History and Constitutionality of Pay-to-Play Campaign Finance Restrictions in America
Transcript of History and Constitutionality of Pay-to-Play Campaign Finance Restrictions in America
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9900 Main Street, Suite 303Fairfax, VA 22031(703) 383-0880 tel.(703) 383-5288 [email protected]
HISTORY AND CONSTITUTIONALITYOF PAY-TO-PLAY CAMPAIGNFINANCE RESTRICTIONS IN AMERICA
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Americans for Limited Government Research Foundation is a 501(c)3 dedicated to educating the public on limited government ideas
and principles. For more information on this position paper, or on Americans for Limited Government Research Foundation, please
contact us at (703) 383-0880.
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HISTORY AND CONSTITUTIONALITY
OF PAY-TO-PLAY CAMPAIGN FINANCE
RESTRICTIONS IN AMERICA
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Introduction
The hallmark of corruption is the financial quid pro quo: dollars for political favors. - National Conservative Political Action Committee.
470 U.S. 480, 496-497 (1985)
The US federal government, several states, and numerous local governments in America have adopted restrictions on
campaign donations by government contractors in the past 15 years. This method of government ethics reform began as far
back as 1940 with the Hatch Act, which prohibited federal government contractors from making campaign contributions (now
part of the Federal Elections Campaign Act). Many of these restrictions were preceded by simple anti-bribery laws, but those
laws proved too easy to circumvent. Bribery laws deal with only the most blatant and specific attempts of those with money
to influence government action. (Buckley v Valeo, 424 U. S. 1 (1974)). However, Actors in this field are presumably shrewd enough
to structure their relations rather indirectly, (Blount v. SEC, 61 F.3d 938 (D.C. Cir 1995)). Campaign finance restrictions extend to the
broader threat from politicians too compliant with the wishes of large contributors. (Nixon v. Shrink Missouri Govt PAC, 528 U.S. 377
(2000)). Pay to Play restrictions around the country vary in their scope, duration, and degree, but all are aimed at combating the
quid pro quo between campaign contributions and access to political favors; that is, the corrupt practice of political candidatessoliciting or accepting campaign cash in return for the preferential treatment in the award of lucrative government contracts to
the campaign donors.
The competing legal interests at play in this context are the guaranteed rights of free speech and association. A persons
right to make campaign contributions receives only limited constitutional protection because contributions only marginally
impact political speech. A principal consideration of every Pay to Play law is to provide the proper respect for constitutiona
rights while effectively combating the evil of buying political favor and its official counterpart, influence peddling. The spirit
and intent of these laws are clear, but the sophisticated perpetrators of quid pro quo schemes adapt quickly and readily to take
advantage of loopholes in the letter of the law. Various money laundering techniques can conceal or even legalize what are still, in
effect, kick backs. A timidly drawn law can be worse than none at all, because it creates the illusion of reform while perpetrator
laugh all the way to the bank. As discussed below, some statutes narrowly restrict the contributions so that the contributor is
only restricted or prohibited from giving money to candidates or issues that have a direct connection with that contributors
business dealings with the government. Many state statutes, and the federal election laws, ban corporate and union donations
altogether. Some states prohibit a person in a particular regulated industry (gaming, for example) from making a contribution to
any politician, while others only prohibit or restrict donations to any candidate who can directly influence regulations. A statute
might only prohibit contributions to a political candidate, but allow contributions to ballot issues. Others ban the award o
government contracts to certain campaign contributors. Still others prohibit or restrict only the narrow class of people who have
or seek no-bid contracts with the government from making political contributions to some, or all, candidates but allow people
who have competitive-bid government contracts with the government to continue their political contributions. Pay to Play
laws are now an established mainstream approach for tackling the problem of graft in government procurement practices, and
they have been roundly approved by the courts as being closely drawn to vindicate the Governments important interest in
preventing corruption and the appearance of corruption.
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The Problem
Graft is nothing new in the world, especially soft white collar corruption involved in the award of government contracts based
on special relationships between public officials and government contractors. Particular acts of corruption are often hard to
detect, one at a time, but the aggregate effects of Pay to Play are refelected by the heavy financial toll that corrupted actors
within our government system take on the taxpayer.
Graft takes the collective wealth of working taxpayers and transfers that wealth to the benefit of corrupt government
officials and their private sector accomplices. Graft increases the cost of government by motivating officials on the take to
mismanage government project spending. An inside deal, that is good for the corrupt official personally, usually leads to a bad
economic decision for the public because the extra cost of corruption must be passed on to the taxpayer; a bought politician
tends to make distorted choices. This mismanagement effect is costly to the public trust. One dollar of corruption is estimated
to impose a burden of $1.67 on the taxpayers. (Vinod D. Hrishiikesh, Statistical Analysis of Corruption Data and Using the Internet to Reduce
Corruption, 10 J. ASIAN ECON. 591 (1999)).
