HOUSE BILL No. 5663

May 17, 2016, Introduced by Reps. Glenn, Chatfield, Webber, Iden, Hooker, Aaron Miller, Outman, Goike, Graves and Barrett and referred to the Committee on Elections.

 

     A bill to amend 1976 PA 388, entitled

 

"Michigan campaign finance act,"

 

by amending sections 2, 5, and 11 (MCL 169.202, 169.205, and

 

169.211), section 2 as amended by 2001 PA 250, section 5 as amended

 

by 1999 PA 237, and section 11 as amended by 2012 PA 273, and by

 

adding section 48.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 2. (1) "Automated telephonic communication" means any

 

outbound telephone call that plays a recorded message to promote,

 

advertise, or campaign for or against a political candidate or

 

ballot question.

 

     (2) (1) "Award" means a plaque, trophy, certificate, bust,

 

ceremonial gavel, or memento.

 

     (3) (2) "Ballot question" means a question that is submitted

 

or is intended to be submitted to a popular vote at an election


whether or not it qualifies for the ballot.

 

     (4) (3) "Ballot question committee" means a committee acting

 

in support of, or in opposition to, the qualification, passage, or

 

defeat of a ballot question but that does not receive contributions

 

or make expenditures or contributions for the purpose of

 

influencing or attempting to influence the action of the voters for

 

or against the nomination or election of a candidate.

 

     (5) (4) "Bundle" means for a bundling committee to deliver 1

 

or more contributions from individuals to the candidate committee

 

of a candidate for statewide elective office, without the money

 

becoming money of the bundling committee.

 

     (6) (5) "Bundling committee" means an independent committee or

 

political committee that makes an expenditure to solicit or collect

 

from individuals contributions that are to be part of a bundled

 

contribution, which expenditure is required to be reported as an

 

in-kind expenditure for a candidate for statewide elective office.

 

     (7) (6) "Business" means a corporation, limited liability

 

company, partnership, sole proprietorship, firm, enterprise,

 

franchise, association, organization, self-employed individual,

 

holding company, joint stock company, receivership, trust,

 

activity, or entity that is organized for profit or nonprofit

 

purposes.

 

     Sec. 5. (1) "Domestic dependent sovereign" means an Indian

 

tribe that has been acknowledged, recognized, restored, or

 

reaffirmed as an Indian tribe by the secretary Secretary of the

 

interior Interior pursuant to chapter 576, 48 Stat. 984, 25 U.S.C.

 

USC 461 to 463, 464 to 465, 466 to 470, 471 to 472, 473, 474 to


475, 476 to 478, and 479, commonly referred to as the Indian

 

reorganization act, or has otherwise been acknowledged by the

 

United States government as an Indian tribe.

 

     (2) "Do-not-call list" means the federal do-not-call registry

 

established by the Federal Trade Commission.

 

     (3) (2) "Election" means a primary, general, special, or

 

millage election held in this state or a convention or caucus of a

 

political party held in this state to nominate a candidate.

 

Election includes a recall vote.

 

     (4) (3) "Election cycle" means 1 of the following:

 

     (a) For a general election, the period beginning the day

 

following the last general election in which the office appeared on

 

the ballot and ending on the day of the general election in which

 

the office next appears on the ballot.

 

     (b) For a special election, the period beginning the day a

 

special general election is called or the date the office becomes

 

vacant, whichever is earlier, and ending on the day of the special

 

general election.

 

     (5) (4) "Elective office" means a public office filled by an

 

election. A person who is appointed to fill a vacancy in a public

 

office that is ordinarily elective holds an elective office.

 

Elective office does not include the office of precinct delegate.

 

Except for the purposes of sections 47, 54, and 55, elective office

 

does not include a school board member in a school district that

 

has a pupil membership of 2,400 or less enrolled on the most recent

 

pupil membership count day. However, elective office includes a

 

school board member in a school district that has a pupil


membership of 2,400 or less, if a candidate committee of a

 

candidate for the office of school board member in that school

 

district receives an amount in excess of $1,000.00 or expends an

 

amount in excess of $1,000.00. Elective office does not include a

 

federal office except for the purposes of section 57.

 

     Sec. 11. (1) "Payroll deduction plan" means any system in

 

which an employer deducts any amount of money from the wages,

 

earnings, or compensation of an employee.

 

     (2) "Person" means a business, individual, proprietorship,

 

firm, partnership, joint venture, syndicate, business trust, labor

 

organization, company, corporation, association, committee, or any

 

other organization or group of persons acting jointly.

 

     (3) "Political committee" means a committee that is not a

 

candidate committee, political party committee, independent

 

committee, or ballot question committee.

 

     (4) "Political merchandise" means goods such as bumper

 

stickers, pins, hats, beverages, literature, or other items sold by

 

a person at a fund-raiser or to the general public for publicity or

 

for the purpose of raising funds to be used in supporting or

 

opposing a candidate for nomination for or election to an elective

 

office, in supporting or opposing the qualification, passage, or

 

defeat of a ballot question, or in supporting or opposing the

 

qualification of a new political party.

 

     (5) "Political party" means a political party that has a right

 

under law to have the names of its candidates listed on the ballot

 

in a general election.

 

     (6) "Political party committee" means a state central,


district, or county committee of a political party or a party

 

attempting to qualify as a new political party under section 685 of

 

the Michigan election law, 1954 PA 116, MCL 168.685, that is a

 

committee. Each state central committee shall designate the

 

official party county and district committees. There shall not be

 

more than 1 officially designated political party committee per

 

county and per congressional district.

 

     (7) "Political solicitor" means an individual, candidate, or

 

committee that makes or causes to be made an automated telephonic

 

communication.

 

     (8) (7) "Public body" means 1 or more of the following:

 

     (a) A state agency, department, division, bureau, board,

 

commission, council, authority, or other body in the executive

 

branch of state government.

 

     (b) The legislature or an agency, board, commission, or

 

council in the legislative branch of state government.

 

     (c) A county, city, township, village, intercounty, intercity,

 

or regional governing body; a council, school district, special

 

district, or municipal corporation; or a board, department,

 

commission, or council or an agency of a board, department,

 

commission, or council.

 

     (d) Any other body that is created by state or local authority

 

or is primarily funded by or through state or local authority, if

 

the body exercises governmental or proprietary authority or

 

performs a governmental or proprietary function.

 

     Sec. 48. Within 90 days after the effective date of the

 

amendatory act that added this section, a political solicitor shall


not make or cause to be made an automated telephonic communication

 

from within this state to an individual whose name is on the then-

 

current version of the do-not-call list.