Connecticut 2025 2025 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB07093 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/03/2025

                     
Researcher: MHF 	Page 1 	4/3/25 
 
 
 
OLR Bill Analysis 
HB 7093  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING REFERENDA, INDEPENDENT 
EXPENDITURES AND OTHER CAMPAIGN FINANCE CHANGES.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill changes laws affecting campaign finance and elections, 
including independent expenditures (IE) and political action 
committees (PAC). Principally, it does the following: 
1. codifies “independent expenditure political committee” (known 
as an IE-only PAC) as a type of PAC and requires IE-only PACs 
to register with the State Elections Enforcement Commission 
(SEEC) (§§ 1-3, 6, 7 & 9-15);  
2. classifies referendum PACs as IE-only PACs and makes 
conforming changes (§ 15); 
3. expands IE disclosure requirements (§ 4); 
4. increases the maximum penalties for failing to file IE reports (§ 
4); 
5. modifies PAC registration requirements, including expanding 
the contents of the registration statement (§ 5); 
6. in conformity with current practice, eliminates aggregate 
individual contribution limits to certain committees (§ 8); 
7. expands disclaimer requirements for referenda and party 
candidate listings (§§ 16-19); 
8. narrows the circumstances under which SEEC must dismiss a 
complaint within one year after receiving it (§ 20); 
9. modifies the deadline by which a person must return surplus  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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funds from the Citizens’ Election Fund (CEF) before he or she is 
guilty of larceny (§ 21); 
10. requires statewide candidates seeking to participate in the 
Citizen’s Election Program (CEP) to receive a certain number of 
in-state contributions (§ 22); and 
11. caps the inflation adjustments to CEP qualifying contributions 
(QCs) to match the limit generally applicable under the state’s 
campaign finance laws (§ 22). 
The bill also makes minor, technical, and conforming changes.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 
§§ 1-3, 6, 7 & 9-15 — IE-ONLY PACS 
The law authorizes persons (including individuals, entities, and 
committees) to make unlimited IEs and defines “independent 
expenditure” as an expenditure made without the consent, 
coordination, or consultation of a (1) candidate or candidate’s agent, (2) 
candidate committee, (3) PAC, or (4) party committee (CGS § 9-601c). 
The bill codifies “independent expenditure political committee” 
(known as an IE-only PAC) as a type of PAC under Connecticut’s 
campaign finance laws and, like for other committees that make IEs, 
requires their registration with SEEC. It defines them as PACs that make 
only (1) IEs and (2) contributions to other IE-only PACs (see 
BACKGROUND). It also allows these PACs to (1) coordinate with other 
IE-only PACs to make IEs and (2) make donations to tax-exempt 
501(c)(3) (nonprofit) and 501(c)(19) (veterans) organizations and refund 
contributor contributions. 
The bill makes several conforming changes, including specifying that 
(1) individuals, business entities, and labor unions may make 
contributions to IE-only PACs and (2) various types of IE-only PACs, 
such as those formed for a single election or primary, may not make 
contributions except to other IE-only PACs. It also classifies referendum 
PACs as IE-only PACs.  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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Lawful Purposes (§ 6) 
The bill defines “lawful purposes of the committee” for IE-only PACs 
as promoting the following: 
1. a political party,  
2. the success or defeat of candidates for nomination or election to 
a public office or position regulated by state campaign finance 
laws, or  
3. the success or defeat of referendum questions.  
It also expands the “lawful purposes of the committee” for party 
committees to include promoting the success or defeat of referendum 
questions. Existing law generally allows PACs to pay specific expenses 
to accomplish their lawful purposes.  
Surplus Distributions (§ 7) 
By law, candidate committees and PACs, other than exploratory 
committees or PACs organized for ongoing political activities, must 
generally spend or distribute surplus funds (1) within 90 days after (a) 
a primary when a candidate loses or (b) an election or referendum not 
held in November or (2) by March 31 following an election or a 
referendum held in November.  
The bill establishes a surplus distribution procedure for IE-only 
PACs, other than those formed for ongoing activities. Specifically, it 
requires them to distribute surplus funds, according to the schedule 
outlined above, to (1) their contributors, on a prorated basis; (2) state or 
municipal governments or agencies; or (3) tax-exempt 501(c)(3) and 
501(c)(19) organizations. 
