Printed on recycled paper 132nd MAINE LEGISLATURE FIRST REGULAR SESSION-2025 Legislative Document No. 951S.P. 406 In Senate, March 11, 2025 An Act to Require Disclosure of Campaign Funding Sources Received by the Secretary of the Senate on March 6, 2025. Referred to the Committee on Veterans and Legal Affairs pursuant to Joint Rule 308.2 and ordered printed. DAREK M. GRANT Secretary of the Senate Presented by Senator BENNETT of Oxford. Cosponsored by Representative RIELLY of Westbrook and Senator: GROHOSKI of Hancock, Representative: SUPICA of Bangor. Page 1 - 132LR0066(01) 1 2 is enacted to read: 3 4 the requirements of section 1065. 5 is enacted to read: 6 7 8 electorate is the cornerstone of a healthy democracy. Transparency in the funding of 9 political campaigns is essential to ensuring that voters can make informed decisions and 10 hold elected officials accountable. The increasing influence of undisclosed financial 11 contributions, commonly referred to as "dark money," undermines public confidence in the 12 integrity of elections, distorts the democratic process and conceals the identities of those 13 seeking to influence public policy for their own interests. 14 The Legislature further finds that the public has a compelling interest in knowing the 15 sources of all significant campaign-related expenditures to prevent corruption, undue 16 influence and the appearance thereof. Full disclosure of political spending promotes 17 fairness, accountability and trust in government, while safeguarding the fundamental 18 principle that government derives its legitimacy from the consent of the governed. 19 It is therefore the intent of the Legislature to require the greatest possible transparency of 20 campaign expenditures, including the identification of all contributors to entities that spend 21 or contribute money to influence candidate elections in order to restore public confidence 22 in elections, protect the integrity of democratic institutions and ensure that the voices of all 23 citizens, not just the wealthy and powerful, are heard. 24 As used in this section, unless the context otherwise indicates, the 25 following terms have the following meanings. 26 A. "Covered committee" means a committee required to file a report under section 27 1017-A or 1059 that makes, in one election cycle, more than $50,000 in expenditures 28 and receives a contribution from a covered contributor. 29 B. "Covered contribution" means the total amount contributed by a covered contributor 30 to a covered committee in an election cycle. 31 C. "Covered contributor" means a person that contributes more than $10,000 to a 32 covered committee in an election cycle. 33 D. "Election cycle" means the 2-year period beginning the day after a general election 34 and ending the day of the next general election. 35 E. "Original funds" means funds over which a person has legal control and to which 36 the person holds title that the person receives from: 37 (1) Salary, wages or other earned income from employment; 38 (2) Investment income, sale of assets or bequests; 39 (3) Distributions from a partnership, limited liability company or trust in which the 40 person holds a legal interest; Page 2 - 132LR0066(01) 1 (4) Commercial transactions; or 2 (5) Membership dues, union dues or other similar periodic payments to an 3 organization, association or group as long as the payments do not exceed $10,000 4 per year per person. 5 F. "Original source" means the person who directly received the original funds. 6 G. "Pass-through funds" means funds over which a person has legal control and to 7 which the person holds title that are not that person's original funds. 8 A covered committee shall notify each contributor in 9 writing that the funds may be used to make expenditures to influence a campaign in this 10 State and that information about the sources of pass-through funds may be required and 11 reported under this section. The notice may be provided to the contributor before or after 12 the covered committee receives the contribution, but the contribution may be used or 13 transferred only in accordance with this subsection and subsection 6. The notice must 14 provide that the contributor has 21 days in which the contributor may state that those funds 15 are solely the contributor's original funds, that the funds include pass-through funds or that 16 the contributor opts out of allowing the funds to be used by the covered committee to 17 influence a campaign in this State. Any contributor that has not responded to the notice 18 within 21 days is presumed to have opted out of allowing the contribution to be used to 19 influence a campaign in this State. The commission shall develop a form that a covered 20 committee may use to provide the notice required under this subsection. 21 If a covered contributor in response to the notice 22 under subsection 3 states that the funds include pass-through funds, the covered contributor 23 shall provide the covered committee with the following information: 24 A. The identity of each source of original funds that directly or indirectly contributed 25 $2,500 or more in funds included in the contribution; 26 B. The amounts from each source, which must total at least as much as the 27 contribution; and 28 C. The identity of all 3rd parties that transferred $2,500 or more of the original funds 29 from the original source until the funds were received by the covered contributor, 30 including the dates and amounts of the transfers. 