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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Smith
DATE TYPED 02/22/05 HB
SHORT TITLE Retirement Board Membership Contributions
SB 251/aSPAC
ANALYST Geisler
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Public Employee Retirement Agency (PERA)
American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SPAC Amendments
The Senate Public Affairs Committee amendments to SB 251:
1)
Increase the contribution limit from $200 (two hundred dollars) to $2000 (two thousand dol-
lars).
2)
Expands the scope of the limit of campaign contributions to include organizations, associa-
tion or entity. This is in addition to the limitation in the bill on donations by corporations, la-
bor organizations, or other persons.
Synopsis of Original Bill
SB 251 amends Section 10-11-130.1 of the Public Employees Retirement Act to add an addi-
tional restriction on campaign contributions made to candidates for the Public Employees Re-
tirement Board. In addition to the existing restriction on campaign contributions (no candidate
for the Board may accept anything of value more than $25.00 from those who have or seek con-
tracts with the board or association), SB251 would prohibit candidates for board membership
from accepting a contribution with a value of more than two hundred dollars ($200) from “any
corporation, labor organization or other person.”
pg_0002
Senate Bill 251/aSPAC -- Page 2
Significant Issues
PERA provides the following input on major issues surrounding the bill:
Issue 1: Is the limitation proposed by SB251 likely to withstand legal challenge.
With certain revisions suggested in this analysis, yes. Efforts at reforming campaign finance
have been challenged in court as an unconstitutional infringement upon the rights to free speech
and association guaranteed by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. Neverthe-
less, for almost 30 years, the United States Supreme Court has upheld reasonable campaign con-
tribution limits. The Court also recognized a meaningful distinction between restrictions on
campaign contributions and restrictions on campaign expenditures. The Supreme Court imposes
significantly more severe restrictions in the review of measures that are aimed at limiting a can-
didate’s expenditures than measures aimed at restricting campaign contributions. See, e.g. Buck-
ley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976).
The Supreme Court has recently reaffirmed that the states have substantial leeway to act in limit-
ing contributions. Nixon v. Shrink Missouri Government PAC, 528 U.S. 377 (2000). In Nixon,
the Supreme Court reasoned that, if the question of the propriety of large campaign contributions
remains unanswered, the “cynical assumption that large donors call the tune could jeopardize the
willingness of voters to take part in democratic governance.” Therefore, state lawmakers are
permitted to place limits on campaign contributions. However, the Supreme Court has empha-
sized that such limits must be reasonable and narrowly tailored. Limits must not be set so low
that they are "so radical in effect as to render political association ineffective, drive the sound of
a candidate's voice below the level of notice, and render contributions pointless." Nixon.
Under the federal Taft-Hartley Act enacted in 1947, corporations, unions and interstate banks are
permanently banned from making contributions to federal candidates. Corporate and bank con-
tributions had been banned since 1907. Such bans have survived court challenge.
The PERA Act already imposes a rather extreme limit of twenty-five dollars ($25.00) on those
persons or organizations who have or seek to have a contractual relationship with PERA or the
Board, including investment consultants. To date, there have been no legal challenges to the
limit contained in Section 10-11-130.1.
Issue 2: Is the limitation proposed by SB251 sufficiently reasonable and properly tailored.
As it is presently framed, the limitation is constitutionally suspect. SB251 would prohibit candi-
dates for PERA board membership from accepting a contribution with a value of more than two
hundred dollars ($200) from “any corporation, labor organization or other person.” The inclu-
sion of the phrase “or other person” is troublesome because it would limit contributions from in-
dividuals as well as those from corporations and labor organizations.
The distinction between contributions made by corporations and labor organizations and those
made by individuals is well recognized. Federal law entirely prohibits both corporations and la-
bor organizations from making campaign contributions but permits contributions by individuals
up to $1000.00 per election to candidates. See, 2 USC Section 441 b and Section 441 a.
On December 16, 2004, the Public Employees Retirement Board met and voted to support legis-
pg_0003
Senate Bill 251/aSPAC -- Page 3
lation that would impose limits on the campaign contributions made by “a corporation, labor or-
ganization, or any other organization, association or entity.” While the Board expressed its in-
terest in such a limit, it expressed no interest in placing limits on campaign contributions made
by individuals.
While several states have limits on campaign contributions by individuals, most are over
$1000.00 with the average for gubernatorial candidates being over $6000.00 and the average for
legislative candidates being over $2000.00 (National Conference of State Legislatures data).
Most limits on campaign contributions by individuals apply only in statewide offices and elec-
tions. Id. PERA Board elections are not statewide to the extent that Board members are elected
by separate constituencies (for example one member is elected by state employees statewide, one
by retirees statewide, etc.). With the exception of the existing conflict of interest limitations such
as the one in Section 10-11-130.1 B, New Mexico has no limits on the amount that individuals
may contribute to candidates for election. Id. Please see proposed changes under alternatives.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
2004 PERA Election
Historically, candidates for PERA Board elections have not raised campaign contributions in the
amounts seen in the most recent election. In the most recent election, a single campaign con-
tributor (American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, 1625 L Street, Wash-
ington, DC “AFSCME”) contributed over $53,000.00 (fifty-three thousand dollars) to three
Board candidates. All the Board candidates who received these contributions were successful.
There were six unsuccessful candidates in the same races. By comparison, the six unsuccessful
candidates raised a combined total of $2,400.00 (two thousand four hundred dollars.) Clearly, a
single contributor exerted an out-sized influence on these races, raising the question of whether
large donors are able to “call the tune” and “jeopardize the willingness of voters to take part in
democratic governance” as phrased by the Nixon Court. The Courts have found reasonable
campaign contribution limits to be a viable answer in these situations.
ALTERNATIVES
PERA suggests that the new material added as NMSA Section 10-11-130.1 C
be amended as follows:
C.
No person who is a candidate for retirement board membership by election by some or
all of the members of the association pursuant to the Public Employees Retirement Act
shall accept a contribution with a value of more than two hundred dollars ($200.00) di-
rectly or indirectly from any corporation, labor organization, or any other organization
or association. No person shall act as a conduit for a contribution in excess of the limit
set forth in this section.
AFSCME provides:
1.
Individual donors should have the same restrictions as corporations, labor unions, and other
groups.
2.
The $200 dollar limit is too low, in particular for board positions that are elected statewide.
pg_0004
Senate Bill 251/aSPAC -- Page 4
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
Corporations individuals, and labor organizations will continue to be able to make unlimited
campaign contributions to candidates for election to the Public Employees Retirement Board.
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