The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

STATE HOUSE SUPPORTS UNLIMITED FUNDRAISIN­G DURING SESSION

Bill allows top offifficia­ls to create committees for fundraisin­g efffffffff­ffforts.

- By James Salzer

The Georgia House gave fifinal approval Thursday to legislatio­n creating new committees that would give Gov. Brian Kemp and legislativ­e leaders the ability to raise unlimited campaign money during General Assembly sessions.

Senate Bill 221 passed the House 96- 69, largely along party lines, with Democrats saying it could increase the likelihood that Statehouse lobbyists would be asked to give money at the same time they were trying to persuade lawmakers to pass legislatio­n.

State lawmakers for decades have been banned from taking campaign contributi­ons from lobbyists and special interests during the session. Long ago, the General Assembly said it looked bad for a lawmaker to take a check at the same time he or she is considerin­g legislatio­n or funding that the donor may be trying to get approved or killed.

But caucus funds that raise money to support GOP candidates, such as the House Republican Trust and its Senate counterpar­t, are allowed to take money during sessions.

SB 221 will allow a governor, lieutenant governor, a party’ s nominee for those positions, and House and Senate Republican and Democratic leaders to create such committees, which would raise money for their own races or to try to afffffffff­fffect other contests.

House Majority Whip Trey Kelley, R- Cedartown, who pushed the bill in the House, said all contributi­ons would be disclosed and the committees would be able to coordinate directly with candidates, something the caucus trusts aren’t legally allowed to do.

Rep. Stacey Evans, D- Atlanta, said that would give caucus leaders more power over rank- and

file members.

“Do you really want to vote to give your caucus leadership more power over your fate, to allow them to use unlimited campaign contributi­ons and coordinate with your opponent if they think you are getting out of line?” Evans asked. “Not only to do it, but to threaten it, to hold that over your head in a way they can’t now.”

Statewide candidates are allowed to raise about $ 18,000 per election cycle if they make a runoff — $ 7,100 in legislativ­e races — from individual donors.

Limits on how much donors could give to the committees would not apply. So contributo­rs — typically lobbyists, industry associatio­ns or businesses interested in legislatio­n or state funding — could give as much as they like.

During debate on the measure, Rep. Matthew Wilson, D- Brookhaven, said: “The only purpose this bill serves is to funnel more money into our politics, that’s all it does. Fundamenta­lly, I believe we need fewer ways to get money into politics, not more.”

Wilson called it the “Gold Dome Swamp Bill.”

“Every one of our constituen­ts is watching us this session; the stakes are very high,” he added. “This bill shows them where our priorities lie, where your priorities lie: with them or with the protection of your seat, with them or with the well- moneyed interests in the hallway.”

Old- timers at the Capitol remember when lobbyists seeking to pass legislatio­n could go onto the legislativ­e chamber floors or into ante rooms and buttonhole lawmakers.

The atmosphere was more free- wheeling than today, although lobbyists still wine and dine lawmakers off- campus during sessions.

Back in the day, lawmakers regularly held fundraiser­s during the session.

In the early 1990s, lawmakers made it illegal for lobbyists and others to give campaign contributi­ons to legislator­s during the session because, besides the possibilit­y for corruption, it just didn’t look good.

But what goes unsaid is that caucus trusts and other groups involved in the political process already accept donations during the session, and they accept “dark money ” — money where donors aren’t disclosed.

Are view of campaign contributi­on reports by The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on showed the House and Senate GOP caucus funds — which are controlled by House and Senate leadership — reported receiving more than $ 300,000 in the past five years during legislativ­e sessions. Donors included:

■ The film industry while film tax credit legislatio­n was being considered.

■ Medical marijuana producers as rules were being written to regulate the state’s new market.

■Airbn bas lawmakers were considerin­g a bill to collect taxes on stays.

■ The cable industry as the General Assembly was looking at taxing competitor­s in the streaming business.

■ The trial lawyers lobby, which fights seemingly annual battles against limits on jury awards.

■San Francisco-based e- cigarette- maker Juul when taxes on “alternativ­e nicotine products” were being considered.

Kelley said the leadership committees won’t change the status quo, other than t hat t he new committees will have more direct coordinati­on with candidates.

But Wilson said i t adds another way for House and Senate leaders to hit up lobbyists during the session as the General Assembly is considerin­g their bills.

“Money always f i nds a way i nto every nook and cranny that we allow it to, and it keeps us from putting the interests of our citizens first,” he said.

The bill, he added, “gets us closer to that quid pro quo that our laws today acknowledg­e that we need to be wary of, we need to prevent.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? House Majority Whip Trey Kelley, R- Cedartown, pushed Senate Bill 221, stressing that all contributi­ons would be disclosed.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM House Majority Whip Trey Kelley, R- Cedartown, pushed Senate Bill 221, stressing that all contributi­ons would be disclosed.

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