For Immediate Release:
October 24, 2002 |
Contact: Craig McDonald, Andrew Wheat
512-472-9770 |
Luddite PACs & Candidates Hide $8 Million
In Political Funds From Electronic Disclosure
“Texas politics is crawling with Luddites who need to be dragged kicking and screaming into the computer age,” said Texans for Public Justice Director Craig McDonald. “Politicians should not be able to accept contributions that they refuse to disclose on the Internet.”
The Texas Legislature enacted a 1999 electronic-filing law that requires
most state candidates and PACs to file campaign-finance reports in a computerized
format that the Texas Ethics Commission posts on the Internet. This electronic-filing
law contains two major loopholes that exempt candidates and PACs that claim
that:
1. They do not intend to raise or spend more than $20,000 a year; or
2. Neither they nor their agents use computers to track campaign finances.
The new TPJ study reveals 234 large PACs and major-party candidates
that failed to file one or more electronic disclosure reports between January
2001 and July 2002.
Led by several Republican Party PACs, nine PACs and 12 candidates appear to have dodged electronic filing without obtaining legally required exemptions. Although the plain language of the law does not grant special treatment to the PACs of political parties, the Texas Ethics Commission staff appears to have unofficially exempted certain party PACs from the electronic-disclosure requirement. Some of these PACs raise hundreds of thousands of dollars and take direct corporate contributions.
Major findings of the new report, Luddite
PACs & Candidates, include:
For the full report, including reform recommendations, go to:
http://www.tpj.org/reports/luddites02/
Texans for Public Justice is a non-profit, non-partisan research
and advocacy
organization that tracks the role of money in Texas politics.
Copies of this report and other of our publications are available
by visiting www.tpj.org.