Referendum PACs (§§ 7 & 15) 
The bill classifies referendum PACs as IE-only PACs and makes 
conforming changes. Specifically, it allows any person to establish an IE-
only PAC for a single referendum question or multiple questions 
submitted to a vote on the same day. Under the bill, the committee may 
make IEs only for these purposes.   2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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Relatedly, the bill eliminates provisions in current law that establish 
surplus distributions for referendum PACs and instead subjects them to 
the bill’s procedure for IE-only PACs. 
§ 4 — REPORTING IES AND COVERED TRANSFE RS 
Under current law, a person must disclose information about IEs they 
make that exceed $1,000 in the aggregate by filing certain reports. A 
“person” is an individual, committee, firm, partnership, organization, 
association, syndicate, company trust, corporation, limited liability 
company, or other legal entity (other than the state or its political or 
administrative subdivisions) (CGS § 9-601(10)).  
The bill does the following: 
1. changes the period during which IE disclosure reports are subject 
to a 24-hour electronic filing deadline; 
2. expands disclosure requirements for persons that make IEs 
without forming a PAC (known as “incidental spenders”);  
3. extends the law’s covered transfer requirements to IEs related to 
certain referenda and generally expands an exemption to these 
requirements; 
4. increases the maximum penalties for failing to file IE reports; and 
5. conforms law to practice by requiring that, to disclose IEs, (a) 
incidental spenders use SEEC’s long- and short-form reports and 
(b) PACs, including IE-only PACs, use SEEC’s campaign finance 
forms for PACs formed in Connecticut. 
As under existing law, IEs made for or against (1) statewide office or 
legislative candidates, or statewide referenda, must be filed with SEEC 
and (2) municipal office candidates or municipal referenda must be filed 
with town clerks.  
24-Hour Report Filing Deadline 
Under current law, a person must electronically file a disclosure 
report within 24 hours after making or obligating to make an IE during  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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a primary or general election campaign that exceeds $1,000 in the 
aggregate and promotes the success or defeat of a statewide office or 
legislative candidate. 
The bill applies the 24-hour electronic filing requirement to these IEs 
made or obligated to be made during the period (1) beginning June 1 in 
a regular election year or, in the case of a special election for state senator 
or state representative, the day the governor issues writs of election, and 
(2) ending on the day after the primary or general election for which the 
IE is made or incurred. In the case of a special election, a person that 
makes or obligates to make an IE that exceeds $1,000 in the aggregate 
before the governor issues the writs must electronically file the IE report 
within 24 hours after the governor issues the writs. 
Additionally, the bill applies the 24-hour reporting requirement to 
IEs within this timeframe that promote the success or defeat of a 
referendum question proposing a constitutional amendment, 
convention, or revision. 
For any other IEs (those not subject to 24-hour reporting 
requirements), the bill requires that IE reports be filed according to the 
same schedule as the periodic statements filed by PACs. 
Disclosures by Incidental Spenders 
Existing law requires persons, other than PACs (as described above), 
to disclose information about IEs they make using SEEC’s long- and 
short-form reports (i.e. SEEC Form 26) (see BACKGROUND). The bill 
adds to the information that these IE-makers must disclose in these 
reports.  
Under the bill, for a long-form report, they must additionally 
disclose, for a referendum, its date, the question’s text, and whether the 
IE supported or opposed it. For the short-form report, it must also 
disclose, for a referendum, the question’s text and the allocation of the 
expenditure in support of or opposition to it. 
Disclosing Covered Transfers. As part of both the long- and short-
form reports, the law requires a person to disclose the source and  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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amount of any covered transfer of $5,000 or more, in the aggregate, 
received during the 12 months before the applicable primary or election 
if the IE for which the report is being filed is made or obligated to be 
made 180 days or less before the primary or election. The bill extends 
the requirement to covered transfers made to promote or oppose a 
referendum question proposing a constitutional amendment, 
convention, or revision. 
The law exempts from this disclosure requirement a person that 
discloses the source and amount of a covered transfer in a report it files 
with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) or the IRS, as long as the 
person includes a copy of the report in the statement it files with SEEC. 
The bill extends this exemption to (1) apply to similar out-of-state 
agency reports and (2) persons that include information sufficient for 
SEEC to find their out-of-state, FEC, or IRS filing in their IE reports.  
Under current law, if a person makes the IE from a dedicated IE 
account, the IE report and disclaimer (see below) may include only 
persons that made covered transfers to it directly. The bill requires the 
report and disclaimer to include this information but removes a 
provision limiting it to only this information. 