31 A covered contributor that received pass-through funds exceeding the amount of the 32 covered contribution may choose which original sources to disclose as long as the covered 33 contributor discloses a total amount of original funds at least equal to the amount of the 34 covered contribution and identifies all persons that transferred those original funds from 35 the original sources to the covered contributor. 36 A covered committee shall maintain records of the 37 information required under subsection 4 for at least 5 years and provide the records to the 38 commission upon request. 39 A contribution may be used or transferred by the covered committee 40 immediately upon the covered committee's receipt of information from the contributor that 41 states that those funds are solely the contributor's original funds or, if the funds include 42 pass-through funds, the information required under subsection 4. A covered committee 43 may not use or transfer funds received from a contributor for the purpose of influencing a Page 3 - 132LR0066(01) 44 campaign in this State if the contributor has opted out or is presumed to have opted out 45 pursuant to subsection 3. Funds of a contributor that has opted out or is presumed to have 46 opted out pursuant to subsection 3 must be segregated from funds in the covered 47 committee's campaign account described in section 1054. This subsection may not be 48 construed to prohibit the use or transfer of such funds for other purposes. 6 A covered committee shall 7 include the following information received from a covered contributor pursuant to 8 subsection 4 in an appropriate report required under section 1017-A or 1059: 9 A. The name and mailing address of each original source whose aggregate direct or 10 indirect contributions exceed $10,000 during the election cycle. For an original source 11 who is an individual, the report must include that individual's occupation and place of 12 business; 13 B. The date and amount of original funds received from each original source identified 14 in accordance with paragraph A; and 15 C. The identity of all 3rd parties that transferred $5,000 or more of the original funds 16 from the original source until the funds were received by the covered committee, 17 including the dates and amounts of the transfers. 18 A covered committee is not responsible for reporting the information required by this 19 subsection for the funds of a covered contributor that has opted out or is presumed to have 20 opted out pursuant to subsection 3. In reporting the required information under this 21 subsection, a covered committee may rely upon the information it received pursuant to 22 subsection 4, unless the covered committee knows or has reason to know that the 23 information is false or incomplete. 24 For a communication made by a covered 25 committee that is an independent expenditure, as defined in section 1019-B, subsection 1, 26 or a communication subject to section 1055-A, the communication must include the 27 statement described in section 1014, subsection 2-B. The top 3 funders included in the 28 statement must be the funders that, since the day following the most recent general election, 29 are the original sources of the highest dollar amounts of original funds directly or indirectly 30 contributed to the covered committee making the communication. Section 1014, 31 subsection 2-B, paragraph E does not apply to the statement required by this subsection. 32 For the purposes of disclosing original sources under this section, a 33 covered contributor that received funds that are not its own original funds prior to January 34 1, 2026 or that has held an amount of funds at least equal to $10,000 without interruption 35 for a period of 5 years may consider those funds its own original funds. 36 Notwithstanding section 1004-A, subsections 4 and 5 and section 1014, 37 subsection 4, the commission may assess a penalty for a violation of this section of not 38 more than $20,000, in addition to any penalty assessed under sections 1020-A and 1062-A. 39 When determining the amount of any penalty, the commission shall consider the amount 40 of the original funds not disclosed, the harm suffered by the public from the lack of 41 disclosure and the covered committee's compliance record. If the commission determines 42 that adjusting the statutory maximum penalty amount would serve the purposes of this 43 section, it may recommend adjustments in a report to the joint standing committee of the 44 Legislature having jurisdiction over campaign finance reporting matters. 1 2 3 4 5 Page 4 - 132LR0066(01) 1 The commission shall adopt rules to implement this section, including the 2 content and timing of the notice described in subsection 3 and report described in 3 subsection 7. Rules adopted under this subsection are routine technical rules as defined in 4 Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter 2-A. 5 6 Revised Statutes, Title 21-A, section 1065, subsection 10 takes effect January 1, 2026. 7 8 This bill requires certain party committees, political action committees and ballot 9 question committees to notify and seek consent from a contributor in writing that the 10 contribution may be used to make expenditures to influence a political campaign in this 11 State. The bill requires the committee to report to the Commission on Governmental Ethics 12 and Election Practices information about the identity of certain contributors and 3rd parties 13 and the amount of the contribution used to make expenditures to influence a political 14 campaign in this State. The bill contains other requirements regarding the source of 15 contributions, required reporting relating to the top 3 funders and penalties for violations. 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15