Friday, August 25, 2006

grassroots lobbying exemption?

The FEC is considering a temporary exemption for specific grassroots lobbying communications as we head toward the fall elections. Many advocacy groups support this exemption, as it will allow them to rally constituents to call members of Congress on some important bills next month. Reform organizations are against the proposal, seeing it as a potential loophole in the campaign finance regulations.

Take a look at the proposed reg here. I've never been a big fan of the "support, oppose, attack" langauge... it's completely vague and difficult to figure out in the context of a lobbying campaign. Can a group be critical of a congressman's votes, or is that attacking? Still, having seen how some organizations take advantage of the gap between express advocacy and electoral impacts *cough-cough... 527s* it's easy to understand why Campaign Legal Center and Democracy 21 are opposed.

Middle ground? I'd like to think there is a way to craft a reg that allows legitimate lobbying to occur during the blackout windows... but to date, no one has found that magic mixture of vowels and constanants that would please both sides of this debate.

Read more from CLC and Bob Bauer...

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