By law, a “covered transfer” is, with certain exceptions, any donation, 
transfer, or payment of funds by a person to a recipient that (1) makes 
IEs or (2) transfers funds to another person that makes IEs (CGS § 9-
601(29)). 
Penalties for Failure to File an IE Report  
The bill increases the maximum civil penalties SEEC may impose for 
failure to file certain required IE reports. It also subjects IEs that support 
or oppose referendum questions to these penalties.  
Specifically, existing law allows SEEC to impose a maximum penalty 
of $10,000 for failing to file a report for an IE that is made or obligated 
more than 90 days before a primary or general election. The bill extends 
this penalty and the penalties described below to IEs that support or 
oppose a referendum.  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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For IEs made or obligated 90 days or fewer before a primary or 
general election, SEEC may currently impose a maximum penalty of 
$20,000 for failing to file a report. The bill instead allows SEEC to impose 
a penalty of up to $20,000 or twice the amount of any unreported IE, 
including for a referendum, whichever is greater.  
Currently, a knowing and willful failure to file an IE report is 
punishable by an additional fine of up to $50,000. The bill instead allows 
SEEC to impose an additional civil penalty of up to $50,000 or 10 times 
the amount of any unreported expenditure, whichever is greater.  
In addition, the bill establishes personal liability for a civil penalty 
that remains unpaid after the later of one year after the date when (1) 
SEEC imposed it or (2) a court issues a final judgment following any 
appeal of SEEC’s action. Specifically, the bill makes the following 
individuals personally liable:  
1. in the case of a committee, the chairperson and any officer, or  
2. in the case of a person other than a committee, (a) the CEO, CFO, 
or equivalent; (b) any other officer; and (c) any manager who had 
direct, extensive, and substantive decision-making authority 
over the IE or IEs made or obligated to be made. 
§ 5 — PAC REGISTRATIONS 
By law, most PACs must register with SEEC and designate a 
treasurer. They may also designate a deputy treasurer. The registration 
statement must include, among other things, the committee’s name and 
purpose.  
The bill expands the required contents of the PAC registration 
statement. Under current law, for a committee that files reports with the 
FEC or an out-of-state agency, the registration must include a statement 
to that effect and the agency’s name. The bill expands this provision to 
include reports filed with the IRS and requires the statement to include 
identifying information under which those filings are made.  
In addition, if a committee is established or controlled by a person or  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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individual acting as an agent for a person, the statement must indicate 
the person’s name. If a committee is established or controlled by a 
person other than a human being, the statement must indicate the name 
of the CEO or an equivalent. Current law requires only that a PAC 
established by a business entity or organization (e.g., a labor union) 
indicate the name of the entity or organization and, if established by a 
person other than a human being, a certification that the person making 
the expenditure is not a foreign national.  
§ 8 — AGGREGATE CONT RIBUTION LIMIT FOR INDIVIDUALS 
State law generally limits the amount that individuals may contribute 
to a specific candidate committee, party committee, or PAC. The bill 
conforms the law to SEEC practice by eliminating an aggregate limit on 
certain contributions by an individual. Under this limit, an individual 
may not contribute more than $30,000 in the aggregate during a single 
primary and election to (1) candidate committees, (2) exploratory 
committees, and (3) slate committees for justice of the peace (in a 
primary). In practice, SEEC does not enforce this aggregate limit (see 
BACKGROUND). 
§§ 16-19 — POLITICAL ATTRIBUTIONS 
IEs and Referenda (§§ 16, 17 & 19) 
By law, printed, video, and audio political communications (both IEs 
and non-IEs) must include certain attributions, known as “disclaimers.” 
Among other things, they must identify the person making the 
expenditure for the communication.  
Under current law, only the disclaimer requirements for written, 
typed, or other printed communications apply to expenditures made for 
a referendum. The bill extends, to IEs promoting a referendum 
question’s success or defeat, existing law’s disclaimer requirements for 
election- and primary-related IEs made for video and audio 
communications and telephone calls. Generally, each of these 
disclaimers must (1) include the name of the IE-maker and a statement 
that the expenditure was made independent of any candidate or 
political party and (2) state that additional information about the IE-
maker is available on SEEC’s website.   2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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Additionally, communications made within 90 days before the 
primary or election must also state the names of the five persons that 
made the five largest covered transfers to the IE-maker, in the aggregate, 
during the 12 months immediately before the referendum. As under 
existing law for other communications, the bill allows disclaimers for 
referendum IEs to omit any person that made covered transfers to it of 
less than $5,000, in the aggregate, during the 12 months immediately 
before the referendum. 