Graft tends to perpetuate itself, and indeed spread and intensify, because large sums of money siphoned off governmen
contracts, and put into the hands of corrupt officials in the form of campaign cash, give corrupt incumbents such a huge advantage
against election challengers that serious challenges are rare. The huge rewards that graft can bring embolden wrongdoers, and
the raw power they gain in the process helps insulate them from, and cover up, their bad acts. Pervasive corruption is often
dismissed by its very public perpetrators; some just deny it as political mythology while the more brazen see official favoritism
as a perfectly legitimate rewards system of friends trusting friends. To the victor go the spoils. is a familiar saying as old as ou
Republic. More recently, party boss Joseph A. Ferriero, County Democratic Chairman of Bergen County, New Jersey, put it like
this, Yes, Democratic supporters have been given contracts. Theres nothing wrong with it, because the government is giving
work to people who are supportive of the team. (New York Times -January 25, 2006).
Even when some corrupt official gets caught red handed, and publicly prosecuted in a highly visible case, many wel
intentioned defenders of in the established order paint the events as isolated incidents that cant happen here. Efforts to make
government transactions transparent are met with disdain and with incredulous personalized claims that people who dont trus
their public officials are just paranoid, and should not be allowed to interrupt the peoples business by prying into the inner
workings of government procurements. Fear of being targeted for ridicule or worse by societys powerful elite makes it easy
to look the other way, live in denial, or just accept government corruption as the way of the world. This is the most dangerous
attitude of all; the perception that our government system is just unethical and corrupt and that there is nothing anyone can do
about it. By this attitude, the perception of pervasive corruption at all levels of government, citizens lose hope and lose faith in
their governing institutions. When this fundamental disconnect occurs people disengage from government, and self-governance
is at risk.
Competitive cost and price bidding takes much (though certainly not all) of the discretion out of selection of government
contractors, and removes some of the most obvious opportunities for corrupt preferences. Sometimes, however, there are
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perfectly good reasons why public officials must award a sole source contract, where no competitive bids are solicited. When
time, flexibility, expertise, reputation, and capacity to perform are so crucial that price must be a secondary consideration, no-bid
contracts are properly awarded; the right contractor is first chosen, then the terms are negotiated in the absence of competition
Determining whether a sole source contract is necessary, and which contractor should get the contract, requires the exercise
of sound discretion on the part of government officials. There is no price competition to help measure value, and the lack oa cost benchmarks gives rise to the opportunity for mischief by officials willing to peddle influence in the award of lucrative
government contracts. Who can say exactly what the contract should cost, when there are no other credible detailed cos
estimates by anyone in the marketplace other than the contractor? This leaves room for windfall profits to the contractor willing
to overcharge the government, but only if an unethical public official in charge of spending the taxpayers money is willing to
overpay - for a fee. When the proverbial fox is watching the chicken coop, there is no objective safeguard of the public trust.
The solutions for protecting against corrupt Pay to Play kick back arrangements involve a difficult balance because
of the need to prevent mismanagement without interfering with the essential management function; a law that does not allow
public officials to exercise sound discretion and make common sense decisions would doom government projects to inflexible
control by penny pinching bookkeepers with no instinct for results. Every state, and every town, has its own unique best way
of getting things done right, and the process of framing a good and uniform solution for preventing fraud in the government
contract procurement process must take care not to interfere with legitimate management decision making by the many hones
officials who are the backbone of successful public works. The problem with crafting the right solution is simply put in thi
famous admonition, Exercise caution in your business affairs, for the world is full of trickery. But let this not blind you to wha
virtue there is; many persons strive for high ideals, and everywhere life is full of heroism. Max Ehrmann Desiderata (1927)
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The SEC Reduced Corruption with Municipal Bonding Pay to Play Prohibitions
By the early 1990s it was clear by anecdotal evidence that the issuance of municipal bonds had become a hotbed of systemati
corruption. When a state or municipality issues bonds to raise the capital for a large government project, it backs those bonds with
tax revenues. Bond underwriters put together the aggregate capital by marketing these tax-backed bonds to investors. Generally
municipal bonding contracts should be issued in a competitive bidding process because price competition brings the highes
price to the issuer. In some complex bond issues, price auctions do not make sense, and bonds are negotiated with a preselected
contractor instead. However, by the early 90s the limited practice of issuing negotiated bonds, where the underwriter firs
gets the contract and then negotiates price, seemed to be generally and suspiciously on the rise. This was explained away as
the proper, though highly subjective, exercise of discretion by the officials in charge of awarding the underwriting contract unt
1993, when a series of scandals resulted in the major underwriters entering into an agreement with the Securities Exchange
Commission (the Federal Agency having jurisdiction) to stop making campaign contributions to the bond issuers. This agreemen
was formalized and became Rule G-37, which prohibited all underwriters and their employees from conducting business in states
where they have made campaign contributions in the past two years and prohibited contributions in the two years following the
award of bond business. The elegance of this rule is that it eliminated the incentive for corrupt decisions (at taxpayers expense
to engage inappropriately in the practice of awarding negotiated bonds (no bid contracts), without putting fetters on the
decision making process of ethical public officials, who sometimes need to make an honest discretionary call that a sole source
contract is the best fit for the unique situation their own constituents face. Of course, not everyone thought this solution was
fair, or constitutional, even though it reduced corruption without interfering with the exercise of discretion in the procuremen
process. According to some, the rule prevented big business bond underwriters and their families from engaging in free politica
expression, so they sued claiming it violated their First Amendment rights.
