Senators reject childcare amendment but advance campaign‑finance bill allowing limited travel and security expenses
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Summary
Senators defeated an amendment that would have allowed campaign funds to pay for childcare for minor children and broader childcare uses, but advanced LB 986 — which permits certain campaign‑related spending such as security and, under narrower proposals, travel for minor children — to engrossing.
The Nebraska Legislature debated whether campaign funds should be permitted for childcare and related family travel before rejecting a broad amendment and advancing the underlying accountability and disclosure bill. Senator Hunt, sponsor of the childcare language, argued the change would lower barriers for single parents and low‑income candidates, saying the law as written “was not written in anticipation of single parents or low income parents ever in public service.”
Opponents raised concerns that donor money spent on childcare or household needs could create conflicts or open avenues for abuse. Senator Kaut warned the measure could “open ourselves up to a lot of cases or potential for abuse,” and Senator Klaus urged members to “put family first” and warned about the personal cost of public service.
Hunt said she consulted the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission (NADC) and cited an advisory opinion from 01/31/2020 she said required statutory change to permit travel of minor children on campaign funds. She described the proposal as narrowly targeted and reportable to NADC: “Elected officials work hard to earn the contributions they use to travel for work… and they shouldn’t be prevented from doing that just because they have little kids,” she said.
After extended debate and a roll‑call under call, the body voted down AM 28‑68 (the broader childcare amendment). The clerk recorded the amendment as not adopted. Senator Hunt later withdrew a narrower floor amendment (FA 11‑54) that would have limited changes to travel (conference fees, meals, lodging, and travel by the office holder and the office holder’s minor children) rather than childcare services. The underlying bill, LB 986, was then advanced to E & R for engrossing.
The floor debate mixed policy and procedural points: supporters emphasized access and transparency — noting campaign expenditures are reportable to NADC — while opponents focused on conflicts, donor influence, and safeguarding campaign funds for campaign activities. The immediate procedural outcome was to keep the broader childcare expansion off the bill while allowing the main accountability/disclosure measure to move forward.
Next steps: LB 986 has been advanced to engrossing; proponents said they will continue to press childcare‑related changes in future sessions or pursue regulatory clarification with the NADC.