The bill also specifies that, concerning elections and primaries, 
existing law’s disclaimer requirements apply only to those IEs 
promoting a candidate’s success or defeat for nomination or election. 
Party Candidate Listings (§ 18) 
Current law requires that party committees (i.e. town and state 
central committees) use the appropriate disclaimer in any print, 
television, or social media promotion of a slate of candidates 
(disclaimers by individual candidates are not required). The bill instead 
requires that organization expenditures for party candidate listings by 
a party committee, legislative caucus committee, or legislative 
leadership committee use the appropriate disclaimer. 
By law, a “party candidate listing” is a communication that (1) lists 
the name or names of candidates for election; (2) is distributed through 
public advertising (e.g., cable television, newspapers, or similar media), 
direct mail, telephone, electronic mail, publicly accessible Internet sites, 
or personal delivery; and (3) is made to promote the success or defeat of 
a candidate or slate of candidates seeking nomination or election, or to 
aid or promote the success or defeat of a referendum question or a 
political party. The communication may not be a solicitation for or on 
behalf of a candidate committee (CGS § 9-601(25)(A)). 
§ 20 — SEEC INVESTIGATIONS 
By law, SEEC receives complaints from the secretary of the state, 
registrars of voters, town clerks, and individuals under oath about 
alleged election law violations. It investigates and holds hearings as it 
deems appropriate (CGS § 9-7b(a)(1)). The bill (1) lowers the statutory  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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standard required for the commission to determine a violation exists 
and (2) narrows the circumstances under which SEEC must dismiss a 
complaint within one year after receiving it. 
Standards for Investigating and Docketing 
Under existing law, SEEC staff are required to evaluate written 
complaints it receives and determine whether or not to, among other 
resolutions, investigate and docket a complaint for a determination by 
the commission. Currently, the commission must determine if probable 
cause of a violation does or does not exist. The bill instead requires 
SEEC, in conformance with existing practice, to determine if it has 
reason, or no reason, to believe a violation exists.  
After SEEC makes a determination about a violation, it generally may 
(1) initiate a contested case under the Uniform Administrative 
Procedures Act, (2) refer the matter to the chief state’s attorney’s office 
for criminal prosecution, (3) attempt to informally resolve the matter, or 
(4) dismiss it. (SEEC regulations generally prohibit the commission from 
proceeding with a contested case unless it finds, by a majority vote of a 
quorum, reason to believe that a violation occurred (Conn. Agencies 
Regs., § 9-7b-35).)  
Time Limit 
Currently, SEEC must dismiss a complaint it receives on or after 
January 1, 2018, if it does not issue a final decision within one year after 
receiving the complaint. However, the deadline must be extended if 
specified actions delay the final decision’s issuance.  
The bill relaxes this requirement for SEEC complaints received on or 
after July 1, 2025. It instead requires the commission to dismiss after one 
year any complaint for which it has not (1) found reason to believe a 
state election law violation occurred and (2) initiated a contested case 
proceeding. 
The bill also (1) requires that the deadline for making this finding be 
extended for the same reasons that the final decision deadline must be 
extended under current law and (2) establishes an additional reason for  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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extending this deadline (see below). As under current law, the one-year 
deadline must be extended by the length of the delay. 
Extensions  
Under current law, the one-year deadline for SEEC to issue a final 
decision must be extended if its issuance is delayed for any of the 
following reasons: 
1. extension or continuance granted to a respondent by SEEC or its 
staff before issuing the decision; 
2. issuance of a subpoena in connection with the complaint; 
3. litigation in state or federal court related to the complaint; or 
4. any investigation by, or consultation with, the chief state’s 
attorney, attorney general, U.S. Department of Justice, or U.S. 
attorney for Connecticut. 
The bill similarly requires an extension, for these same reasons, of the 
one-year deadline for finding reason to believe that an election law 
violation occurred and initiating a contested case. The bill also requires 
an extension if the finding and commencement are delayed because of 
an investigation by SEEC or its staff involving a potential IE violation. 
§ 21 — FAILURE TO RETURN SURPLUS CEF FUNDS 
By law, candidates participating in the Citizens’ Election Program 
receive a grant from the Citizens’ Election Fund (CEF). Under current 
law, a person is guilty of larceny if he or she does not repay surplus CEF 
funds within 90 days following the election or primary for which the 
grant is made. 
