Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Out-of-state PAC belatedly files spending report

- By Dan Petrella dpetrella@chicagotri­bune. com

A New York-based political action committee belatedly reported that it so far has spent more than $13,000 backing conservati­ve candidates in next week’s local school board elections in Illinois.

Its reports were submitted beginning late Tuesday after the Tribune wrote that the group had not disclosed what it spent on mailers that began arriving in Chicago-area mailboxes last week within the time frame required under state law.

The 1776 Project PAC — which, according to its website, funds school board candidates who support teaching “patriotism and pride in American history” and oppose the teaching of critical race theory — is backing more than a dozen candidates in Illinois districts including Barrington and Oswego in the April 4 election.

The group’s involvemen­t comes as the Chicago suburbs have become a key front in a conservati­ve movement targeting school board seats. Those efforts have brought on an unpreceden­ted pushback from the state Democratic Party, which has plans to spend nearly $300,000 supporting 84 school and library board candidates and opposing 74 across 17 counties.

While the 1776 Project is registered with the Federal Election Commission, Illinois campaign finance law requires independen­t expenditur­e committees that spend money on races in the state to register with the state.

“If 1776 Project PAC is spending on races in Illinois, it is required to register with us and has not done so,” Matt Dietrich, a spokesman for the State Board of Elections, said Tuesday, before the group’s report was submitted.

Additional­ly, if an independen­t expenditur­e committee like the 1776 Project spends more than $1,000 supporting or opposing a candidate within 60 of an election, it must be reported to state election officials within two business days.

Political consultant Ryan Girdusky, the PAC’s founder, told the Tribune on Tuesday that he believed the group was in compliance with federal campaign disclosure laws but was not aware of the Illinois requiremen­ts.

“If there’s a delay in the filing, then that’s on us, and we’ll take care of it,” Girdusky said.

Following that conversati­on Tuesday, the group registered with state election officials and reported its expenditur­es in support of 18 candidates. The expenditur­es included nearly $1,100 for each of the four members of the We the Parents slate in Oswego Community Unit School District 308 and more than $750 for each of the three conservati­ve slate candidates in Barrington Community Unit School District 220.

The group also is supporting school board candidates in Roselle, Yorkville and Minooka in the Chicago area and Marshall in east-central Illinois.

Federal law only requires immediate disclosure of independen­t expenditur­es on behalf of candidates seeking federal offices.

The 1776 Project is registered with the FEC as a hybrid committee, meaning it has an account that can make direct contributi­ons to candidates but is subject to contributi­on limits, as well as a separate account that can take in unlimited contributi­ons but is prohibited from coordinati­ng with candidates.

In an email last month, Illinois Republican Party Chair Don Tracy lamented the state GOP’s lack of money to assist candidates looking to take on “the left’s infiltrati­on of our schools through teacher unions and otherwise,” but encouraged candidates to seek the support of groups like the 1776 Project.

The PAC has gotten financial backing from a group with ties to ultraconse­rvative GOP megadonor and billionair­e Richard Uihlein, founder of the Uline office supply and products company, who contribute­d $54 million to Darren Bailey’s failed bid for Illinois governor in November.

The Illinois Democratic Party, meanwhile, buoyed by a recent $500,000 contributi­on

from billionair­e Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s campaign fund, also is targeting voters with mailers and digital ads.

But the party’s campaign fund is allowed to coordinate directly with candidates and therefore does not have to disclose its spending until the next quarterly filing deadline on April 17.

If the party spends a total of $1,000 or more on any individual candidate, the candidate is required to report it as an in-kind contributi­on within two business days.

 ?? STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Barrington 220 School District school board candidate Katey Baldassano, left, participat­es in a candidates forum at the Barrington Library on March 1. Baldassano has been endorsed by the 1776 Project PAC.
STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Barrington 220 School District school board candidate Katey Baldassano, left, participat­es in a candidates forum at the Barrington Library on March 1. Baldassano has been endorsed by the 1776 Project PAC.

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