In the meantime, Rule G-37 had hit the nail on the head and was working well precisely because removed corrupt
incentives without interfering with the sound exercise of management discretion. The process by which it reduced corruption
was measureable, and allowed for empirical study of the period before and after the enactment of rule G-37. This study showed
what everyone already knew, but had not yet proven on a system wide basis that without the lure of legalized kick backs, bond
issuers were less likely to award no-bid negotiated bonds to pre-selected underwriters:
The results show that, as would be expected in the presence of corruption, the use of negotiated
bonds dropped suddenly following the banning of campaign contributions. Results imply that about one-third
of municipal bond issuers (measured by value) acted corruptly, willing to switch from their natural preference
for a competitive issue to a negotiated issue in order to gain the opportunity to realize a private gain in the
form of campaign contributions. The results display a high degree of statistical significance and are robust tothe selection of the event window. The results suggest the prohibition of campaign contributions was effective
in reducing a large portion of the corruption in the industry. A rough estimate suggests that the enacting of
G-37 by reducing corruption saved municipalities $500 million in real interest costs for bonds sold in the first
year it was enacted alone.
Excerpt: DO CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS AND LOBBYING CORRUPT? Gajan Retnasaba. Journal of Law, Economics & Policy (Spring, 2006)
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Pay to Play Restrictions Validated in Court against First Amendment Challenges:
SEC Rule G-37 Upheld in Federal Court
In every case where a quid in the electoral process is being exchanged for a quo in a particular market where the government
deals, the corruption in the market is simply the flipside of the electoral corruption. (Blount v. SEC, 61 F.3d 938 (D.C. Cir 1995), rehearing
and suggestion for rehearing en banc denied (1995), certiorari denied by 517 U.S. 1119, 116 S.Ct. 1351, 134 L.Ed.2d 520 (1996)).
The Rule G-37 limitation on the right to make political contributions was challenged as a violation of First Amendment
rights and on grounds that it violated the Tenth Amendment by regulating state and local elections. Plaintiff William Blount,
a securities broker and then chair of the Alabama Democratic Party, challenged Rule G-37 on the grounds that the regulation
sought to restrict speech based on content by prohibiting contributions to campaigns. Predictably, First Amendment challenge
William Blount is still making news in 2008. (See U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Litigation Release No. 20545 / April 30, 2008:
According to the SECs complaint, Langford selected Blount-Parrish to participate in every Jefferson County municipal bond
offering and security-based swap agreement transaction during 2003 and 2004, earning Blount-Parrish over $6.7 million in fees
Moreover, the SEC alleges, Langford and Blount concealed the payment scheme by using their long-time friend, LaPierre, an
Alabama registered political lobbyist, as a conduit.
In 1995 the Federal Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld MSRB Rule G-37. The Supreme Court
then refused to review the case, and therefore Pay to Play restrictions are unlikely to face successful challenge in court. Blount
v. SEC, decided over 10 years ago, paved the way for a wave of state and local Pay to Play legal reforms that have steadily
developed since that time.
The Blount court found that Pay to Play corruption was prevalent without requiring strict proofs. Bount himself remarked
on national radio that, most likely [state and local officials] are gonna call somebody who has been a political contributor and
at least in close cases, award contracts to friends who have contributed. (Morning Edition (National Public Radio, June 1, 1994), available
in LEXIS, News Library, Transcript No. 1358-9)). The court ruled that disclosure rules alone were not likely to curb the corruption, and that
the campaign donation restrictions were closely drawn to prevent special relations between underwriters and their employees
on the one hand, and officials who might influence the award of the contract on the other. The court also approved broad
loophole-closer extensions of campaign restrictions to brokers, executives, employees, and others by prohibiting brokers
dealers, municipal securities dealers, and municipal finance professionals in general from directly or indirectly doing anything
that would result in a violation of the direct contribution restrictions. The court said, the prohibition only affects Blount
family to the degree that he is directing their contributions, thus seeking to evade the rules provisions.