The bill instead aligns this deadline with state campaign finance law’s 
deadline for distributing surplus funds (see § 7 above). The campaign 
finance law sets several surplus distribution deadlines that exceed 90 
days after an election or primary. 
§ 22 — CEP QUALIFYING CONTR IBUTION DONORS 
By law, the CEP is the state’s voluntary public campaign financing  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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system and is available to statewide and legislative office candidates. 
Candidates qualify for the CEP by raising an aggregate amount of 
qualifying contributions (QCs), which must come from individual 
donors. The bill requires that CEP candidates for (1) governor receive 
QCs from at least 2,250 in-state residents and (2) other statewide offices 
receive QCs from at least 675 in-state residents. Current law does not set 
a minimum number of contributors for these offices.  
Under existing law, individual QC amounts range from $5 to $250, 
and the inflation-adjusted maximum for the 2024 election was $320. The 
bill caps inflation adjustments to maximum QC amounts at the broadly 
applicable limits for contributions by an individual for the relevant 
office set in state campaign finance law. Under existing law, these limits 
are (1) $3,500 for governor; (2) $2,000 for other statewide offices (i.e. 
lieutenant governor, secretary of the state, state treasurer, state 
comptroller, and attorney general); (3) $1,000 for state senator; and (4) 
$250 for state representative (CGS § 9-611(a)).  
BACKGROUND 
Related Bills 
SB 515, favorably reported by the Government Oversight Committee, 
adjusts the timing of inflation adjustments for QCs. 
SB 1517, favorably reported by the Government Administration and 
Elections (GAE) Committee, makes identical changes. 
sSB 1405, favorably reported by the Government Oversight 
Committee, among other things, amends the definition of organization 
expenditure and party candidate listing, adjusts the timing of inflation 
adjustments for QCs, modifies political advertising disclaimer 
requirements, and restricts the timing of commission actions. 
sSB 1409, favorably reported by the Government Oversight 
Committee, generally requires all municipal campaign finance filings to 
be filed with SEEC instead of the municipality. 
SB 1533, favorably reported by the GAE Committee, makes identical 
changes as this bill regarding the definition of “organization  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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expenditure” and adjusts the timing of inflation adjustments for QCs. 
sHB 7089, favorably reported by the Government Oversight 
Committee, amends the definition of “organization expenditure” and 
adjusts the timing of inflation adjustments for QCs. 
sHB 7221, favorably reported by the GAE Committee, generally 
requires all municipal campaign finance filings to be filed with SEEC 
instead of the municipality. 
HB 7222, favorably reported by the GAE Committee, among other 
things, makes identical changes as this bill regarding the definition of 
“organization expenditure” and adjusts the timing of inflation 
adjustments for QCs. 
sHB 7246, favorably reported by the GAE Committee, among other 
things, amends the definitions of “organization expenditure” and 
“solicit.”  
Aggregate Contribution Limits 
In McCutcheon et al. v. Federal Election Commission, 134 S. Ct. 1434 
(2014), the U.S. Supreme Court held that aggregate limits on 
contributions by individuals to federal candidates, political parties, and 
PACs were unconstitutional under the First Amendment. 
In Advisory Opinion 2014-03, SEEC announced that, unless it 
received further guidance from the legislature or a court of competent 
jurisdiction, it would no longer enforce current law’s $30,000 aggregate 
limit on contributions by individuals during a single primary and 
election to (1) candidate committees, (2) exploratory committees, and (3) 
slate committees for justice of the peace (in a primary). 
IE-Only PACs 
In Declaratory Ruling 2013-02, SEEC ruled that, in light of a line of 
cases ruling that contribution limits to IE-only PACs are 
unconstitutional, it would no longer enforce limits on contributions to 
PACs that receive and spend funds only for IEs unless it received further 
guidance from the legislature or a court.  2025HB-07093-R000516-BA.DOCX 
 
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Long- and Short-Form IE Reports 
As part of these reports, a person must disclose the source and 
amount of any covered transfer of $5,000 or more in the aggregate that 
it received during the 12 months before the applicable primary or 
election. This requirement applies if the IE for which the report is being 
filed is made or obligated to be made 180 days or less before the primary 
or election (CGS § 9-601d(f)). 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Government Oversight Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 11 Nay 1 (03/18/2025)