other fees charged in conjunction with the solicitation

 

for each contributor.

 

     (b) The connected organization transfers the entire specified

 

amount of any designated contribution, individually or aggregated


with other contributions, for deposit to the separate segregated

 

fund electronically or by written instrument. Any transfer of

 

designated contributions must be accompanied by or logically

 

associated with a record or electronic record setting forth all

 

information required under section 26 for each individual

 

contributor whose contribution is transferred.

 

     (c) The connected organization accounts for any contributions

 

under this subsection in a manner that documents all of the

 

following:

 

     (i) The identity of the individual contributor.

 

     (ii) The date, amount, and method of receipt for each

 

individual contribution.

 

     (iii) The date, amount, and method of all transfers to the

 

separate segregated fund.reports all information required under

 

section 26 for each individual contributor, and a transfer of

 

contributions for deposit to the separate segregated fund by a

 

connected organization described in subsection (12)(a)(ii) must be

 

accompanied by or logically associated with a record or electronic

 

record that sets forth all required information for each individual

 

whose contribution is transferred.

 

     (d) The connected organization and the separate segregated

 

fund adopt have a written policy governing the handling,

 

accounting, and transfer of any contribution under this subsection.

 

     (e) In connection with an investigation or hearing under

 

section 15 regarding any contributions under this subsection, the

 

connected organization voluntarily agrees to make available to the

 

secretary of state any records described in subdivisions (a) to (d)


and provides those records at the request of the secretary of

 

state.

 

     (8) In addition to any other expenditures or disbursements

 

allowed under subsection (1), a connected organization may pay

 

costs for a prize, fund-raising event, or 1 or more items to be

 

sold, as part of fund-raising activities for the separate

 

segregated fund. Any payment of costs by the connected organization

 

for a prize or fund-raising event, or per individual item to be

 

sold, must not be disproportionately valuable related to the amount

 

raised by that prize or fund-raising event, or the amount raised

 

per individual item sold. If the connected organization makes a

 

payment of costs under this subsection that is disproportionately

 

valuable, reimbursement of at least the impermissible portion by

 

the separate segregated fund to the connected organization, within

 

60 days of the payment or as directed by the secretary under

 

section 15, cures a violation of this subsection. A payment of

 

costs under this subsection is not disproportionately valuable if

 

it is equal to or less than 10% of the total amount raised by the

 

prize or fund-raising event, or if the payment of costs per item

 

sold is equal to or less than 10% of the amount raised per

 

individual item sold.

 

     (9) (8) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (10),

 

subsections (8) and (11), a person who knowingly violates this

 

section is guilty of a felony punishable, if the person is an

 

individual, by a fine of not more than $5,000.00 or imprisonment

 

for not more than 3 years, or both, or, if the person is not an

 

individual, by a fine of not more than $10,000.00.


     (10) (9) If a connected organization that obtains

 

contributions for a separate segregated fund from individuals

 

described in subsection (2), (3), (4), or (5) pays to 1 or more of

 

those individuals a bonus or other remuneration for the purpose of

 

reimbursing those contributions, then that connected organization

 

is subject to a civil fine of not more than 2 times the total

 

contributions obtained from all individuals for the separate

 

segregated fund during that calendar year.

 

     (11) (10) If a violation of this section results solely from

 

the failure of a connected organization to transfer 1 or more

 

contributions, that connected organization is not guilty of a

 

felony as described in subsection (8), (9), but shall notify the

 

contributor of the failure to transfer the contribution and refund

 

the full amount of the contribution to the contributor if

 

requested. The penalties described in subsection (8) (9) apply to

 

any other violation of this section, including use or diversion of

 

any contributions by a connected organization before those

 

contributions are transferred to the separate segregated fund under

 

subsection (7).

 

     (12) (11) As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Connected organization" means either of the following:

 

     (i) A corporation organized on a for-profit or nonprofit

 

basis, a joint stock company, a domestic dependent sovereign, or a

 

labor organization formed under the laws of this or another state

 

or foreign country.

 

     (ii) A member of any entity under subparagraph (i) that is not

 

an individual and that does not maintain its own separate


segregated fund, unless its separate segregated fund and the

 

separate segregated fund of the entity of which it is a member are

 

treated as a single independent committee as provided in section

 

52(10).

 

     (b) "Record" and "electronic record" mean those terms as

 

defined in section 2 of the uniform electronic transactions act,

 

2000 PA 305, MCL 450.832.

 

     (c) "Written instrument" means a money order, or a check,

 

cashier's check, or other negotiable instrument, as those terms are

 

defined in section 3104 of the uniform commercial code, 1962 PA

 

174, MCL 440.3104, in the name of the connected organization and

 

payable to the separate segregated fund.

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