PHOENIX — Arizonans could get the last word on whether to uphold or reject newly enacted campaign finance laws that would allow more “dark money” to flow into state elections.
Opponents of changes approved earlier this year by the Republican-controlled Legislature filed the necessary paperwork Friday to begin circulating petitions to refer the two new laws to voters.
The two measures would create new exceptions to existing statutes that require certain groups that try to influence elections to disclose the true source of their cash. That would bar both the secretary of state and the Citizens Clean Elections Commission from demanding they open up their books.
Foes have until Aug. 5 to gather 75,321 valid signatures on each of two petitions.
If they are successful, both measures would not take effect until voters decide in November whether to ratify what lawmakers have approved or reject it.
Provisions in SB 1516 and HB 2296 say if an organization is classified as a “social welfare” organization by the Internal Revenue Service, it need not disclose its donors to efforts to affect political races.
Rep. J.D. Mesnard, R-Phoenix, who spearheaded the effort, said the Internal Revenue Code aligns with existing law that says groups that spend less than half their money on political issues can keep the sources of their funding secret.
Rep. Ken Clark, D-Phoenix, said the problem with that is the IRS does not actively police these groups to ensure they are, in fact, living within their fiscal limits.
“SB 1516, in a very kind of sneaky way, abdicates the state’s responsibility to oversee expenditures in campaigns from dark money groups,” he said. Clark said the two state agencies that have the power to police election laws need to be able to demand that groups spending money to influence Arizona voters open their books.
While federal law says “social welfare” groups cannot spend more than half their money trying to elect candidates, there is no such limit on trying to approve or defeat ballot measures.
Clark also said the changes give political parties the power to “launder” anonymous donations and get the funds to candidates, all outside the purview of voters.
Mesnard does not dispute that the change could mean less information for voters about who is trying to influence them. But he said he’s not bothered by that.
“At the end of the day, this is fundamental to democracy, and that is the right of a person or a group of people, an organization, to weigh in on our election process,” he said. “Somewhere along the line, some folks got it into their heads that we have a ‘right to know.’”
Mesnard said he does not believe that.
“A message is a message,” he said. “If it’s important to you to know who’s behind the message and you don’t know who’s behind the message, then disregard it. But if it’s not important to you and you want to focus on the message itself, then there’s no harm done with the current system.”
Clark, however, is proceeding under the premise that people do want to know who is spending millions of dollars on commercials to affect the outcome at the ballot. “We know the public wants nothing to do with dark money and they can see through these games,” he said.