The Blount court also confirmed that, The Supreme Court has said that preventing corruption or the appearance o
corruption is the only legitimate and compelling government interest thus far identified for restricting campaign finances.
(FEC v. National Conservative PAC, 470 U.S. 480, 496-97 (1985)). The court distinguished betweenthe special justifications for politica
contribution bans on certain players, Contributions and solicitation of contributions have two aspects. They may communicate
support for a candidate and his ideas, but they may also be used as the cover for what is much like a bribe: a payment that
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accrues to the private advantage of the official and is intended to induce him to exercise his discretion in the donors favor,
potentially at the expense of the polity he serves. The SEC clearly rested its approval of Rule G-37 on a wish to curtail this
latter function. Finally, the Court also described the focus of Pay to Play restrictions, Unlike general campaign financing
restrictions, ... which seek to combat unspecified forms of undue influence and political corruption, [these] conflict of interest
provisions, ... are tied to a contributors business relationship with governmental entities and are intended to prevent fraud andmanipulation.
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State Laws That Currently Restrict Contributions from Agents of Government
Regulated Industries
Eight states have banned contributions from gaming interests. Because of the perception that gaming has traditionally been
connected with corruption, states have been aggressive in ensuring that a proper distance is kept between gaming interests and
politicians. These types of statutes fit the model of separating political contributions from political favors, and therefore provide
guidance and justification for Pay to Play laws.
Indiana prohibits contributions from any officer or person who holds an interest in a gaming entity (Ind. Stats. 4-33-10-2.1);
Iowa prohibits contributions from riverboat gambling corporations (Iowa Stats. 99F.6(4)(a));
Kentucky prohibits contributions from persons owning lottery contracts (KY Rev. Stats. 154(a).160);
Louisiana prohibits contributions from casino officers or key employees (La. Rev. Stats. 18:1505.2)
Michigan prohibits contributions from any licensee or person who has an interest in a gaming entity (Mich. Stats. 7(b)(4)-(5));
Nebraska prohibits contributions from lottery contractors for duration of contract and three years after (Neb. Stats. 49-1469.01)
The law covers contributions from the individual, an officer of the company, its PAC, or anyone acting on behalf of the
company, officer, or PAC (Neb. Rev. Stat. 9-835). Furthermore, a lottery contractor may not make a campaign contribution
or independent expenditure for a statewide office candidate during the term of the contract and for three years after the
award or renewal (Neb. Rev. Stat. 49-1469.02). The law also prohibits a candidate from receiving such a contribution.
New Jersey prohibits contributions from casino officers or key employees (NJ Perm. Stats. 5:12-138); and
Virginia prohibits contributions from pari-mutual corporations, executives and their spouses and families
(VA Stats. 59.1-375, 376).
Louisiana and New Jerseys bans on contributions from those involved in the gaming industry have been upheld in the
courts. Inre Petition of Soto, (236 N.J. Super. 303 (App. Div. 1989), certif. denied, 121 N.J. 608, cert. denied, 496 U.S. 937, 110 S. Ct. 3216, 110 L. Ed
2d 664 (1990)), the Court upheld the constitutionality of a statute that prohibits any officer or key employee of a casino from
contributing any money or thing of value to a candidate for public office or to any party or group organized to support such
candidates. The threat of impropriety is particularly insidious when the concern is that casinos, with their enormous economic
power, might appear to infiltrate the governmental process. Casino Assn of La. v. Foster, (820 So. 2d 494, 502-504 (La. 2002)), rejected
arguments that a state law prohibiting any political contributions from any officer, director, trustee, partner, senior managemen
level employee, or key employee in the casino industry, or the spouse of any of the foregoing was unconstitutionally broad. In
Michigan, the Attorney General approved the constitutionality of that states ban on gaming contributions. (Michigan AG Opinion
7002 (Dec. 17, 1998)). In Schiller Park Colonial Inn, Inc. v. Berz, (349 N.E.2d 61, 66-67 (Ill. 1976)) the Court rejected arguments that an
Illinois law prohibiting any political contributions from any officer, associate, agent, representative, or employee of a liquo
licensee was unconstitutionally broad.
