Connecticut 2025 2025 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB01533 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/14/2025

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sSB 1533  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING CHANGES TO THE CITIZENS' ELECTION 
PROGRAM.  
 
SUMMARY 
The Citizens’ Election Program (CEP) is the state’s voluntary public 
campaign financing system, available to candidates for legislative and 
statewide office. This bill makes several changes to the CEP, including 
(1) changing when certain inflationary adjustments must be made, (2) 
modifying the procedures for gubernatorial convention campaign 
grants, (3) changing when certain grant restrictions take effect, and (4) 
amending the definition of “organization expenditure.” 
The bill also makes technical and conforming changes. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage, except that provisions changing 
the timeline for certain CEP adjustments are effective July 1, 2025, and 
provisions on when a convention campaign grant may be applied for 
and when CEP grant restrictions take effect are effective January 1, 2028. 
§ 2 — CPI ADJUSTMENTS FOR CITIZENS’ ELECTION PROGRAM 
The CEP is the state’s voluntary public campaign financing system, 
available to candidates for legislative and statewide office. By law, 
candidates qualify for the CEP by raising at least an aggregate amount 
of funds through qualifying contributions (QCs) from individual 
donors. The State Elections Enforcement Commission (SEEC) must 
adjust the aggregate and QC amounts every two years for legislative 
office candidates and every four years for statewide office candidates 
based on the change in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban 
Consumers (CPI-U). 
Beginning with the 2028 election cycle, the bill shifts the timing of 
these adjustments from January of an election year to January of the 
prior year. For the 2026 election cycle, it also authorizes SEEC to make  2025SB-01533-R000660-BA.DOCX 
 
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an early inflationary adjustment to these amounts by July 3, 2025, based 
on the CPI-U, as published by the U.S. Department of Labor, during the 
period beginning on January 1, 2017, and ending on December 31, 2024.  
By law, the statutory aggregate contribution amounts and QC 
amounts are set based on the elected office. The statutory aggregate 
amounts are $250,000 for the governor, $75,000 for the lieutenant 
governor or other statewide office, $15,000 for a state senator, and $5,000 
for a state representative. The maximum QC amount under state law is 
$250. 
§ 3 — INELIGIBILITY FOR CEP GRANTS 
Once a candidate files an affidavit to abide by the CEP’s 
requirements, current law makes the candidate ineligible for a CEP 
grant if he or she changes status as a major party, minor party, or 
petitioning party candidate or becomes a candidate of a different party. 
The bill shifts when this prohibition begins from the affidavit’s filing to 
the CEP grant application’s filing (which is generally after the candidate 
has met his or her fundraising requirement and qualified for ballot 
access, unlike when the affidavit has been filed). 
§§ 3 & 4 — GUBERNATORIAL CONVE NTION CAMPAIGN GRANT 
Under existing law, a major party gubernatorial candidate who 
participates in the CEP may apply for and receive a “convention 
campaign grant” before the party’s nominating convention. The law 
allows candidates to apply for this grant at any time after filing the 
affidavit of intent to participate in, and abide by, the CEP’s spending 
limits and requires SEEC to approve or disapprove the application 
within 10 business days after receiving it. The bill specifies that a major 
party candidate for nomination to the office of governor in 2030 or after 
may apply for this grant beginning in the January preceding the election 
after filing the affidavit.  
Additionally, under the bill, if a gubernatorial candidate is approved 
for a convention campaign grant, but the upcoming grant amount has 
not yet been determined through the CPI adjustment process described 
above, similar to existing law for other CEP grants, SEEC must approve  2025SB-01533-R000660-BA.DOCX 
 
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the initial grant amount the candidate is eligible for. Once the CPI 
adjustment has been made, SEEC must approve and pay the remaining 
portion of the candidate’s grant. 
Relatedly, any candidate committee that applies for a grant before 
July 3, 2025 (see above), may only be approved for the unadjusted 
amount. 
§ 1 — ORGANIZATION EXPEND ITURES 
By law, organization expenditures are made by legislative caucus, 
legislative leadership, or party committees to benefit candidates or their 
committees. They are not considered campaign contributions, but the 
law places restrictions and limits on those made to benefit legislative 
candidates participating in the CEP. 
The bill modifies the definition of organizational expenditure to 
include a campaign event at which a candidate or candidates are 
present. (Prior law included this language until 2023.) Current law only 
defines this as an event with campaign materials but at which no 
contribution may be received, solicited, or bundled. 
BACKGROUND 
Related Bills 
SB 515 (File 478), favorably reported by the Government Oversight 
Committee, makes changes to the inflationary adjustment procedures 
for QCs. 
SB 1405 (File 489), favorably reported by the Government Oversight 
Committee, makes changes to the inflationary adjustment procedures 
for QCs and amends the definition of “organization expenditure.” 
HB 7089 (File 512), favorably reported by the Government Oversight 
Committee, makes identical changes as this bill, among others. 
sHB 7222, favorably reported by the Government Administration 
and Elections (GAE) Committee, makes identical changes to this bill, 
among others.  2025SB-01533-R000660-BA.DOCX 
 
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sHB 7246, favorably reported by the GAE Committee, amends the 
definition of “organization expenditure.”  
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Government Administration and Elections Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 17 Nay 2 (03/26/2025)