Subcommittee backs amendment to extend ban on foreign contributions to local measures

Notice Subcommittee on SB 534 (Election Law) · April 3, 2026

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Summary

A legislative subcommittee reviewed a 'replace-all' amendment to SB 534 that would expand existing prohibitions on foreign expenditures to ban foreign contributions for local ballot measures, clarify definitions (including 'measure'), adjust notice requirements, and refine penalties and enforcement language; members debated definitions and the 'willfully' standard before taking an informal voice vote to submit the amendment.

A legislative notice subcommittee on SB 534 advanced an amendment intended to expand the state’s prohibition on foreign money in politics to cover local ballot measures and related local vote formats.

The chair opened the subcommittee at 10 a.m. and invited members to discuss Representative Lane’s replace-all amendment to Senate Bill 534. Lane said the draft separates provisions that apply to local measures from those that apply to presidential primaries and would make both contributions and expenditures by foreign nationals illegal at the local level, effectively mirroring sections already applied to expenditures. "I did actually read the statute," Representative Lane said, explaining the goal was to ensure measures—town meetings and other popular-vote questions—are covered where federal definitions fall short.

Why it matters: supporters said the change closes a potential loophole where a foreign national could give to a committee that then makes an expenditure, and it would make clear that local ballot questions and traditional town-meeting votes are included. Opponents and some members urged care so the statute does not sweep in inadvertent actors or unnecessarily override local election practices.

Several drafting issues dominated the discussion. Members agreed to fold existing prohibition language on expenditures into the contributions section so that contributions by foreign nationals cannot be used as a pass-through. They debated whether to keep or remove phrasing such as 'directly or indirectly' and questioned the legal meaning of an "indirect expenditure." One member gave a canvassing example—where a PAC pays canvassers who then carry literature for a local candidate—to illustrate the risk of ambiguous wording producing court disputes.

Penalties and remedial language were another point of contention. The amendment retains a willfulness standard in parts of the draft, which several members favored because it requires intent and reduces the chance of penalizing innocent or naive donors. The chair said he had "no tolerance for foreign interference in elections," while also noting that broadly punitive penalties could catch well-meaning local actors; members discussed disgorgement, interest calculations, and whether the existing false-sworn statute and other penalty provisions provide sufficient remedial paths for parties who come forward and correct reports.

Committee staff noted a memo comparing other states’ statutes and offered to extract penalty language for the subcommittee’s review. Members also discussed whether an added affirmation of compliance (a signed affidavit when political committees file reports) is redundant with existing registration and reporting forms and whether any new signature requirement should apply only to state-level filers or to local entities as well.

Outcome and next steps: after concluding line-by-line review and several drafting clarifications (including adjusting statutory cross-references and scope language to preserve the notice-to-candidates requirement for state elections while extending local coverage), the chair took an informal voice vote of the subcommittee members present; members answered "Aye." The chair said he would submit the amendment, notice an executive session to take up the bill with the full committee, and schedule a brief subcommittee meeting next Tuesday to finalize the report and formal recommendations.

What remains unresolved: committee members left open the precise treatment of the terms "indirect" and "indirect expenditure," how broadly to apply certain penalty mechanisms, and whether to require a new signed affirmation for filers at the local level. Staff committed to circulate comparative penalty language and a cleaned draft of the amendment before the next meeting.

The subcommittee adjourned with the understanding that a final, cleaned amendment would be prepared and circulated before the executive-session consideration of SB 534.