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In addition to the broader bans on campaign contributions from regulated sectors such as the gambling industry, severa
states have implemented more narrowly tailored restrictions on campaign contributions from regulated sectors to those whom
are the regulators:
Delaware, Florida, Montana, and Washington prohibit insurance agents from making contributions to candidates for the
Office of Insurance Commissioner. (Delaware Code 18 2304(6), Florida Statutes Title XXXVII 627.0623, Montana Code Ann. 33-18-305, and
Washington RCW 48 -30.110).
Florida also prohibits licensed food outlets and convenience stores from contributing to candidates for Commissioner of
Agriculture. (Florida Statutes Title IX 106.082).
Georgia prohibits public utilities from contributing to any political campaign. (Official Code of Georgia Ann. 21-5-30(f)).
Georgia law further prohibits any regulated entity from contributing to any candidate for the office that regulates that entity
Official Code of Georgia Ann. 21-5 30.1.
(Source: Craig Holman, Ph.D. - Public Citizen)
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State by State Pay to Play Restrictions on Government Contractors
An ever-growing number of states and municipalities are enacting Pay to Play laws that bar or severely limit campaign
contributions by state and local contractors, their top executives, and in some instances, the executives spouses and dependents
In order to prevent money laundering, most Pay to Play legislation contains anti-circumvention language that restricts
contributions from other persons closely associated with a state contractor to entities that pass legal contributions through to
banned recipients, and requires disclosure reports. A loophole called wheeling, making contributions to a permitted recipien
which is later transferred to a banned recipient, is a common work around that newer statutes address. Some states, like
Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island, do not have Pay-to-Play laws prohibiting or restricting campaign contributions, but
only impose reporting requirements on any person doing business with the state.
New Jersey - N.J. Perm. Stat. 19.44a-20.13 applies to state government contracts (no-bid and competitive) above a $17,500
contract threshold. It restricts principals of a contractor (10% ownership interest), as well as the spouses of individua
contractors (and controlled PACs and Section 527 organizations) from contributing more than $300 aggregate/election from
and after 18 months (or a full gubernatorial term) before the award until termination of the contract to any Gubernatoriacandidates and state and county party committees. Compliance certificates required. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPEAL BY
EARLE ASPHALT COMPANY, June 30, 2008 Superior Court Appellate Division of New Jersey, the court rejected all arguments
against the restrictions, even on competitive contractors, even when contracts are competitively bid, State officials exercise
substantial discretion that contractors may seek to influence through campaign contributions. The court demonstrated
competitive government contracts were subject to the same influences as no-bid government contracts, For example, the
Commissioner of Transportation has the authority to determine whether a contractor is responsible, ( see Trap Rock Indus
Inc. v. Kohl, 59 N.J. 471, 481-86 (1971), cert. denied, 405 U.S.1065, 92 S. Ct. 1500, 31 L. Ed. 2d 796 (1972)), whether a bid conforms to the
specifications of the contract, N.J.S.A. 27:7-30, (see Meadowbrook Carting Co. v. Borough of Island Heights,138 N.J. 307, 313-14 (1994)) , and
whether to reject all bids because they are excessively above the estimated cost, or for any other cause, ( N.J.S.A. 27:7-30; se
DGR Co. v. State, Dept of Treasury, 361 N.J. Super. 467, 474-77 (App. Div. 2003)). Moreover, even after a competitively bid construction
contract is awarded, the Commissioner or other State contracting official may exercise substantial discretionary authority
in determining whether to execute change orders and in resolving disputes concerning performance of the contract or
payments to the contractor. See Home Owners Constr. Co. v. Borough of Glen Rock, 34 N.J. 305, 315-16 (1961); Capital Safety, Inc. v. State, Div. o
Bldgs. and Const., 369 N.J. Super. 295, 302-03 (App.Div. 2004). Therefore, we reject appellants argument that the governmental interes
in preventing the actuality or appearance of public corruption does not support a limitation upon the amount of politica
contribution by contractors who seek the award of competitively bid contracts. Further, the court found the token $300
contribution limit to be constitutionally valid, the particular danger that contractors campaign contributions may influencethe discretionary decisions of State contracting officials or create a public perception of such influence establishes the specia
justification for the contribution limits The court said, The strong governmental interest in limiting political contribution
by businesses that contract with the State is similar to the governmental interest that this court in Soto found to justify an
absolute prohibition against political contributions by high-level casino employees.
