summary
Introduced
02/05/2025
02/05/2025
In Committee
02/05/2025
02/05/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
03/27/2025
03/27/2025
Introduced Session
Potential new amendment
2025 Regular Session
Bill Summary
The bill modifies campaign finance requirements contained in the "Fair Campaign Practices Act" that are related to prohibitions on lobbyist contributions and reporting and disclosure requirements for independent expenditures, electioneering communications, federal committees, and nonprofit entities. Prohibition on lobbyist contributions (section 2 of the bill). A lobbyist is prohibited from soliciting, making, or promising to make a contribution to an elected official or candidate for the following state offices: members of the general assembly, the governor or lieutenant governor, the secretary of state, the state treasurer, or the attorney general. Current law applies this prohibition only when the general assembly is in regular session or when any measure adopted by the general assembly in a regular session is pending before the governor for approval or disapproval. The bill changes current law so that the prohibition on lobbyist contributions applies throughout the year, regardless of whether the general assembly is in session, and also extends this prohibition to cover any individual who has been a professional lobbyist within the preceding 6 months. Reporting and disclosure requirements for independent expenditures, electioneering communications, federal committees, and nonprofit entities. The state constitution defines an "electioneering communication" to mean certain communication that unambiguously refers to a candidate and that is disseminated to the public within 30 days before a primary election or within 60 days before a general election. Senate Bill 19-086, enacted in 2019, expanded the definition of this term for purposes of campaign finance disclosures to include any communication that satisfies all other requirements specified in the state constitution but that is disseminated between the primary election and the general election. The bill further expands this definition for purposes of campaign finance disclosures to include any communication that satisfies all other requirements specified in the state constitution but that is disseminated within 90 days prior to a primary election (sections 1, 4, and 7). The state constitution defines an "independent expenditure" to mean any purchase, payment, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, or gift of money by any person for the purpose of expressly advocating the election or defeat of a candidate or supporting or opposing a ballot issue or ballot question and that is not controlled by or coordinated with a candidate or agent of a candidate. Under existing law, any person making an independent expenditure in excess of $1,000 within 30 days before a primary, general, or regular biennial school election is required to file a report within 48 hours after obligating money for the independent expenditure. The bill expands this requirement to cover the 90 days before a primary, general, or regular biennial school election and the period between the primary and general elections and shortens the time for the filing of this report to within 24 hours after obligating money for the independent expenditure (section 3). Existing law requires a disclosure on any communication that constitutes an expenditure in excess of $1,000. This disclosure must include the name of the person paying for the communication and, if the person paying for the communication is not a natural person, must identify a natural person who is the registered agent of the nonnatural person. The bill requires that this disclosure statement also identify the names of the 3 persons that have contributed the most money to the person identified as paying for the communication for the purpose of making the communication (section 3). The bill also requires a written affirmation from any committee registered with the federal election commission (federal committee) that contributes, donates, or transfers $1,000 or more to any committee that is required to report or register under the "Fair Campaign Practices Act" (section 6). The bill prohibits any committee from accepting such a contribution, donation, or transfer unless the federal committee provides a written affirmation that includes, as applicable: ! The name, address, and identification number of the federal committee; ! The name and address of the treasurer of the federal committee; ! The amount and recipient of the contribution, donation, or transfer; and ! A list of any person that transferred $1,000 or more to the federal committee, which includes the person's name and address and, if the person is a natural person, the person's occupation and employer. In addition, the bill requires a written affirmation from any nonprofit entity that contributes, donates, or transfers $1,000 or more to an issue committee, independent expenditure committee, or political organization (section 5). The bill prohibits any such committee or organization from accepting a contribution, donation, or transfer from a nonprofit entity unless the nonprofit entity provides a written affirmation that includes, as applicable: ! The name and address of the nonprofit entity; ! The name and address of the registered agent of the nonprofit entity; ! The amount and recipient of the contribution, donation, or transfer; and ! A list of any person that is not a natural person and that donated $1,000 or more to the nonprofit entity, which includes the person's name and address.
AI Summary
This bill modifies campaign finance requirements in Colorado to enhance transparency and restrict potential conflicts of interest. It expands the definition of "electioneering communication" to include communications within 90 days before a primary election, requiring more detailed disclosure of such communications. The bill significantly changes lobbyist contribution rules by prohibiting professional lobbyists and former lobbyists (defined as those who were lobbyists within the past six months) from making contributions to state elected officials and candidates throughout the entire year, not just during legislative sessions. Additionally, the bill introduces new reporting requirements for independent expenditures, mandating that any independent expenditure over $1,000 must be reported within 24 hours (reduced from 48 hours) and must identify the top three contributors to the entity making the expenditure. The legislation also requires written affirmations from federal committees and nonprofit entities that contribute $1,000 or more to political committees, including detailed information about their contributors, donors, and organizational structure. These changes aim to increase financial transparency in political campaigns and reduce potential undue influence in the electoral process.
Committee Categories
Military Affairs and Security
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
Senate Committee on State, Veterans, & Military Affairs Postpone Indefinitely (on 03/27/2025)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location | Created |
|---|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/sb25-148 | 02/05/2025 |
| Fiscal Note FN2 | https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2025A/bills/fn/2025a_sb148_f1.pdf | 06/18/2025 |
| Senate State, Veterans, & Military Affairs Amendment L.002 | https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/leg.colorado.gov/2025A/amendments/07856C6D93A0A34987258C590069EE92/SB148_L.002.pdf | 03/27/2025 |
| Senate State, Veterans, & Military Affairs Amendment L.001 | https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/leg.colorado.gov/2025A/amendments/26EDD9CB7B24751787258C4A00593A61/SB148_L.001.pdf | 03/27/2025 |
| Fiscal Note FN1 | https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2025A/bills/fn/2025a_sb148_00.pdf | 03/07/2025 |
| BillText | https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2025A/bills/2025a_148_01.pdf | 02/05/2025 |
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