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Connecticut Conn. Gen. Stat. 9-612(g) applies to all state government contracts (no bid and competitive) above a $50,000
contract threshold. The contractor (including board members, officers, managers, and individuals who hold at least 5%
ownership interest, their spouses and adult dependent children) is prohibited from making any campaign donations to state
and local candidates responsible for awarding the contract from the start of negotiations until the end of the calendar yea
after termination. Violations result in contract cancellation and 1 year debarment). In Connecticut, state contractors who wereconvicted for giving illegal gifts to Governor Rowland, but for many years they had given him far more money in legal campaign
contributions. Connecticut responded to this scandal with meaningful reforms. Connecticut lobbyists and state contractor
can no longer give or solicit contributions for legislative and statewide candidates. This law was recently modified after a lowe
court preliminary court order that the transparency measure in the law should not have required the public Internet database
to disclose the identities of minor children of principals of state contractors. Securities Industry & Fin. Markets Assn v. Garfield
(469 F. Supp. 2d 25, 38 (D. Conn. 2007)). The Green Party has filed suit in the US District Court of Connecticut in Green Party o
Connecticut v Garfield, (3:06-CV-1030(SRU)) , to invalidate the Pay to Play provisions. This litigation is pending at the trial court level
but no decision has been reached as this survey goes to print. Persons wishing to check the status of this case are referred to
www.brennancenter.org/content/resource/green_party_of_connecticut_v_jeffrey_garfield_et_al/
Hawaii HI Rev. Stat. 11-205.5 covers all no-bid and competitive-bid contracts of any value, and prohibits any contribution
by the contractor to any state and local candidates, parties, and committees from the award to until the termination of the
contract.
South Carolina - An individual, corporation, or other entity awarded a no-bid contract with the state or any of its politica
subdivisions may not contribute to a public official who was in a position to act on the contract award (S.C. Code Ann. 8-13
1342).
West Virginia - West Virginia law generally prohibits anyone who bids on or has a public contract at the state or local leve
from contributing to any political party, committee, or candidate for public office or to anyone for political purposes or use
(W. Va. Code 3-8-12(d)). The ban applies during the period of contract negotiation and performance.
Vermont - Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 32, 109. An investment firm (or its PAC) which has contract with a the state treasurer is
banned from making or soliciting campaign contributions on behalf of any candidate for state treasurer, and is disqualified
for any contract with state treasurer for five years after making any contribution to a state treasurer candidate.
Ohio Applied to both no-bid and competitive contracts over a $10,000 threshold. Restricted contributions from
government contractor, PACs, partners, shareholders, administrators, executors, trustees, and individuals with at least
20% ownership interest (spouses and minor children), and collective-bargaining labor organization for the benefit of state
and local officials ultimately responsible for awarding the contract, or for appointing the official who directly awards the
contract. The limit is $1,000 within 2 years before the award, and $1,000 within 1 year of the termination of the contract
but no more than $2,000 aggregate. Officials cant solicit contributions from contractors even for others from date of the
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award until 1 year after contract. Considered one of the most comprehensive laws in the nation after sweeping expansive
changes in 2007, implementation of this new law had been stalled by a trial court on purely procedural grounds not relating
to the constitutional validity of the laws substantive provisions, but as of this writing has been reinstated by a stay in the
appellate court. UAW v Brunner, Case No. (05CVH-03-2553 (June 18, 2008)) In 2007, the Court issued an order striking Ohios law
(H.B. 694) because of technical deficiencies in the way the law was enacted, signed and filed, having nothing to do with theconstitutionality of the campaign restrictions it imposed on county commissioners, city council members, township trustees
school board members, and other local boards, commissions, task forces, and other authorities. The bill as passed by the
legislature had minor typographical differences from the bill as it was actually presented to the governor, and this kind o
hyper technicality is enough to invalidate any law. H.B 694 was immediately re-passed by the legislature, in Am. Sub. H.B
119 (the Ohio budget bill), in an attempt to cure any defects in the way the manner in which H.B. 694 was signed and filed
Judge Bender ruled on June 18, 2008 that the insertion of the bill into the budget bill invalidly attempted to amend an
unconstitutionally passed statute, saying that the campaign contribution provisions of H.B. 119 unconstitutionally violated
the so-called single subject rule for passing statutes because they did not relate to the prime purpose of the budget bill
If that ruling holds, then the previous version of the law, which existed prior to April 4, 2007, is now back in effect.
The State of Ohio has appealed Judge Benders decision and asked for a stay of his ruling pending appeal. Judge Bende
granted the stay on July 17, 2008, which effectively puts Ohios stricter, more comprehensive laws back into effect. So as of
this date of writing, and until the appellate court rules, the version of the law as enacted in HB 694 and HB 119 is still in effec
pending appeal. Persons wishing to check for updates should refer to www.bricker.com/legalservices/practice/govern/ptop
asp. Previous pay to play law prohibits any state agency or department or its political subdivisions from awarding a no-bid
contract valued at more than $500 to anyone who has contributed an aggregate of over $1,000 within the prior two years
to the person holding the public office that has responsibility for awarding the contract. No contract worth more than $500
may be awarded to a corporation, or business trust, if an owner (or spouse) with more than a 20% interest has contributed
more than $1,000 in the previous two years to the public official or his campaign committee. [Ohio Rev. Code Ann. 3517.13(J)]
For purposes of this restriction, if the contract awarding authority is a gubernatorial appointee, the governor is considered
to have ultimate responsibility for awarding the contract, in which case, the ban applies to those who contributed to the
governors campaign.
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Pay to Play Laws and Proposals Pending in States
Illinois - The General Assembly approved in May 2008 a ban on contractors with state deals of $50,000 or more from giving
campaign contributions to the officeholders who hired them. Whether it becomes law depends on the signature of a governo
who has been held up as the primary example of why such a ban is needed. The bill will soon be formally submitted for the
signature of Gov. Rod Blagojevich, a Democrat who ran as a reformer in 2002, who has allegedly made such deals. One oBlagojevichs top fundraisers and political insiders, Antoin Tony Rezko, was convicted on 16 of 24 federal felony counts of
money laundering, bribery and fraud in attempting to twist campaign contributions out of companies seeking state business o
regulatory approval. Former Republican Gov. George Ryan is serving a 6 1/2-year federal prison sentence for racketeering.
South Dakota Ballot Question I-10 is a comprehensive statutory voter initiative which would prohibit misappropriating publi
funds for political campaigns and lobbyists, imposes a golden parachute cooling off periods for legislators, and contains Pay
to Play campaign finance reform for all government contracts over a $500 threshold. The proposal has a transparency measur
which provides a public Internet summary of all government contracts; it classifies contracts as competitive bid or sole-source
contracts, and identifies the contractor and its principals to aid enforcement of the statute. The measure requires sole-source
(no bid) government contracts to contain contract-based consensual restrictions which bind the contract holders (principals) to
refrain making or soliciting campaign donations or spending to state and local candidates during the contract term and for 2
years thereafter. Loophole-closers prohibit the contract holders from using others people or entities as proxies or conduits to
make prohibited donations indirectly, through any officer, employee, immediate family member of any officer or employee
vendor, or agent., or through any person who intends to make such a contribution. These persons and organizations are
not prohibited from making donations directly on their own behalf, so long as they are not making an indirect pass-through
donation as a conduit for a prohibited donor. Prohibited donors include partners, 5% owners, officers, and includes exclusive
public sector labor union principals and the PACs they control (but do not include not public employees). Any public official o
candidate who does or would have ultimate responsibility for the award of a specific public contract (whether competitive
or no-bid) is banned from soliciting or accepting donations from the holder contractor of that contract or his immediate family
members. Violators forfeit contracts and are debarred from state contracts for 3 years. The law would empower citizens to bring
suit as private attorneys general in the event the government fails to act.
Colorado I-59 ballot question is proposed initiative amendment to the campaign finance section of the state constitution. I
applies only to no-bid government contracts over a $50,000 threshold, and includes exclusive collective bargaining agreement
with a labor organization representing employees, but not employment contracts with individual employees. It contains a
transparency measure which publically discloses contract summaries and prohibited donors. Under this measure, a person who
makes or causes to be made any contribution intended to promote or influence the result of an election on a ballot issue shal
not be qualified to enter into a sole source government contract relating to that particular ballot issue. Sole source contractor
(and their principals) agree to refrain from making political contributions to state and local candidates and parties for the term
of the contract plus two years. Contributions made indirectly to sidestep restrictions, through political entities for the benefit o
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banned recipients, or by self-restricted donors using family members as conduits, are prohibited by anti-circumvention clauses
Official accomplices are subject to misconduct proceedings and restitution, and violators are liable for breach of contract and
ineligible to hold public contracts or public employment for 3 years.
General Constitutional Standards for Campaign Finance RegulationsIn 1974 the US Supreme Court ruled, with reference to the FECA, that combating prevention of corruption and the appearance o
corruption spawned by the real or imagined influence of large financial contributions on candidates is a sufficient state interest
(Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 2526 (1976)). The FECA prohibits an individual who is a federal contractor from making contributions to
candidates for federal office or federally registered political committees (PACs) during the term of the contract. The restriction
applies from the time the individual begins negotiations with a federal agency or the agency issues its request for proposals
(RFP) until the negotiations cease or the contract which was the subject of the RFP has been completed (2 USCA 441c). State i
not compelled to verify logical assumptions with statistical evidence, (Hughes v Alexandria Scrap Corp, 426 U.S. 794 (1976)). See Randall v
Sorrell,126 S. Ct. 2479, 2491 (2006) which noted the absence of any special circumstances for extremely severe across-the-board
general political contribution limits. Pay to play laws are based on special justifications for limiting the narrow group of would
be donors, the government contractors and their affiliates, whose donations may influence discretionary decisions of state and
local contracting officials or create a public perception of such influence. The right to make political contributions is not entitled
to the same high level scrutiny as other First Amendment rights, limits on contributions nevertheless must be closely drawn to
a sufficiently important state interest. Absolute bans on corporate contributions for federal candidates have been in existence
since 1907 and are constitutional. (FEC V. Beaumont (02-403) 539 U.S. 146 (2003))
In 2002 Congress passed the McCain-Feingold Act. The purpose of the BCRA was to curb the circumvention o
FECAs limitations by bringing soft money contributions and spending into regulation. The US Supreme Court addressed the
constitutionality of the BCRA in McConnell v. Federal Election Commission. 540 U.S. 93 (2003). The Court declined to subject BCRA
solicitation and spending restrictions to strict scrutiny, noting that the restrictions of BCRA only marginally impact political speech
As with direct limits on contributions, therefore, 323s spending and solicitation restrictions have only a marginal impact on
political speech. The Court held BCRA to the less rigorous closely drawn scrutiny applicable to contribution limitations, even
though, many of its provisions restrict not only contributions but also the spending and solicitation of funds raised outside o
FECAs contribution limits. But for purposes of determining the level of scrutiny, it is irrelevant that Congress chose in 323 to
regulate contributions on the demand rather than the supply side. See, e.g., National Right to Work,supra, at 206-211 (upholding a provision
restricting PACs ability to solicit funds). The relevant inquiry is whether the mechanism adopted to implement the contribution limit, o
to prevent circumvention of that limit, burdens speech in a way that a direct restriction on the contribution itself would not.
The McConnel court went on to say, Our treatment of contribution restrictions reflects more than the limited burden
they impose on First Amendment freedoms. It also reflects the importance of the interests that underlie contribution limits-
interests in preventing both the actual corruption threatened by large financial contributions and the eroding of public confidence
in the electoral process through the appearance of corruption. (National Right to Work, 459 U. S., at 208; see also Federal Election Commn v
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Colorado Republican Federal Campaign Comm., 533 U. S. 431, 440-441 (2001) (Colorado II)). We have said that these interests directly implicate
the integrity of our electoral process, and, not less, the responsibility of the individual citizen for the successful functioning
of that process. (National Right to Work, supra, at 208 (quoting Automobile Workers, 352 U. S., at 570)) . Because the electoral process is the
very means through which a free society democratically translates political speech into concrete governmental action, (Shrin
Missouri,528 U. S., at 401 (Breyer, J., concurring)), contribution limits, like other measures aimed at protecting the integrity of the processtangibly benefit public participation in political debate. For that reason, when reviewing Congress decision to enact contribution
limits, there is no place for a strong presumption against constitutionality, of the sort often thought to accompany the word
strict scrutiny. (Id., at 400 (Breyer, J., concurring)). The less rigorous standard of review we have applied to contribution limit
(Buckleys closely drawn scrutiny) shows proper deference to Congress ability to weigh competing constitutional interests
in an area in which it enjoys particular expertise. It also provides Congress with sufficient room to anticipate and respond to
concerns about circumvention of regulations designed to protect the integrity of the political process.
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Conclusion
Pay to Play laws are developing and evolving as they have spread state by state, first by statute and more recently by vote
initiative. No such laws have ever been invalidated by any court on substantive constitutional grounds, and indeed the US Supreme
Court is showing more and more appreciation for the need for campaign finance restrictions, like those found in Pay to Play
statutes, to close potential loopholes and anticipate novel and ambitious avoidance schemes of corrupt officials and the lobbyist
and government contractors who are their private sector accomplices. Pay to Play laws are becoming more savvy, and more
strict, but they remain committed to preserving the flexibility and discretion of honest public officials. Competitive procuremen
of goods and services from the private sector is both beneficial and necessary in government, and government officials must be
free to exercise broad discretion to make good decisions that provide a good fit for every unique need or situation. By precisely
targeting only the corrupt incentives that lead officials and contractors to mischief, and leaving the management process o
contract procurement alone, Pay to Play laws help combat graft without violating the maxim that should govern all thoughtfu
solutions; Primum non nocere - First, do no harm.
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Greg Schmid is general counsel for ALG.
Schmid graduated in 1982 with a BA degree
from University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and
received his law degree in 1985 from Thomas
Cooley Law School. Schmid has practiced law
in Michigan for 23 years, with a concentration
in government policy and procedure.
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Americans for Limited Government Research Foundation | 9900 Main Street, Suite 303Fairfax VA 22031 (703) 383-0880 | (703) 383-5288 fax | info@getliberty org